Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Push to defund Planned Parenthood hit other clinics, who are now suing

Must read

Introduction to the Issue

By PATRICK WHITTLE and GEOFF MULVIHILL

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — An item in Republicans’ sweeping policy and tax bill intended to block Medicaid dollars from flowing to Planned Parenthood, the nation’s biggest abortion provider, is also hitting a major medical provider in Maine.

Maine Family Planning filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration Wednesday seeking to restore the reimbursements.

Accessing health care in Maine — one of the Northeast’s poorest states and its most rural — is a challenge in areas far from population centers such as Portland and Bangor.

Vanessa Shields-Haas, a nurse practitioner, said the organization’s clinics have been seeing all patients as usual and completing Medicaid paperwork for visits — but not submitting it because it appears the provision took effect as soon as the law was signed.

“Knowing how hard it is to access care in this state, not allowing these community members to access their care, it’s cruel,” Shields-Haas said.

Show Caption

1 of 4

Flyers and documents are posted on a patient bulletin board in an examination room at the Maine Family Planning healthcare facility, July 15, 2025, in Thomaston, Maine. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Expand

## Impact on Clinics Beyond Planned Parenthood
### Maine Clinics Appear to be Only Others Included in Cuts

Republican lawmakers targeted Planned Parenthood in one piece of what President Donald Trump dubbed the “big beautiful” bill that Congress passed and the president signed earlier this month.

While advocates focused on Planned Parenthood, the bill did not mention it by name. Instead, it cut off reimbursements for organizations that are primarily engaged in family planning services — which generally include things such as contraception, abortion, and pregnancy tests — and received more than $800,000 from Medicaid in 2023.

The U.S. Senate’s parliamentarian rejected a 2017 effort to defund Planned Parenthood because it was written to exclude all other providers by barring payments only to groups that received more than $350 million a year in Medicaid funds. The not-for-profit Maine organization asserts in its legal challenge that the threshold was lowered to $800,000 this time around to make sure Planned Parenthood would not be the only affected entity.

It is the only other organization that has come forward publicly to say that its funding is at risk, too.

Federal law already bars taxpayer money from covering most abortions. Instead, the money in question involves other health services, such as cancer screenings and tests, and treatment for sexually transmitted infections.

### Proponents’ View

Proponents of that wrinkle in the law say abortion providers use Medicaid money for other services to subsidize abortion.

“This has never been just about Planned Parenthood,” Autumn Christensen, vice president of public policy for Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, said in a statement. “It’s about any Big Abortion business or network that performs abortions. Taxpayers should never be forced to prop up an industry that profits from ending human lives.”

## The Role of Maine Family Planning
### Beyond Abortion Services

Maine Family Planning operates 18 clinics across the state.

In 2024, it had about 7,200 family planning patients, plus another 645 who obtained abortions. Services include pregnancy testing, contraception, family planning counseling, breast exams, cancer screenings, and treatment of sexually transmitted infections.

Some of the sites also offer primary care services, where there are another 600 or so patients. There are about 800 gender-affirming care patients and about 200 who use its upstart mobile clinic, said George Hill, the president and CEO of the organization.

Hill said that for about two-thirds of its patients, Maine Family Planning is the only place they get medical care in a typical year.

About half of the patients not seeking abortions are enrolled in Medicaid, and the clinics have been receiving about $1.9 million a year in reimbursements, which accounts for about one-fourth of the organization’s budget.

### Challenges in Rural Areas

“It’s a difficult state to provide care in and now we’re facing this,” Hill said. In its lawsuit, the group says it has enough reserves to keep seeing patients covered by Medicaid without reimbursement only through October.

Maine Family Planning says that if it had to turn away patients, it would be more complicated for them than simply finding another provider. There aren’t enough in rural areas, the group notes — and many don’t accept Medicaid.

One patient, Ashley Smith, said she started going to Maine Family Planning about five years ago when she could not find other health care she could afford. While she’s not enrolled in Medicaid, she fears clinics could be shuttered because of cuts.

“I am so worried that if my clinic closes, I don’t know what I’ll do or if I’ll be able to see another provider,” Smith said.

## Legal Challenge
### Violation of Equal Protection

The Center for Reproductive Rights, which is representing Maine Family Planning in the challenge, says in its legal filing that the defunding denies it equal protection under the law because it would have funding cut off, but organizations that provide similar services would not.

“The administration would rather topple a statewide safety network than let a patient get a cancer screening at a facility that also offers abortion care,” Meetra Mehdizadeh, a Center for Reproductive Rights lawyer, said in an interview.

Planned Parenthood already sued and won a reprieve from a judge, preventing its Medicaid payments cutoff — at least until July 21 — while a court considers that case.

Planned Parenthood has warned that the law could put 200 of its affiliates’ roughly 600 clinics across the U.S. at risk of closing.

## Conclusion
The push to defund Planned Parenthood has inadvertently affected other clinics, such as Maine Family Planning, which are now fighting back with lawsuits. The situation highlights the complexities of healthcare funding and the challenges faced by rural communities in accessing essential services. As the legal battles unfold, the future of these clinics and the wellbeing of their patients hang in the balance.

## FAQs
– **Q: What is the main issue with the new policy and tax bill?**
– A: The bill cuts off Medicaid reimbursements for organizations primarily engaged in family planning services, including abortion, and received over $800,000 from Medicaid in 2023.
– **Q: Which organizations are affected by this bill?**
– A: Planned Parenthood and Maine Family Planning are the two organizations publicly known to be affected by this funding cut.
– **Q: What services does Maine Family Planning provide beyond abortion?**
– A: Maine Family Planning offers a range of services including pregnancy testing, contraception, family planning counseling, breast exams, cancer screenings, treatment for sexually transmitted infections, primary care services, and gender-affirming care.
– **Q: Why is this funding cut particularly challenging for rural areas like Maine?**
– A: Rural areas have limited access to healthcare providers, and many of these providers do not accept Medicaid, making it difficult for patients to find alternative care if clinics like Maine Family Planning are forced to close or reduce services.

- Advertisement -spot_img

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest article