Dayton
Daily News...
Committee
hears from ‘Heartbeat’
opponents
December 18, 2011
COLUMBUS
— Opponents of the
“Heartbeat” bill had their say Tuesday before a Senate committee,
including one
witness whose plea for “peace” in the heated debate over abortion drew
a
challenge from Sen. Peggy Lehner, R-Kettering.
Cathy
Levy, an opponent and executive
director of the Ohio Coalition for Religious Choice, got the attention
of
Lehner, who’s on the committee, when Levy urged everyone, in the spirit
of the
holiday season, to attack the problems that lead to abortion, including
abuse,
poverty and addiction.
“Let
us work together, in peace, to
solve root problems and improve our world to create a kingdom of heaven
in our
midst,” said Levy. She urged the committee to oppose the bill and
others that
would “restrict access to the option of a safe, legal, insurable
abortion.”
Lehner,
who opposes abortion, said she
agreed with much of what Levy said but questioned references to peace
when
discussing “ripping an unborn child” apart.
Lehner
said counseling a woman to have
an abortion, from her experience, is the easier choice.
“To
help her give life ... that’s what
peace is really all about,” Lehner said.
Another
hearing of the Health, Human
Services and Aging Committee is set for noon today on House Bill 125,
which
would ban abortion once a human heartbeat is detected and would be the
nation’s
toughest anti-abortion law.
Supporters
testified last week.
Senate
President Tom Niehaus, R-New
Richmond, said he couldn’t say for certain whether the full Senate
would vote
on the bill today, the last floor session this year.
The
House also is scheduled for its
last session of the year today.
The
Senate could wait until returning
in January for a floor vote. However, backers have campaigned for
Senate
passage — with TV ads and even a plane pulling a sign over the
Statehouse —
since the House passed the bill in June.
Niehaus
sounded irked Tuesday after
receiving three pages of proposed changes to the bill from supporters.
“What
I find interesting is that after
months of being berated for not moving the bill, that the bill was
vetted in
the House ... now at the 11th hour they have apparently decided that
some
changes are needed,” Niehaus said.
Janet
Porter, president of
Faith2Action and a prime mover behind the proposal, said the changes
weren’t
major and were crafted to answer questions senators had raised.
Read
this and other articles at the
Dayton Daily News
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