Media contact:
Tara Murtha – [email protected]
Overview
Women’s Law Project leverages state legal and constitutional power to advance gender equity and justice.
On January 16, 2019, represented by attorneys from the Women’s Law Project; attorney David S. Cohen; Planned Parenthood Federation of America; and a private law firm, a group of Pennsylvania abortion providers filed a lawsuit challenging the state statute that bans abortion coverage through the Pennsylvania Medicaid program.
The central claims of Allegheny Reproductive Health Center v. Pennsylvania Department of Human Services are that the state’s Medicaid abortion coverage ban violates the Equal Rights Amendment and equal protection provisions of the Pennsylvania Constitution.
In January 2024, Women’s Law Project achieved a landmark victory hailed as “the strongest rebuke to Dobbs yet” after successfully petitioning Pennsylvania Supreme Court to overturn a 1985 precedent that effectively blocked abortion restrictions from being challenged as sex discrimination under the Pennsylvania Equal Rights Amendment.
In the ruling, the Court declared Pennsylvania’s statutory ban on Medicaid coverage of abortion “presumptively unconstitutional” under the new Allegheny Repro precedent, which restores the full breadth of the Pennsylvania Equal Rights of Amendment of 1971–which means abortion restrictions can be challenged as sex discrimination under the Pennsylvania Constitution.

The Allegheny Repro litigation team after presenting oral arguments in Commonwealth Court, 2025
Latest News
July 2025: Oral Arguments in Commonwealth Court to be Rescheduled
The Court notified us that we will re-argue sometime in fall 2025 to allow newly elected Attorney General Dave Sunday to present his defense of the ban.
February 2025: Oral Argument before Commonwealth Court
On February 5, the WLP litigation team led by Executive Director Susan J. Frietsche, Senior Staff Attorney Christine Castro, and Drexel law professor David S. Cohen presented oral arguments before Commonwealth Court.
January 2024: Victory at the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
On January 29, 2024, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued a lengthy and ruling that represents a huge legal victory for Pennsylvania abortion providers and a step closer to reproductive freedom for Pennsylvanians.
The Court did not overturn the state Medicaid ban. Instead, the Justices sent the case back to Commonwealth Court with instructions for that court to apply the new precedent.
This ruling paves the way to successfully eliminating the Medicaid ban by:
- reversing Fischer, the decades-old precedent that improperly locked our state court’s doors to challenging abortion restrictions including the Medicaid ban as sex-based discrimination
- recognizing abortion restrictions can be considered sex-based discrimination
- asserting Pennsylvania’s Medicaid ban is “presumptively unconstitutional,” and
- revitalizing the Pennsylvania Equal Rights Amendment of 1971, which returns the full breadth of the state constitutional right to be free of sex-based discrimination to Pennsylvanians for the first time in decades.
We also won on the issues of standing and intervention. The Court reversed the lower court’s erroneous ruling on standing and reaffirmed abortion providers have the right to represent the interests of patients in court. The Court also reversed the lower court’s erroneous ruling on intervention and rejected the request of a self-selected group of anti-abortion state lawmakers who sought to gain the privileges of being direct parties in the case.
Progress on Asserting Reproductive Autonomy as a Fundamental Right in Pennsylvania:
Two of the five Justices of the Court that ruled in this case explicitly asserted that our state constitution “secures the fundamental right to reproductive autonomy, which includes a right to decide whether to have an abortion or to carry a pregnancy to term.”
A third Justice called that opinion “incredibly insightful,” but decided that resolving that question was not required by this case.
The two Justices who found a right to abortion spoke eloquently about its connection to privacy: “Whether or not to give birth is likely the most personal and consequential decision imaginable in the human experience. Any self-determination is dependent on the right to make that decision.”
In 1985, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that the coverage ban enacted via the Abortion Control Act was constitutional in a case called Fischer v. Department of Public Welfare. Allegheny Repro sought to and successfully overturned Fischer, a bad precedent that upheld the Medicaid ban in 1985 and inappropriately restricted the Pennsylvania Equal Rights Amendment from applying to most situations in which it was intended to apply.
- February 5, 2024: Oral arguments were presented at Commonwealth Court
- January 29, 2024: The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania overturned Fischer and sent the case back to Commonwealth Court
- October 26, 2022: Oral arguments took place in the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
- October 13, 2021: Provider-appellants filed opening briefs with the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
- March 26, 2021: Commonwealth Court issued a ruling
- October 14, 2020: Oral arguments took place in Commonwealth Court
- January 16, 2019: ARHC v. PA DHS was filed in Commonwealth Court
- 1985: The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania upholds the Medicaid ban in Fischer v. Department of Public Welfare
- 1982: Fischer litigation is filed to challenge the Medicaid ban
- 1982: Pennsylvania enacted the Abortion Control Act, banning Medicaid from covering abortion care except in very narrow circumstances (“the Medicaid ban” or “the coverage ban”)
Initial Case Documents (January, 2019)
Petition for Review (January 16, 2019)
Affidavit – Terri-Ann Thompson, PhD, Ibis Reproductive Health
Affidavit – Sarah Noble, MD, MPH, Board-certified psychologist based in Pennsylvania
Affidavit – Courtney Schreiber, MD, MPH, Division Chief and Medical
Director at the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania
Affidavit – Colleen Heflin, Professor of Public Administration and International
Affairs and a Senior Research Associate in the Center for Policy Research at the
Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University
Affidavit – Elicia Gonzales, former Executive Director, Abortion Liberation Fund (formerly Women’s Medical Fund)
PA GOP House & Senate Intervention Requests (Spring 2019)
Pennsylvania House Republicans Application to Intervene (April 17 2019)
Pennsylvania Senate Republicans Application to Intervene (April 17, 2019)
Answer to Application to Intervene Pennsylvania House (May 8, 2019)
Answer to Application to Intervene Pennsylvania Senate (May 8, 2019)
Opinion (June 21, 2019)
Petitioners’ Brief in Opposition to Preliminary Objections filed May 15, 2020
The state and a small group of legislators have asked the court to dismiss the case because of a 1985 precedent. In this brief, WLP and our cooperating attorneys argue Pennsylvania’s ban on Medicaid coverage of abortion unconstitutionally discriminates against pregnant women enrolled in Medical Assistance who choose to have an abortion. It does so on the basis of their sex and on the basis of their choice to exercise their fundamental right to terminate their pregnancy. Petitioners outline why the lone precedential ruling upholding the ban was wrongly decided and should be overruled. Petitioners also assert that striking down a state law as unconstitutional would not, as House Intervenor-Respondents also contend, relieve the General Assembly and all other state actors from complying with federal law because the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution compels such compliance.
Amici Curiae supporting Petitioners filed May 15, 2020
Amici curiae are advocates for reproductive justice including New Voices for Reproductive Justice and 24 additional Pennsylvania-based and national organizations advocating for Black women and girls. Amici submit this brief in support of petitioners to amplify the importance of reproductive justice, the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, reproduction, and ability to form our families. In this brief, amici argue that the state-enforced Medicaid ban on covering abortion care has consequences for all Medicaid beneficiaries in Pennsylvania, but those consequences fall more heavily on Black women and girls.
National Health Law Program brief:
Amicus curiae the National Health Law Program (NHeLP) is a 50-year-old public interest organization that works to advance access to quality health care, including the full range of reproductive health care services, and protect the legal rights of low-income and underserved individuals. NHeLP submits this brief to provide the Court with relevant background information regarding the Medicaid program and to correct several misstatements the Intervenors made in prior briefing in this case. For example, Intervenors suggest that if Pennsylvania is forced to cover abortion services, it could choose to terminate coverage of family planning services and supplies to save money. That is not the case. If Pennsylvania were to terminate or substantially reduce coverage of family planning services, it would violate the Medicaid Act, putting all of its Medicaid funding at risk.
Members of the Democratic Caucuses of the Pennsylvania House and Senate Brief:
Amici Curiae are 47 Democratic members of the Pennsylvania General Assembly. Amici believe Pennsylvania’s Coverage Ban unconstitutionally restricts low-income women covered under the Pennsylvania Medical Assistance program from obtaining an abortion in violation of the Pennsylvania Equal Rights Amendment, Article I, Section 28 (“ERA”) and the guarantees of equal protection under Article 1, Sections 1 and 26 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. Amici have an interest in this case because the questions before this Court involve issues of separation of powers between the three branches of State government and the constitutional interpretation of a state statute restricting low-income women from obtaining health care services.
Pennsylvania Religious Coalition for Reproductive Justice brief:
Amici Curiae is the Pennsylvania Religious Coalition for Reproductive Justice (PRCRJ) is the Pennsylvania affiliate of the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (RCRC). PARCRJ’s mission is to educate, serve, witness and advocate for reproductive justice as a spiritual and moral issue. Amici argue that any genuine efforts to protect the health and well-being of pregnant women must allow for those seeking abortions to have access to safe and affordable abortion care.
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania Ruling (March 26, 2021)
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania Opinion:
The Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania ruling cleared the way to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, the only court with the power to lift the Medicaid ban. The court also determined that abortion providers cannot challenge abortion restrictions on behalf of their patients. This ruling on the legal doctrine of “standing” defied well-established precedent going back decades. Judge Ellen Ceisler dissented from the portion of the ruling regarding standing.
Appellants File Opening Brief with PA Supreme Court (October 13, 2021)
Plaintiff-appellants brief filed to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania:
The central claim in the case is that the state’s Medicaid abortion coverage ban violates the Equal Rights Amendment and equal protection provisions of the Pennsylvania Constitution. In 1985, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that the coverage ban was constitutional in a case called Fischer v. Department of Public Welfare. Petitioners seek a court order overruling the 1985 Fischer decision, recognizing reproductive autonomy rights as a fundamental right, and restoring Medicaid coverage of abortion.
Amicus Curiae File Briefs with PA Supreme Court (October 13, 2021)
New Voices for Reproductive Justice et. al. brief:
Amici curiae are 23 organizations working in Pennsylvania and the U.S. to ensure Reproductive Justice and the health and well-being of Black women and girls. Lead amicus New Voices for Reproductive Justice (“New Voices”) is a Pennsylvania non-profit organization that works through leadership development, community organizing, policy advocacy, and culture change to amplify the voices of Black women and girls, who demand and deserve access to quality and culturally responsive health care. In this brief, amici argue that the Coverage Ban violates the Pennsylvania Constitution and particularly harms Black women and girls.
National Health Law Program brief:
Amicus curiae the National Health Law Program (NHeLP) is a 50-year-old public interest organization that works to advance access to quality health care, including the full range of reproductive health care services, and protect the legal rights of low-income and underserved individuals. NHeLP submits this brief to provide the Court with relevant background information regarding the Medicaid program and to correct several misstatements the Intervenors made in prior briefing in this case. For example, Intervenors suggest that if Pennsylvania is forced to cover abortion services, it could choose to terminate coverage of family planning services and supplies to save money. That is not the case. If Pennsylvania were to terminate or substantially reduce coverage of family planning services, it would violate the Medicaid Act, putting all of its Medicaid funding at risk.
National Women’s Law Center brief:
Amicus curiae is the National Women’s Law Center, a nonprofit legal advocacy organization founded in 1972 dedicated to the advancement and protection of the legal rights and opportunities of women, girls, and all who face sex discrimination. Amicus argue that the Commonwealth Court was wrong as a matter of law that abortion providers lack standing to assert the rights of their patients. Amicus urges this Court address the obstacles that prevent many abortion patients from advancing their rights in court—obstacles that are heightened for those in need of Medical Assistance. These obstacles include forgoing their right to privacy—risking stigmatization, harassment, and the threat of violence—to litigate their case.
Members of the Democratic Caucuses of the Pennsylvania Senate and House of Representatives brief:
Amici curiae are Democratic members of the Pennsylvania General Assembly. Amici believe Pennsylvania’s Coverage Ban unconstitutionally restricts low-income women covered under the Pennsylvania Medical Assistance program from obtaining an abortion in violation of the Pennsylvania Equal Rights Amendment, Article I, Section 28 (“ERA”) and the guarantees of equal protection under Article 1, Sections 1 and 26 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. Amici Curiae submit the brief in support of the Appellants so that the Court may hear perspectives from legislators not represented by Republican Legislative Intervenors, who do not have standing to intervene in this matter, and to expand upon the greater protections afforded to our citizens by the Pennsylvania Constitution.
ACLU and professors Seth Kramer and Robert Williams brief:
Amici curiae urge this Court to correct the errors of Fischer v. Department of Public Welfare, which is inconsistent with the robust rights to privacy and autonomy in modern Pennsylvania constitutional law. This Court has both the duty and authority to interpret the Pennsylvania Constitution independently of Federal law, and it must interpret the Pennsylvania Constitution to preserve the greatest freedom and autonomy for the people of Pennsylvania.
Medical Organizations and Healthcare Providers brief:
Amici curiae are medical organizations and healthcare providers. Amici argue that the Commonwealth Court erred in holding that the Reproductive Health Centers lack standing to advance the constitutional rights of their patients under the Pennsylvania ERA and equal protection provisions. The Court misapplied the test for standing, ignored its own precedent, and wrongly distinguished persuasive federal law. The Court’s opinion is also based on a fundamental misunderstanding about the role of abortion providers in supporting their patients. The Court’s incorrect opinion has far-reaching implications for Pennsylvania’s healthcare professionals, impacting their ability to advocate for their patients and promote their patients’ interests.
National Council of Jewish Women, Catholics for Choice, and other Faith-based Organizations brief:
Amici curiae are national and Pennsylvania-based organizations from a broad range of religious traditions and faiths. As faith-based organizations concerned with protecting the rights of women to worship or not as they choose, and to make their own decisions on matters of personal importance, amici have supported and will continue to support the principle that decisions before the point of viability about whether to take a pregnancy to term should belong to the women – all of them, poor or not — who will live with the consequences of their choices. These reproductive decisions are uniquely personal and informed by conscience.
Pennsylvania ratified the Equal Rights Amendment (“ERA”) in 1971 to incorporate modern principles of sex equality into the fabric of the state’s fundamental law. In so doing, Pennsylvania expressly disavowed legal measures that discriminate on their face on the basis of sex, that embrace outdated, stereotypic notions of women’s proper role as wife and mother, and that undermine the very possibility of sex equality in the workplace and other aspects of public life. The Pennsylvania Abortion Control Act (“Coverage Ban”) violates the state ERA in several ways: by funding different, and worse, health care services for women based on sex, and by embracing and perpetuating outmoded gendered stereotypes identity, role in society, and autonomy to make fundamental decisions about one’s reproductive life. Even worse, the Coverage Ban functionally relegates low-income women and pregnant people generally to second-class status. For these reasons, the Coverage Ban should be declared invalid.
Pennsylvania & Intervenors File Briefs with PA Supreme Court (December, 2021)
Pennsylvania Department of Human Services Brief
Pennsylvania Senate Intervenors Principal Brief
Pennsylvania House Intervenors Brief
Amicus Curiae File Briefs Supporting Pennsylvania (December, 2021)
Republican Caucus Members brief
Organizations and Leaders in the Black Community
Life Legal Defense Foundation brief
Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation brief
American Center for Law & Justice brief
New Wave Feminists & Feminists Choosing Life brief
Americans United for Life brief
Appellant’s File Reply Brief (January, 2022)
February 16, 2025: Bucks County Beacon: Pennsylvania Isn’t Quite the Abortion Sanctuary State That Reproductive Rights Advocates Want it to Be
February 14, 2025: Keystone Newsroom: PA medicaid abortion exclusion deemed “presumptively unconstitutional”
February 5, 2025: WESA-FM: Battle over Pennsylvania’s Medicaid abortion restrictions returns to court
February 5, 2025: Ms. Magazine: Rolling Up Our Sleeves, Part 3: Fighting the Trump Administration with State Constitutions
February 5, 2025: Law360: Pa. Dept.’s Switch On Abortion Funding Leaves Court Unsure
January 15, 2025: Pittsburgh Citypaper: Abortion rights in Pa. could run through fall’s judicial election
February 29, 2024: State Court Report: State Equal Rights Amendments Can Protect Reproductive Rights Post-Dobbs
February 14, 2024: State Courts Report: Pennsylvania Supreme Court Ruling Overturns Harmful Precedent in Abortion Ruling
February 14, 2024: NY Review of Books: Abortion Rights as Equal Rights
February 12, 2024: The Quad: Pennsylvania Supreme Court Challenges Lower Courts to Review Their Anti-Abortion Legislation
February 10, 2024: MSN: Pennsylvania Court Rejection of Abortion Ban Signals. NewApproach to Reproductive Rights
February 4, 2024: Bloomberg: Pennsylvania Supreme Court Takes Aim at Politics of Cruelty
February 2, 2024: MSN: Pennsylvania Supreme Court Rules Abortion Restrictions as Sex Discrimination
February 1, 2024: NorthCentral PA: Pennsylvania launches new women’s healthcare program
February 1. 2024: Bucks County Beacon: Pennsylvania Supreme Court Opens Path To Striking Down Discriminatory Ban On Medicaid-Funded Abortions
February 1, 2024: USA Today/Go Erie: A new Pa. Supreme Court ruling could change abortion access in the state. Here’s how.
February 1, 2024: Philadelphia Inquirer: Abortion rights scored a victory in Pa. court, but the fight is far from over
February 1, 2024: The Advocate: Abortion restrictions amount to sex-based discrimination, state Supreme Court says
February 1, 2024: Rewire News: Pennsylvania Just Got Closer to Declaring the Right to Abortion
January 31, 2024: The Tablet: Pa. Supreme Court Overturns State Court Decision on Medicaid Funding for Abortions
January 31, 2014: Ms. Magazine: OP-ED:The Anti-Abortion Movement Is in Crisis Communications Mode
January 30, 2024: Valley Ledger News: Schlossberg Welcomes PA Supreme Court Healthcare Decision
January 30, 2024: Slate: A State Supreme Court Just Issued the Most Devastating Rebuke of Dobbs Yet
January 30, 2024: Feminist Majority Foundation: Pennsylvania Equal Rights Amendment Provides Win for Abortion Access
January 30, 2024: Erie News Now: Elective Abortions Have Chance for Medicaid Coverage after PA Supreme Court Ruling Opens Doors
January 30, 2024: WKOK: Court Stops Short of Recognizing Abortion as Right
January 30, 2024: Jurist: Pennsylvania Supreme Court orders reconsideration of Medicaid abortion coverage limits
January 30, 2024: Ms. Magazine: Pennsylvania ERA Applies to Abortion Restrictions, Says State Supreme Court: ‘This Is a Big Victory’
January 30, 2024: ABC6 Action News: Pa. Supreme Court revives case challenging Medicaid abortion limits
January 30, 2024: CBS News: Pennsylvania Supreme Court revives case challenging limits on Medicaid coverage for abortions
January 29, 2024: Toronto Star: Pennsylvania high court revives case challenging limits on Medicaid coverage for abortions
January 29, 2024: The Bradford Era: Pa. Supreme Court ruling on abortion access draws mixed reaction
January 29, 2024: Penn Capital-Star: Pa. Supreme Court sets ‘high hurdle’ for commonwealth’s Medicaid abortion ban
January 29, 2014: Keystone Newsroom: Pennsylvania Supreme Court says abortion care is protected by the state constitution
January 29, 2024: Keystone Gazette: Pa. Supreme Court rules state Constitution provides fundamental right to reproductive autonomy
January 29, 2024: WHYY: Pa. Supreme Court allows challenge to 1982 law prohibiting Medicaid payments for abortions
January 29, 2024: The Center Square: High court brushes up against constitutional abortion access
January 29, 2024: The New Republic: Pennsylvania Supreme Court Sets Up Showdown on Medicaid Abortion Ban
January 29, 2024: Washington Post: Pennsylvania high court revives case challenging limits on Medicaid coverage for abortions
January 29, 2024: Lehigh Valley News: Reaction divided as Pa. Supreme Court revives case that limits Medicaid coverage of abortion
January 29, 2024: The Guardian: Pennsylvania case challenging ban on Medicaid abortions back in court
January 29, 2024: Law360: Pa. High Court Revives Challenge To Medicaid Abortion Ban
January 29, 2024: PennLive: Pa. Supreme Court ruling on abortion access draws mixed reaction
January 29, 2024: TruthOut: PA Supreme Court Expresses Doubts Over State’s Anti-Abortion Medicaid Law
January 29, 2024: City & State PA: What Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court abortion ruling means
January 29, 2024: Bloomberg Law: Abortion Providers Get Second Go at Undoing Medicaid Exclusion
January 29, 2024: WITF-FM: YOUTUBE: Medicaid coverage for abortions court case
January 29, 2024: WGAL-TV: YOUTUBE: Pennsylvania high court revives case challenging limits on Medicaid coverage for abortions
January 29, 2024: WHTM-TV: YOUTUBE: Pa. Supreme Court sets aside 1985 ruling that banned Medicaid funding for abortion, legal case review
January 29, 2024: WTAJ-TV News: YOUTUBE: Pennsylvania high court revives case challenging limits on Medicaid coverage for abortions
January 29, 2024: WENA-NEWS: YOUTUBE: Elective Abortions Might Get Covered by Medicaid after PA Supreme Court Ruling Opens Doors
January 29, 2024: PoliticsPA: Reproductive Rights and Medicaid at Center of PA Supreme Court Ruling
January 29, 2024: NPR: Pennsylvania high court revives a case challenging Medicaid limits for abortions
January 29, 2024: Pennsylvania Capital-Star: Pa. Supreme Court sets ‘high hurdle’ for commonwealth’s Medicaid abortion ban
January 29, 2024: Washington Examiner: Pennsylvania Supreme Court makes key decision on abortion rights
January 29, 2024: The Hill: Pennsylvania Supreme Court clears way for challenge to ban on Medicaid abortion coverage
January 29, 2024: CBS/KDKA News: Pennsylvania Supreme Court revives case challenging limits on Medicaid coverage for abortions
January 29, 2024: SpotlightPA: Pa. Supreme Court sets the stage to consider whether the state constitution protects abortion
January 29, 2024: Philadelphia Inquirer: Pa. Supreme Court sets up a showdown over whether abortion is a right protected by the state constitution
January 29, 2024: Pittsburgh Tribune: Pa. Supreme Court returns Medicaid-funded abortion case to lower court
January 29: 2024: CityCast Pittsburgh: AUDIO: PA Supreme Court’s Abortion Ruling, Explained
January 29, 2024: Abortion Every Day: In the States
January 29, 2024: NBC Philadelphia: Pennsylvania high court revives case challenging limits on Medicaid coverage for abortions
June 29, 2023: Penn Capital-Star: Say no to the status quo: It’s time to fight for a better post-Roe Pennsylvania
October 27, 2022: NBC Philadelphia: Abortion Providers Challenge Medicaid Ban in Pa.
October 26, 2022: Associated Press: Abortion providers challenge Medicaid ban in Pennsylvania
October 26, 2022: Law 360: Clinics Want Pa. Justices To Revisit Abortion-Funding Ban
October 26, 2022: Legal Intelligencer: Pennsylvania Justices Eye 37-Year-Old Precedent in Challenge to Abortion Coverage Ban
July 13, 2022: PennLive: Abortion rights and the Pennsylvania constitution: Here’s what to know
July 12, 2022: Philadelphia Inquirer: The latest battle over abortion rights in Pa. is all about the state constitution. Here’s what to know.
June 23, 2022: Ms. Magazine: The Equal Rights Amendment Will Help Protect Abortion Rights
May 3, 2022: What overturning Roe v. Wade will mean for abortion access in Pennsylvania
February 11, 2022: Penn Capital-Star: ‘Abortion rights are always on the ballot.’ Advocates issue a call to action ahead of 2022 election
February 8, 2022: Temple News: All women deserve the right to safe abortions in Pennsylvania
January 29, 2022: Altoona Mirror: Ward amendment would refuse abortion rights in Pennsylvania
January 27, 2022: NBC Philadelphia: Pa. Republican Lawmakers Want Abortion Ban to Be Put on Ballot for Voters
January 27, 2022: Philly Voice: Proposed Pa. Constitution amendment to limit abortion access has rights advocates concerned
January 26, 2022: PoliticsPA: Republicans Introduce Constitutional Amendment on Abortion
January 22, 2022: Philadelphia Inquirer: How a proposed amendment to the state constitution could affect abortion access in Pennsylvania
January 31, 2022: Rewire: Pennsylvania Republicans Are Close to Banning Abortion in the State
December 17, 2021: Philadelphia Inquirer: Lawsuit shaping the future of abortion in Pa. isn’t the one you think
December 9, 2021: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Greer Donley: A different abortion case is pending in Pennsylvania
October 19, 2021: Ms. Magazine: Pennsylvania Medicaid Abortion Coverage Ban Challenged Under State ERA: “Sex Discrimination, Pure and Simple”
October 14, 2021: Penn Capital-Star: Pa. Medicaid abortion case heads to state Supreme Court
October 14, 2021: Bloomberg Law: Abortion Providers Ask State Court to Strike Medicaid Pay Ban
October 14, 2020: WHYY: Providers to argue Pa. ban on using Medicaid funds for abortions is illegal
October 14, 2020: Law360: Pa. Court Asks If 1985 Ruling Shut Door On Abortion Funding
September 2, 2021: WESA-FM: What Texas’ New Abortion Law Means For Pennsylvania
March 26, 2021: AP: Pennsylvania court again backs limits on abortion coverage
January 28, 2020: Legal Intelligencer: Pa. Lawmakers Get Green Light to Intervene in Planned Parenthood’s Bid to Upend Funding Ban
January 17, 2019: PennLive: Groups go to court over Pa.’s ban on paying for abortions for women with lower incomes
January 17, 2019: WESA-FM: PA Doesn’t Let State Money Fund Abortions. Now, Providers are Suing
January 17, 2019: Morning Call: Abortion clinics sue Pennsylvania over Medicaid dollars
January 16, 2019: Rewire News: Lawsuit: Pennsylvania Medicaid Abortion Ban is Unconstitutional
January 16, 2019: Associated Press: Pennsylvania Sued Over Limits on State Coverage of Abortion
January 16, 2019: U.S. News & World Report: Pennsylvania Sued Over Limits on State Coverage of Abortion
January 16: Law360: Pa. Faces Suit Over Medicaid-Funded Abortion Ban
January 16, 2019: USA Herald: Pennsylvania Sued Over State Law Limiting Medicaid Coverage for Abortion
January 16, 2019: KYW Newsradio: Abortion Providers Sue to Overturn Pa. Ban on Abortion Funds
January 16, 2019: PennLive: With reproductive rights under assault, new lawsuit seeking to overturn Pa’s Medicaid abortion coverage ban is the right move
January 16, 2019 Philadelphia Inquirer: Pennsylvania faces new lawsuit over ban on Medicaid coverage of abortion
January 16, 2019: The Incline: Lawsuit: Time’s Up for Pennsylvania’s Medicaid Abortion Ban
January 16, 2019: WITF-FM: Pennsylvania Sued Over Limits on State Coverage of Abortion