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FEMINISTS
FOR LIFE CELEBRATES
THIRTEEN YEARS OF ACTIVISM FOR WOMEN
Since
the Washington, D.C., office opened in 1994
and a new executive director (now president) Serrin Foster was hired to
lead Feminists for Life,
FFL has successfully and uniquely worked to address
the root causes that drive women to abortion.
Through our work
for low-income women:
- FFL was the only
pro-life group active in a unique coalition of women's groups to
successfully fight child exclusion provisions in welfare reform supported
by President Bill Clinton and a Republican Congress. (The "family
cap" was later tested on poor women and teens in New Jersey and
proven to significantly increase abortions.)
- FFL was the only
pro-life and women's group to actively champion the New York state
model program to help working poor pregnant women receive prenatal care
through the State Child Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) under both
President Clinton and President George W. Bush. SCHIP was successfully
implemented by a resolution under President Bush.
Through our work
to reduce poverty among women and children, prevent coerced abortions
due to threats to withhold child support, and instead encourage the active
support of fathers in the lives of their children:
- FFL was the only
pro-life group to successfully advocate for the Enhanced Child Support
Enforcement Act of 1996, which will help streamline the collection and
distribution of child support, establish uniform laws governing interstate
child support cases, and expand penalties for child support delinquency.
- FFL educated women
and men to the rights and responsibilities of fathers through our "What
Women Really Want" brochure, articles in The American Feminist®
and our website (www.feministsforlife.org).
- FFL published the
first-ever comprehensive pregnancy resource directory in the country
in 1994. The self-help directory covered services in Washington, D.C.,
Virginia and Maryland.
Through our work
to prevent violence against women and pregnant women:
- FFL was the only
pro-life group in the National Task Force on Sexual Assault and
Domestic Violence to work successfully for the Violence Against Women
Act, which was passed in 1994.
- FFL was the only
feminist group to support Laci and Connor's Law, also known as the
Unborn Victims of Violence Act. C-SPAN carried live coverage of FFL
President Serrin Foster as she testified before Congress in support
of this Act. President Bush signed it into law in 2004.
- FFL was a charter
member of a coalition against sex trafficking. (1995)
Through our work
to prevent the coercion of women into unwanted abortions:
- FFL was the only
pro-life group that worked with the ACLU to successfully sue the National
Honor Society for denying admission to two teenage moms (1999) and to
speak out in support of a pregnancy discrimination lawsuit in New York
in 2006.
- FFL consulted on
the groundbreaking Coercive Abortion Prevention Act introduced by Michigan
women legislators in 2006. The five-bill package identifies very specific
forms of coercion from financial threats to physical violence, which
could result in jail time and/or fines.
Through our revolutionary
work to meet the needs of college-age women, who are at highest risk
of abortion, and redirect the debate towards action for women, through
the ongoing development of the FFL College Outreach Program from 1994
to present:
- FFL speakers delivered
lectures across the country at top Ivy League, big state, women's and
Catholic collegesto positive response from both pro-life and pro-choice
students and faculty. (1994-present)
- FFL worked with
both pro-life and pro-choice stakeholders to develop and launch
resource kits for student leaders, advisors, counselors, health clinics
and libraries.
- FFL hosted the
first-ever FFL Pregnancy Resource Forum in 1997 and developed creative
tools to evaluate and spark discussion about the lack of services for
pregnant and parenting students, including FFL's Pregnancy Resource
Surveysm in 1998, resulting in concrete
improvements on top campuses across the country.
- FFL created a model
for the future, FFLU, to give schools a vision of what could be accomplished.
(2005)
- FFL's Question
Abortion® and Women Deserve
Better® ad campaigns reached
5 million students from 1996 to present.
- FFL President Serrin
Foster's landmark speech was recognized in 2002 as one of 22 pivotal
speeches on Women's Rights in the anthology series "Great
Speeches in History."
- A report by Planned
Parenthood's research arm, Guttmacher Institute, revealed that in the
10 years since FFL began our College Outreach Program in 1994, there
was a dramatic 30% decrease in abortions among college-educated women.
By helping to introduce
legislation to put into hyper-drive pro-woman solutions on campus:
- FFL's work inspired
Michigan legislation, which was overwhelmingly supported by Democrats
and Republicans in the House and Senate and signed by the pro-choice
Governor in 2004.
- FFL worked to introduce
the Elizabeth Cady Stanton Pregnant and Parenting Student Services Act
(2005-06), which, if passed, would provide $10 million in grants to
200 colleges and universities for annual pregnancy and parenting resource
forums and a central office to coordinate and promote ongoing resources
and support on and off campus.
- FFL held the first-ever
Capitol Hill briefing on the needs of 4.5 million parenting students,
and millions of students who become pregnant and need resources and
support for marital and single parenting choices and various adoption
options. (2006)
By walking our
talk:
- FFL set the example
for small employers and nonprofits through our telecommuting and televolunteering
office.
IMPACT
FFL's feminist name,
our pro-woman message, our demonstrated support for women and our saying
"yes" to life-affirming solutions have earned us credentials
with the media and the pro-choice and pro-life students we are trying
to reach.
Because of FFL's message
and education about our nation's rich pro-life feminist history, the pro-life
movement has become better at articulating support for women.
- Many now educate
others about Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and their suffragist
colleagues, who condemned abortion as exploitative and anti-woman.
- Many are now using
strategies similar to FFL's on college campuses, and some are taking
direct services to the next level.
- Others are using
FFL language and strategies on Capitol Hill, at the United Nations,
and even in the entertainment community.
The leadership of
celebrities like two-time Emmy winner, New York Times best-selling
author and Feminists for Life Honorary Chair Patricia Heaton, Co-Chair
Margaret Colin and others has given FFL increased visibility and put a
fresh face on the pro-life feminist movement. We are the "red carpet
organization" welcoming those who want to help us redirect the polarized
abortion debate toward envisioning and advocating better solutions for
women.
Because of our track
record and the credibility we have earned, FFL has received overwhelmingly
positive press from the mainstream medialiberal and conservative,
religious and secular-and pro-life press for the last 12 years. This was
demonstrated vividly when FFL's connection with Jane Sullivan Roberts,
whose husband now serves as Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, was
revealed in the press. Jane was FFL's former executive vice president
and continues to serve as counsel.
FFL's messagethat
Women Deserve Better-has become the rallying cry of those in the
pro-life movement and the catch-phase of pro-choice activists who recognize
that endless polarized debates do not help women and children. The Women
Deserve Better idea is redirecting the debate towards women-centered solutions.
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