Media Contact: Cat Clark
For Immediate Release
November 9, 2005
Feminists for Life Celebrates Introduction of
Elizabeth Cady Stanton Pregnant and Parenting
Student Services Act of 2005
The Elizabeth Cady Stanton Pregnant and Parenting Student Services
Act of 2005 was introduced by Senator Elizabeth Dole on November 8
as S. 1966, and on November 9 by Congresswoman
Melissa Hart as H.R. 4265.
If passed, the act would establish a pilot program to provide $10 million
for 200 grants to encourage institutions of higher education to establish
and operate a pregnant and parenting student services office. The on-campus
office would serve parenting students, prospective student parents who
are pregnant or imminently anticipating an adoption, and students who
are placing or have placed a child for adoption.
Feminists for Life's President Serrin Foster said, “We are so pleased
that we can share what we have learned from pregnant and parenting students
through our efforts hosting FFL's Pregnancy Resource Forums at top campuses
across the country. Today's parents need creative solutions that challenge
the status quo. Thanks to the leadership of Senator Dole and Congresswoman
Hart, more women, children and families will be better served.”
Research by Guttmacher
Institute, Planned Parenthood's research arm, proves that women of
college age are at highest risk of having an abortion. Forty-five percent
of women who have abortions are of college-age, 18-24 years old. Women
with some college had a pregnancy rate that was lower than average, but
still “had the highest abortion rate of any educational group.”
“The statistics support what pregnant and parenting students have
been telling Feminists for Life for years-that they need more resources
and support,” Foster said. Among women who had abortions, 71% of
18-19 year olds and 58% of 20-24 year olds said having a child would interfere
with their education or career. “We need to listen.”
Participating colleges would be responsible for hosting an initial pregnancy
and parenting resource forum to assess resources on and off campus and
set goals for improved services and access to services including housing,
child care, maternity coverage and riders for additional family members
in any student health care plan, flexible schedules and telecommuting,
resources for pregnant women and children, and counseling. Feminists for
Life's successful Pregnancy Resource Forums served as the model for the
legislation. Schools would annually assess the performance of the office
in meeting the needs of pregnant and parenting students. The college may
allow employees to access these services, too.
The first Pregnancy Resource
Forum was hosted at Georgetown University in 1997 and moderated by
Foster. “We took an inventory of services and decided what was most
needed. Within two years Georgetown trustees set aside nearby housing
for parents, started Hoyas Kids childcare, established a 24-hour hotline,
and cross-trained counselors to address pregnancy resources as well as
sexual assault and domestic violence.” Every year Georgetown hosts
another Pregnancy Resource Forum to see what improvements should be made
next.
Since that first forum, FFL has brought the program to top colleges across
the country, including Harvard, Swarthmore, Berkeley, Stanford, Northwestern,
University of Chicago, Loyola Baltimore and Notre Dame, among others.
Foster shared solutions created at one college with the next. “Every
college built on the others' solutions.”
“Schools can talk about everything else in orientation, classes
and the student newspaper—drinking, drugs, rohypnol, sexual assault,
STDs, domestic violence and gay rights—but they never bring up pregnancy.
When a woman doesn't see anyone else succeeding as a student parent, she
assumes that the administration won't support her. Most often the clinic
automatically refers her to an abortion clinic. There is a better way.”
In 1999, Feminists for Life's Pregnancy Resource Forums inspired
similar legislation by Michigan women legislators—both
Democrats and Republicans of the House and Senate. Foster told them about
the needs of pregnant and parenting students and the success of FFL's
groundbreaking program. The Michigan legislation offered an incentive
to schools to provide pregnant and parenting students a single location
on campus where they can acquire information about prenatal care, foster
care, adoption, and other services. Designed to debut at four Michigan
schools, the law was overwhelmingly supported by both pro-life and pro-choice
legislators and signed
into law by the pro-choice Governor Granholm.
“We have found that when you listen to the unmet needs of women
and focus on identifying and creating resources on- and off-campus, people
will stop yelling at each other and start working together to solve the
problems that drive women to abortion.”
University of Virginia students started a babysitting service. Pro-life
students raised funds and placed diaper decks in men's and women's rooms
all over campus to support more than 1,000 student parents enrolled at
Berkeley each year. Wellesley pro-life and pro-choice students recently
collaborated in a rummage sale to benefit pregnant and parenting mothers.
“Many women want to have children earlier again, for health reasons,
but when a woman is in a 6- or 8-year doctoral program with her husband,
it can be very difficult. We can make this easier for them,” said
Foster. “Elizabeth Cady Stanton would have been
proud to know that she still inspires action today.” The bill is
named for the mother of the women's
movement, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, who was also the mother of seven
children. “Stanton was a revolutionary who consistently advocated
for the rights of women, women's education, the celebration and acceptance
of motherhood, and the protection of our children-born and unborn.”
Feminists for Life gives colleges and universities the tools to
provide the 'rest of the choices.' We are sparking a new revolution on
campus. The legislation introduced by Senator
Dole and Congresswoman Hart can put solutions into hyperdrive. They too
walk in the footsteps of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, said Foster.
Read more about FFLU—our
dream campus. To host an FFL speaker or Pregnancy Resource Forum on
your campus, contact info@feministsforlife.org.