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#New Mexico Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice
coochiequeens · 3 years
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Last summer, Crystal Zaragoza drove a 15-year-old patient from her home in rural Georgia to Virginia, the nearest location where the teen could receive the abortion care she needed.
Zaragoza remained with the patient every step of the way, making the 650-mile trip in one, long 12-hour haul and staying with her at a hotel during and after the procedure before driving back.
Access Reproductive Care-Southeast, the abortion fund serving women in six states across the Southeast U.S. where Zaragoza works, provides what's called "practical support" — helping women overcome significant financial, logistical and geographic hurdles beyond just paying for the abortion care itself. Zaragoza locates providers and facilitates lodging, escorts to and from clinics, child care and travel (often doing the driving herself).
Demand for the help groups like Zaragoza's offer has grown in the years the states her organization serves — Georgia, Florida, Alabama, South Carolina, Tennessee and Mississippi — have chipped away at abortion access. The pandemic has also had an impact. But the Supreme Court's decision last month to consider the legality of Mississippi's ban on most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy — a move pro-abortion-rights advocates say means the newly conservative bench is eyeing an end to Roe v. Wade — has practical support groups looking to ramp up fundraising, volunteering and staffing with even greater urgency.
"We have been preparing for a long while for an eventual reality where Roe is decimated, and a lot of that has been trying to scale abortion funds,” said Yamani Hernandez, the executive director of the National Network of Abortion Funds, which helps women access and receive abortion care.
"These groups have already been navigating a difficult year-plus, and if things do not go well with the Supreme Court, a lot more travel and a lot more assistance will be needed. Distances to travel will increase and the amount of people traveling will increase," she said.
The groups, which are also becoming the target of a new, restrictive wave of anti-abortion laws, are strategizing for the long-dreaded possibility that the way they operate could represent the future of abortion care for millions of women.
Need spiked during pandemic, groups say
Several organizations said the number of women seeking help from abortion funds and practical support groups spiked during the pandemic and has continued to rise in the months since infection rates began declining.
The number of patients helped by the National Abortion Federation, which runs the five largest patient assistance funds by dollar amount, rose in each month from April 2020 to December 2020 (over the prior year) by an average of 21 percent, the group’s leaders said. That equated to more than 100,000 women receiving financial assistance from the group to pay for abortion care. In 2020, the group grew its staff of regional case managers to 19 from eight and plans to add more.
NNAF's Hernandez, meanwhile, said call volume across her group's 83 member funds doubled in the months since May 2020 over the prior year numbers.
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ARC-Southeast saw its call volume double during that time, too, officials said. Before the pandemic, the group was making an average of 350 pledges per month — an accurate way to track demand because it indicates the number of callers who sought care and actually received money, according to the group. Since June 2020, ARC-Southeast has made an average of 600 pledges a month.
Meanwhile, the Brigid Alliance, a New York-based group that pays for women with low income to travel to states where they can receive abortion care, has, since January 2020, seen a 20 percent increase in its client volume and has doubled its budget, via fundraising efforts, in anticipation that it will keep growing.
In 2020, the group helped 661 women travel to receive abortion care. Less than halfway through 2021, it’s already helped 440 women.
“People didn't stop needing abortions just because there was a pandemic. It just became more difficult,” the group’s executive director, Odile Schalit, said.
'Two Americas' when it comes to abortion rights
Leaders of these groups predicted need for their services will only rise ahead of, and following, the Supreme Court's consideration of Mississippi's abortion ban. The law currently allows exceptions for medical emergencies and severe fetal abnormalities.
Abortion-rights activists worry the case will provide an opening for the court to decide whether all bans on abortion before fetal viability — which Roe prohibits — are unconstitutional. (The court will hear the case in the fall and will likely issue a decision next spring or summer.)
"This would basically create two Americas when it comes to abortion. Of course we already have that, but this will make it even worse," said Elizabeth Nash, a state policy analyst at the Guttmacher Institute, a research organization that studies reproductive health rights. "If the Supreme Court really takes a whack at abortion rights and upholds the Mississippi ban or determines that pre-viability bans are OK, you’re talking about having two very different experiences in this country."
"If you're living pretty much anywhere in the middle of the country or the South, abortion could very well be, effectively, banned to a large extent," Nash said.
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Abortion funds and practical support groups could then become some of the only avenues for millions of women who can't otherwise afford or navigate abortion care on their own. Groups are already looking to lift their fundraising so they can increase services to meet what they say will be an all-but-certain surge in demand.
"Virtually any ruling other than one that upholds Roe is going to result in more people having to travel farther and raise more resources, whether that's paying for procedures or travel costs or lost wages costs,” said the Rev. Katherine Ragsdale, president of the National Abortion Federation. “People are going to be more and more dependent on abortion funds and the groups like NAF who can provide those resources.
The NNAF, for example, launched a pilot program this year for several of its 83 member abortion funds that will "fully resource the mid-Atlantic region so they can say yes to every caller," Hernandez said. The group is trying to double its $15 million budget, Hernandez said, via grants and direct appeals to individual donors.
ARC-Southeast, for its part, has grown its small full-time paid staff of 10 by 40 percent and has expanded its volunteer network of 120 unpaid individuals by a similar amount.
Meanwhile, the National Institute for Reproductive Health and its sister advocacy arm, the NIRH Action Fund, are looking to grow their collective budget by about 30 percent, the groups said.
Groups say they are targeted by new state laws
The Mississippi case and its subsequent fallout, however, are far from the the only battle on the minds of leaders of abortion funds and practical support groups.
A unique Texas law enacted in May banning abortions as early as six weeks into a pregnancy also included language allowing anyone, even someone outside Texas, to sue an abortion provider or anyone else who helped someone get an abortion after the six-week limit for up to $10,000 per defendant. (Texas' law prohibits state officials from enforcing the ban and rather leaves enforcement to private citizens' lawsuits; abortion rights activists have vowed to challenge it.)
But that language would also apply to abortion funds and practical support organizations — and lawsuits would cripple those group's ability to operate at a critical moment, they said.
"It's absolutely a new way for state legislatures trying to find ways to end practical support. It could be a model for states considering how to further crack down on that kind of support,” said Guttmacher's Nash.
That would make it even more difficult for people like Schalit to help women like the 24-year-old patient she assisted last year to travel from Tennessee to New Mexico after nearly every part of the system put up roadblocks for her to receive abortion care.
The woman, Schalit said, discovered she was pregnant at eight weeks and made plans to attempt a medication abortion but lost her job (and her medical benefits) around that time after being laid off due to Covid-19. Her unemployment checks were delayed, and by the time she received her first, the closest possible clinics in Tennessee and Kentucky that provided care were booked up. Soon, she had surpassed the gestational limits in both states, prompting her to seek assistance from the Brigid Alliance.
Schalit personally planned the woman’s travel and hotel and connected her to the New Mexico Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice, which helped her seek abortion care.
"Her barriers were a combination of everything many women are facing in this world right now in trying to have an abortion, pandemic or no," Schalit said. "It’s a phenomenal story, but it’s also typical. And it’s about to become even more typical."
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ficsnooneaskedfor · 2 years
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I'm feeling really down about this ruling today (to put it mildly) and needed to do something constructive about it before heading to a protest. I'm seeing many people sharing wonderful organizations that fight for reproductive justice and as a doula/student midwife, I've learned of tons of awesome ones over the years. I wanted to share some lesser-known organizations that you can consider donating to at this time if you have the means.
I've included organizations that focus on the racial disparities in maternal healthcare as well since this ruling will disproportionally affect low-income BIPOC and we have worse birth outcomes/infant mortality rates than white people.
*For gendered language on the site.
Funds:
Repo Legal Defense Fund: The Repro Legal Defense Fund covers bail and funds strong defenses for people who are investigated, arrested, or prosecuted for self-managed abortion. Fund Texas Choice: Funding for Texans to travel for abortion care. DC Abortion Fund: For DC, Maryland, and Virginia residents as well as people who travel to the DC area seeking an abortion. *Indigenous Women Rising Abortion Fund: Serving Indigenous and undocumented people nationwide. *Indigenous Women Rising Midwifery Fund: "This fund will help pregnant Indigenous people in New Mexico access quality care for themselves and their latest addition."
Full-spectrum doula services & trainings (This includes abortion doulas)
The Doula Project: The Doula Project is a New York City-based 501(c)(3) organization that provides free compassionate care and emotional, physical, and informational support to people across the spectrum of pregnancy. The Baltimore Doula Project: "We seek to recognize the obstacles that people of all backgrounds face in reaching reproductive health services, but particularly low-income people, LGBTQI-identified people, youth, and people of color."
BIPOC maternal health/support organizations:
*Mamatoto Village (Washington, DC) A list of BIPOC owned/managed community birth centers throughout the USA.
Public policy & advocacy organizations:
Lawyering for Reproductive Justice Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice: National Birth Equity Collaborative *Sister Song: Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective) Medical Students for Choice
Other:
Faith Aloud: "Faith Aloud is dedicated to providing compassionate spiritual and religious support for people in all their decisions about pregnancy, parenting, abortion, and adoption. Faith Aloud provides nonjudgmental spiritual counseling to people across the country on our free, confidential clergy counseling line."  *Midwifery in Color: "Midwifery in Color is at the forefront of revolutionizing women’s healthcare through health equity and women-centered care. The lens through which we view women’s healthcare is colored by the experiences of black and brown women in order to revolutionize their care ultimately providing health equity and mitigating healthcare disparities." Birth Center Equity: Birth Center Equity Foundation grows philanthropic partnerships to increase grant making to BIPOC birth center leaders in support of sustainable community birth infrastructure and optimal maternal infant health.
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parentsnevertoldus · 4 years
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Hispanic Heritage Month: Talking to My Catholic Parents About Abortion
By  Raquel Ortega via Rewire.News
When my parents came to visit me for the first time in Washington, D.C., it coincidentally was a big day for reproductive health: The EACH Woman Act was being introduced. I decided to use that as an opportunity to finally have a talk about my abortion advocacy work.
Hispanic Heritage Month, which began on September 15 and ends on October 15, is a time to reflect on where I come from, which for me, is a reminder that I owe a lot to my mother, a first-generation American whose family is from Mexico.
In addition to teaching me how to make her famous salsa recipe, how to dance, and that the toilet paper roll is supposed to hang over not under, she also taught me about love of community and being kind to others. As Catholics we always operated under the golden rule, “treat others the way you’d like to be treated.” She is the one who instilled in me that being part of a community is about caring for and supporting one another, whether it’s a family member, a friend, or neighbor.
I don’t often talk about my job with my mamá. Like many other Chicana feminists I know, we often operate under an unofficial “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy. She knows that I organize and speak out around access to abortion, but she doesn’t ever ask me about it. It’s not that my mamá is against abortion. In fact, I know she feels how a lot of Latin@s feel about abortion in this country; she doesn’t fall into a typical “pro-life” or pro-choice label and instead holds complex feelings based on a variety of factors. Personally, she has reservations about abortion when it comes to herself, but at the same time she believes it is not her place to judge or condemn others. If anyone in her life wanted to seek an abortion, she would do whatever she could to support them.
I was very religious when I was younger, but my devotion began to break down in high school when I started to feel like I was being taught unfair and conflicting lessons about sex, sexuality, and abortion by faith leaders in my church. I had been led to believe that sex was sinful and that women who had sex before marriage were immoral—sluts. Things changed for me when, in tenth grade, my good friend told me she was raped at a party. My religious teachings about virtue and purity seemed to make so much sense until, suddenly, it was also so clear to me that what happened was not her fault. Shortly after that happened, I was chastised by my youth minister for having a conversation with another teenage girl about what “birth control” was (our school, and entire state really, had abstinence-only sex education, so it wasn’t really surprising that most young people our age were clueless about the ins and outs of sex). My real-life experiences were showing me that life is not lived in black and white, yet I was told sternly that speaking about birth control and sexual health wasn’t “appropriate” and these types of conversations should be left between a child and their parent—something that in actuality, at least in my community, rarely happened.
I felt a similar discomfort about abortion. But slowly over time, the lessons I was being taught by my mother, such as treating others the way you want to be treated, started to make me reassess that. I did not want to be judged for the thoughtful decisions I made about my own body. I did not want to be stigmatized or shamed for my sexuality. And I did not want to judge, stigmatize, or shame others either.
I have a tendency to push people beyond their comfort zones. Knowing my mother’s complex feelings about abortion, when my parents came to visit me for the first time in Washington, D.C., which coincidentally was a big day for reproductive health, I decided to use that as an opportunity to finally have a talk about my abortion advocacy work.
The visit was the day that All* Above All, a coalition dedicated to lifting bans on abortion coverage, announced with members of Congress the introduction of the EACH Woman Act. The EACH Woman Act is a proactive bill to end the Hyde Amendment and similar restrictions on federal funding for abortion. Due to the Hyde Amendment, which turned 39 this year, people who have insurance coverage through a publicly funded health program, like Medicaid, can’t use their insurance to cover the cost of abortion. I think that a person should have access to safe and affordable abortion care regardless of their income or the type of insurance they have, so for me the introduction of this bill—the first of its kind—was a pretty big deal.
So there we were, my parents and I, eating some chili together at Ben’s Chili Bowl, when I told my mom that I was excited about this new bill because it would make a difference for so many people seeking abortion care. We talked about her religious upbringing and the things she heard about abortion in Catholic school. We discussed the concerns she had about why people choose abortion, and she admitted that she was unsure about the idea of Medicaid coverage. She also asked a lot of great questions like, “So if a woman doesn’t have the money to buy contraception and gets pregnant, and then doesn’t have the money to pay for an abortion…what is she supposed to do? Magically find money to raise a child?” (While my father was present, he did not contribute to our conversation.)
My mother may not feel comfortable with why someone might choose abortion, but to her it doesn’t make sense to deny access to health care just because of how much money someone makes or the type of insurance they have. And on this last point, we can agree.
My mother and I may not see eye-to-eye on everything, but I’m glad that she has taught me her values of support and kindness. These are the values that drive me and fuel the passion for my work. I am glad that she has shown me that I shouldn’t be afraid to ask questions, even if they are uncomfortable ones, and that I should always operate from a place of love.
She has taught me that we can respect a person’s ability to make their own life decisions without imposing our values and views on them. That we should each appreciate and respect everyone’s beliefs, especially when it comes to people we love. That all people should have the economic, social, and political power to live happy lives, and that all people should have access to information and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies.
Back at dinner, I finally asked the question I’ve always wanted to ask my mamá but never before this moment had the right words.
“I know it’s easy to say that you wouldn’t judge when it’s talking about someone else getting an abortion… but what if it were me?”
Without hesitating my mamá said, “Raquelita, no matter what, it’s my job to always support and love you, and that has and will never change.”
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abortionfunds · 6 years
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Current situation in Texas... @westfundtx meeting up with other funds for Taco or Beer Challenge! ・・・ 🌮🍺 Huge thank you to members of the New Mexico Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice and @mariposafund for meeting up to partake in a #TOBC18 pic! Let’s keep the challenge going! (See previous post for details) — view on Instagram https://ift.tt/2wnDMiB
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janniaragon1 · 7 years
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45 years after Roe v. Wade, the anti-abortion movement has momentum in NC and nationally
Jan. 21–At the 45th anniversary of their biggest victory, supporters of abortion rights see Republicans who control Congress, the presidency and North Carolina’s legislature working to undo their efforts.
Abortion opponents have found an ally in the Trump administration, which has worked through judicial appointments and executive action to restrict access to the procedure despite the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling on Jan. 22, 1973, that laws prohibiting abortion were unconstitutional.
The administration’s efforts are cause for celebration for the thousands who marched in the March for Life in Washington on Friday and heard a live video address from President Donald Trump. North Carolina Right to Life activists held a march of their own in Raleigh on Jan. 13.
"As someone who has fought in the trenches for the pro-life movement for decades, I have never been more encouraged," U.S. Rep. Robert Pittenger, a Republican congressman from Charlotte, said in an email statement. "Part of making America great again is restoring the freedom and dignity of every life."
Abortion could be an important issue in what is shaping up to be one of North Carolina’s most competitive Republican primary elections this May. Pittenger has touted his anti-abortion credentials as he tries to fend off a challenge from a Baptist minister, Mark Harris, in a rematch to represent the district that runs east from Charlotte to Robeson County. Harris has criticized Pittenger’s vote in favor of an omnibus spending bill that kept funding for Planned Parenthood intact.
Abortion rights groups, facing a hostile administration, are supporting grassroots campaigns at the state level, but in North Carolina, there’s little support for expanding abortion access among Republicans who have enough votes in the legislature to override Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper’s vetoes.
"The fact that we are going backwards is just very disconcerting to me because women have a role to play, we need them to have control of their lives so that they contribute to their families and their society and run for office," said state Sen. Terry Van Duyn, a Democrat from Asheville.
New conscience protections
The federal Department of Health and Human Services announced Thursday the creation of a Conscience and Religious Freedom Division in its Office for Civil Rights. The division is meant to protect health care workers who refuse to perform medical services such as abortions that contradict their moral or religious beliefs.
On Friday, the department’s Office for Civil Rights announced a rule to enforce "conscience protections" in the health care system. The department also rescinded 2016 guidance that had restricted states from disqualifying abortion providers from their Medicaid programs.
"It’s about time that the government started protecting the conscience rights of Americans rather than attacking them," said Tami Fitzgerald, executive director of the North Carolina Values Coalition.
But Tara Romano, executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice North Carolina, worries allowing religious exemptions could primarily affect patients in emergency situations in which abortion is medically necessary.
"Generally people who are opposed to abortion might not work at a place like Planned Parenthood or abortion clinics," she said. "We’re thinking this is going to be playing out in hospitals, or places where somebody might come in for an emergency, and it might be that abortion is what is needed for that person’s health and safety."
North Carolina’s congressional delegation has been active in supporting legislation regulating abortion and abortion providers. On Friday, the House approved a bill titled the Born Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act, cosponsored by several North Carolina Republicans, which requires health care practitioners to "exercise the same degree of care as reasonably provided to any other child born alive at the same gestational age" for a child born alive during an abortion.
The Senate, where Democrats in the minority can block many proposals, has not considered the bill. Nor has the Senate taken up a House-passed bill, supported by Trump, to ban most abortions after 20 weeks.
Despite once declaring himself as "pro-choice in every respect," Trump has worked to restrict abortion. Just days after his inauguration last year, he reinstated the "Mexico City" policy, first enacted in the Reagan era, which prohibits international organizations that receive government funding from performing or promoting abortion as a method of family planning.
Congress and Trump also rolled back an Obama-era regulation in April that prevented states from withholding federal funds from abortion providers. And his appointment of Neil Gorsuch and promise to appoint pro-life judges to the Supreme Court could have far-reaching consequences in determining the future of Roe v. Wade.
"I think the feeling in the pro-life movement is ecstatic right now," Fitzgerald said. "We have a president who fully embraces the value and the dignity of human life, especially human life in the womb."
Waiting period in NC
With Republicans in charge at the federal level, some abortion rights activists are focusing their lobbying efforts on state governments.
On Jan. 11, the State Innovation Exchange, a strategy group for liberal state legislators, launched its Reproductive Freedom Leadership Council, a coalition of more than 200 state legislators — including nine from North Carolina.
"With the arrival of an incredibly hostile federal administration to all things reproductive rights, I think that has been an impetus for states to step up and recognize that they have a stronger role to play," said Kelly Baden, director of reproductive rights at the State Innovation Exchange. "If Roe were overturned tomorrow, that means it would revert back to state law, and there are many states that still have the criminalization of abortion on their books."
According to the group, 401 state-level restrictions on abortion have been enacted since 2011.
North Carolina restrictions currently in place, according to the left-leaning Guttmacher Institute, include a 72-hour waiting period before receiving an abortion.
"That’s insulting," said Van Duyn, who joined the Reproductive Freedom Council. "To suggest to a woman who has made that difficult decision, that she needs to go home and think about it for another three days, especially when you have women for whom that’s an economic hardship as well, that’s just, it’s an abuse of power."
State Rep. Graig Meyer, a Democrat from Durham and Orange counties who also signed onto the council, said he’s tired of playing defense on the issue of abortion.
"In North Carolina, we generally only talk about reproductive health care when there’s a bill on the table to restrict abortion access," he said. "And I’ve been inspired by women who have spoken very openly about the importance of this. It has made me believe that we need more voices to be willing to speak up on the side of health care access."
North Carolina’s legislature is unlikely to support the council’s goals with its current ideological balance, which some members of the council hope will change after the 2018 elections.
But Fitzgerald isn’t worried about the council’s impact, even nationally.
"I think it’s a weak attempt to counter the gains the pro-life movement is having right now," she said. "I don’t expect it to have much success given the fact that people now realize with the invention of the 3D ultrasound that babies as early as 12 weeks have a heartbeat, at eight weeks they have hands and toes and fingers — people can now see with their own eyes that unborn babies are humans and that they should have human rights."
Danielle Chemtob: @daniellechemtob
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(c)2018 The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Visit The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.) at www.newsobserver.com
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Read More At: http://www.janniaragon.com/45-years-after-roe-v-wade-the-anti-abortion-movement-has-momentum-in-nc-and-nationally/
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parentsnevertoldus · 4 years
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Abortion Funds
An abortion fund is an organization that will help you pay for your abortion when you can’t afford it. Most are small and volunteer-run. Some dispense money for help with travel, lodging, childcare, doula services, and translation services to improve access to abortion services. These organizations also work to enact policy changes that will increase access to necessary abortion care. 
Different funds have different requirements that qualify applicants to use their money. However, none of the abortion funds listed check for immigration status or proof of citizenship--everyone deserves control over their own reproductive options. Each one is different and the best way to find out their expectations is to call. 
If you need an abortion, follow these steps adapted from the National Network of Abortion Funds:
Find out if you have insurance that covers your abortion. Call your insurance company to ask if abortion is a covered benefit, and ask for an in-network clinic. You can often find their phone number on the back of your insurance card. If you know you have Medicaid, check this information to find out if your state covers abortion.
Make an appointment at a clinic for your abortion before searching for funding. Call different clinics to find which one costs the least. Tell the clinic if you can’t afford it and ask if there are any discounts. It’s fine to make an appointment for your abortion even if you’re not sure how you’ll pay for it. Clinics don’t charge you for rescheduling. Find a clinic.
Add up how much you can cover on your own. Abortion funds often don’t have the money to cover the entire cost of your abortion, so any money you can contribute will be important
Read the instructions before you contact an abortion fund on the list. You’ll find out if you qualify for funding and learn the best way to contact them.
Contact lots of places. There may be more than one local or national abortion fund that can help you with your abortion or other things you need on your way to getting an abortion such as transportation and childcare. Find out what to expect when you call abortion funds.
Keep reading for a list of local abortion funds. 
A Fund, Inc. KY View Fund | Donate
Abortion Access Fund NE View Fund
Abortion Fund of Arizona AZ View Fund | Donate
Abortion Fund of Planned Parenthood of NYC NY View Fund
Abortion Rights Fund of Western Massachusetts MA View Fund | Donate
Abortion Support Network View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Access Fund of Aphrodite Medical NY View Fund
Access Reproductive Care – Southeast GA View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
ACCESS Women’s Health Justice CA View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Baltimore Abortion Fund MD View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Blue Ridge Abortion Fund VA View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Broward Women’s Emergency Fund FL View Fund | Donate
Carolina Abortion Fund NC View Fund | Donate
Cascades Abortion Support Collective OR View Fund | Donate
Chelsea’s Fund (Formerly Women for Women) WY View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Chicago Abortion Fund IL View Fund | Donate
Clinic Access Support Network TX View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
DC Abortion Fund DC View Fund
deProsse Access Fund of the Emma Goldman Clinic IA View Fund
Eastern Massachusetts Abortion Fund MA View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Emergency Medical Assistance Inc. FL View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Florida Access Network FL View Fund | Donate
Fountain Street Church Choice Fund MI View Fund | Donate
Freedom Fund WI View Fund
Freedom Fund (Colorado) CO View Fund | Donate
Frontera Fund View Fund
Fund Texas Choice TX View Fund | Donate
Holler Health Justice WV View Fund | Donate
Hoosier Abortion Fund IN View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
HOTDISH Militia (Hand Over The Decision It’S Healthcare) MN View Fund
Iowa Abortion Access Fund IA View Fund | Donate
Jane Doe Fund MI View Fund
Jane Fund of Central Massachusetts MA View Fund | Donate
Joan Bechhofer Fund NY View Fund | Donate
Justice Fund CA View Fund | Donate
Justice Fund (DC) DC View Fund | Donate
Kansas Abortion Fund KS View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Kentucky Health Justice Network KY View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Lilith Fund TX View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
MARIA Abortion Fund for Social Justice View Fund | Donate
Mississippi Reproductive Freedom Fund MS View Fund | Donate
Missouri Abortion Fund MO View Fund | Donate
National Abortion Federation Hotline View Fund
New Jersey Abortion Access Fund NJ View Fund | Donate
New Mexico Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice NM View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
New Orleans Abortion Fund LA View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
New York Abortion Access Fund NY View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
North Dakota Women in Need Fund ND View Fund | Donate
North Florida Justice Fund FL View Fund
Northwest Abortion Access Fund – Alaska AK View Fund | Donate
Northwest Abortion Access Fund – Idaho ID View Fund | Donate
Northwest Abortion Access Fund – Oregon OR View Fund | Donate
Northwest Abortion Access Fund – Washington WA View Fund | Donate
Options FundWIView Fund
Our Justice’s Abortion Assistance Fund MN View Fund | Donate
Planned Parenthood Keystone Fund for Choice PA View Fund | Donate
Planned Parenthood of Illinois Reproductive Justice Fund IL View Fund | Donate
Preterm OH View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Reproductive Equality Fund of the Boulder Valley Women’s Health Center CO View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Richmond Reproductive Freedom Project VA View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Roe Fund OK View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
South Dakota Access for Every Woman SD View Fund | Donate
Stigma Relief Fund TX View Fund | Donate
Susan Wicklund Fund MT View Fund | Donate
Tennessee Reproductive Action Fund TN View Fund | Donate
Texas Equal Access Fund TX View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Vermont Access to Reproductive Freedom VT View Fund | Donate
West Fund TX View Fund | Donate
Western Pennsylvania Fund for Choice PA View Fund | Donate
Women Have Options OH View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Women Help Women (Does not fund in U.S.) View Fund | Donate
Women in Need Fund WA View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Women on Web View Fund | Donate
Women’s Emergency Network FL View Fund | Donate
Women’s Health and Education Fund RI View Fund | Donate
Women’s Health Specialists – Women in Need Fund CA View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Women’s Medical Fund PA View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
Women’s Medical Fund WI View Fund | Donate
Women’s Reproductive Rights Assistance Project (WRRAP) CA View Fund | Donate | Email Sign Up
WV FREE Choice Fund WV View Fund | Donate
Yellowhammer Fund AL View Fund | Donate
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