How to improve sexual health for teens


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game on 2013Birds do it, bees do it. And according to the 2011 Youth Risk Behavior Survey, nearly a third of all Rhode Island teenagers do it too. But what do they know about what they are doing, and what are we teaching them about it?

A conference Friday at Rhode Island College will “help improve the sexual health of Rhode Island’s youth,” according to the Sojourner House blog.

“Curious about what’s going on in regards to sexual health and RI youth?” reads their post. “Does the topic make you feel awkward, and you want to learn more about making those conversations go smoothly?”

Well then you might want to read on:

This conference is intended for any providers, educators, and other community leaders in Rhode Island to help them gain insights and improve their skills related to interacting with youth about sexual health issues. The morning sessions will include a mix of presentations from local experts, as well as a special session where young people from Rhode Island will share their thoughts and ideas about sexual health. The afternoon break-out sessions include hands-on training and skills building. A special emphasis of the conference/training is to learn about current and emerging issues in sexual health, and the roles of culture and technology in young people’s lives.

With a keynote by Teri Aronowitz, NP, PhD, an afternoon of workshops from organizations like Youth Pride, Rhode Island for Community & Justice, the YWCA of Northern RI, Planned Parenthood, and more, this is an event you don’t want to miss!

There’s more information on the Facebook page here.

 

Lizz Winstead, Fake News Inventor, In RI Thursday


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Remember way back in the mid-1990’s when some people could actually say Fox News was fair and balanced with a straight face? Then progressive comedian Lizz Winstead invented fake news for Comedy Central and all of a sudden the joke was on the conservatives.

The Daily Show co-creator will be in town on Thursday night if you’d like to thank her.

Winstead will be here helping to raise awareness for women’s health issues for Planned Parenthood of Southern New England Ocean State Choice Affair. According to its website:

Thursday promises to be a night filled with laughter, razor-sharp wit and biting satire, and even a live Twitter feed, inviting guests who can’t be with us in person to share their vision for the future of reproductive justice through social media – most likely along with a few great one liners from Winstead, herself. Most importantly, it will be a night of sharing our stories, connecting with other reproductive justice advocates and activists, and working to ensure that women, men and teens in Rhode Island receive the care and compassion they deserve.

The event is already sold out. But you can get on a waiting list here, or follow Winstead on Twitter here.

She must be starting to feel right at home in Rhode Island. She was here this summer for Netroots Nation. And Dan McGowan interviewed her for RI Future way back in 2010.

Happy 40th, Roe v. Wade


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On the 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the Rhode Island Coalition for Reproductive Justice (formerly RI Choice Coalition) continues to stand with women and their families to reinforce the importance of safe and legal abortion.  The coalition is pleased to announce its new name on this important anniversary and to recognize the significance of working toward reproductive justice beyond access to abortion.  Reproductive Justice takes into account the multiple identities of a person and the social context in which they live and how that impacts their access to healthcare.  As a coalition we are committed to ensuring Rhode Islanders are able to make decisions concerning their reproduction free of discrimination, coercion and violence.

Coalition leaders are working actively in the legislature and the community to preserve women’s access to a wide range of health care options and to advocate for affordable, quality healthcare for all.  In addition, a new organization, Rhode Island Clergy for Reproductive Choice has been formed and will work in concert with the Reproductive Justice Coalition to bring faith voices into our advocacy and grassroots work on these important issues.

Despite a woman’s constitutional right to make her own personal medical decisions without interference from politicians, access to safe and legal abortion is still at risk in legislatures across the country including our own. Rhode Island is one of 22 states – and the only state in New England – that the Guttmacher Institute designates as “hostile” to women’s reproductive health.

Recent public opinion research conducted by Planned Parenthood Federation of America concluded that the way in which people identify with the issue of abortion has shifted over the years. Labels like “pro-choice” and “pro-life” no longer reflect the way most people think about the complex decision-making that is required when women consider abortion. Americans recognize that these decisions are deeply personal, and should be left to a woman to decide in consultation with her family, physician and faith.

Partner Statements

Peter Stein, Chair of the RI Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice:

Rhode Island’s proud heritage is grounded in broad religious freedom and tolerance.  We are home to the first synagogue in the country, the first Baptist church in America, and many other grand and significant houses of worship.  We are blessed with a vibrant and important religious life in our state.  We must always defend the freedom of religion and celebrate the diversity of viewpoints in our state.  Quite simply, when access to abortion, birth control and other medical services is limited, it prevents women from taking action that is permitted by their personal religious teaching.  As we remember the Roe v. Wade decision, let us celebrate that it allows women to be respected as moral decision makers who are in control of their own bodies.

 

Harry Knox, National President Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice:

We celebrate the 40th Anniversary of Roe v. Wade at a time of increasing attacks on the very freedoms Roe provides.  The Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice is growing to meet these challenges so that people of faith will be heard in the public square calling prophetically for empowerment of women’s moral agency and expansion of access to compassionate abortion care.

 

Neil A. Corkery, former member of the RI House of Representatives, current member of the Board of Directors of Catholics for Choice:

Rhode Island was founded under a just doctrine: that individuals have the right to determine the course of their lives according to their personal beliefs. In this state there should be no question: every woman has the right to decide the future of her pregnancy according to her conscience, whatever her reasons or circumstances. A just society simply does not compel women to continue an undesired pregnancy.

 

Paula Hodges, RI Public Policy & Advocacy Director at PPSNE:

A majority of Americans oppose efforts to overturn Roe v. Wade, which was made crystal clear in November, when they voted to protect a woman’s ability to make her own personal medical decisions without interference from politicians. Legislators who interfere with a woman’s access to safe and legal abortion fail to recognize the views of their constituents.  It is time for Rhode Island to focus on helping women and families get access to preventive health services, annual exams and access to effective and affordable birth control.  In doing so we can work together to empower families, reduce unintended pregnancies and align Rhode Island with other New England states.

 

Kate Brock, executive director of Ocean State Action:

Today we are reminded of the great strides women have made in achieving full equality in Rhode Island and beyond. At the core of this progress is the ability to control one’s reproductive decisions, and they are decisions that belong with a woman, her family and her doctor, not politicians in the Statehouse.  

 

Carolyn Mark, president RI National Organization for Women:

On the 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, we need to remember that women’s reproductive rights have been and will always be inextricably linked to our ability to achieve economic and social equality in this country. When women have access to comprehensive reproductive health services, including abortion, we gain the capacity to participate fully in all aspects of public and private life. While there are forces in this country that seek to deny women our basic rights, there remains a persistent majority that respects the fact that decisions regarding reproductive health care are a matter of privacy and should remain that way. We can never go back.

Planned Parethood Protest Women for Doherty Event


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Brendan Doherty

Expect a lot of women at the Westin tomorrow night. Planned Parenthood is putting together a Women Are Watching event outside the downtown hotel to “counter” a Women for Doherty event that will be going on inside.

“Planned Parenthood Votes! Rhode Island wants Rhode Island voters to know whether their legislators have supported women’s health issues, so that they have this critical information when they vote in November,” said Judy Tabar President of PPV!RI in a press release.

The Doherty event was promoted on Craigslist. Both begin at 6:30.

According to the release from Planned Parenthood:

At the rally, Rhode Island women and men will seek Mr. Doherty’s acknowledgement of Congress’ radical movement to restrict women’s health care and to commit to supporting women’s health care and defend Planned Parenthood’s services.

The Women Are Watching campaign aims to educate Rhode Island voters on the positions of 2012 candidates regarding women’s health care issues and to empower women to hold anti-women’s health candidates of either party accountable, and elect pro-women’s health candidates. Planned Parenthood Votes! Rhode Island welcomes new volunteers, activists and members.

The current Republican-led Congress has voted 33 times to repeal the Affordable Care Act which includes many preventative health care benefits for women including equalizing healthcare costs. Republicans have tried to end Title X funding which provides underprivileged women access to cancer screenings, birth control and other reproductive health services. Mr. Doherty supports Mitt Romney who has promised to end co-pay free contraceptives and to defund Planned Parenthood.

The Planned Parenthood Action Fund Federal PAC has endorsed David Cicilline for this Congressional seat, based upon his 100% voting record on issues of women’s health care.

Progress Report: Anti-Choice Agenda Fares Well in Primary; Happy Birthday Occupy Movement; Chicago Still on Strike


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Anti-choice crusaders Rhode Island Right to Life was one of the most successful PACs on primary night, reports the ProJo. How DINO is that! On the other hand, Political Scene also gives some love to Planned Parenthood and the public sector unions for having a successful primary.

38 Studios will be the issue local candidates don’t want associated with their name, says Dan McGowan. Don’t forget, Don Carcieri said the only way legislators didn’t know he was considering the new loan guarantee money on Curt Schilling is if they weren’t paying attention to the news.

One year ago today, activists in New York City began the unrewarding but effective process of changing the political debate in America when they set up a protest camp in Zuccotti Park. Say what you will about the Occupy movement but we are talking about income inequality and corporate greed today because of them, issues that are defining the 2012 election.

Here in Rhode Island, Occupy Providence planned to spend the night at the State House to stand in solidarity with the anniversary. In New York, about 250 people marched and an unspecified number of arrests occurred.

But Occupy isn’t the biggest direct action in the nation this September … that honor goes to the Chicago Teachers’ Strike. Last night, the teachers’ rejected a proposal causing Mayor Rahm Emanuel to go to court today to try to force them back to work. Please remember, the two sides aren’t arguing over money – they’ve agreed on compensation – the breakdown is over how much reform Emanuel can embed into their contracts.

Here is Rhode Island, where it’s popular to pretend that people are leaving the state to find a better tax rate, researchers have actually proven a much larger theory: there’s less life on earth than initially thought.

Yesterday I was chided on Twitter for quoting Taegen Goddard as saying Elizabeth Warren is “pulling away” in polls from Scott Brown as they battle for the hotly contested Mass. Senate race. Today, Goddard writes that she is “surging” after going from 5 percentage points behind to 2 ahead. All political analysis aside, Liz Warren is simply more in line with Bay State voters and at the end of the day this will matter most. Just ask Bill Weld.

On Choice, Rhode Island Not Far from Mississippi


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If abortion is legal in a state, but there’s nowhere to have an abortion performed, is it really an option? This hypothetical is quickly becoming a reality for those living in Mississippi. While the situation in Rhode Island isn’t quite that dire, some female leaders here say they are saddened and frightened for the lives of women who may not be granted the same privileges and access as others in New England.

The Mississippi Case

A federal judge on July 11 ruled to temporarily block a state law that would force the sole abortion provider in the state of Mississippi to close its doors. The TRAP law requires physicians performing abortions in the state to be OB/GYN certified and to have hospital admitting privileges.

Critics say that the TRAP law was specifically crafted with the intention to close the doors of the Jackson Women’s Health Organization, where 2 of its 3 OB/GYNs are not currently qualified to access hospital privileges. Essentially this would mean the closure of the state’s only abortion provider.

Rhode Island Out of Line with Other New England States

In 2012, a nationwide report by NARAL Pro-Choice America gave Rhode Island a D+ on its “choice-related laws.” The report highlighted the Rhode Island House as “mixed-choice,” the Rhode Island Senate as “anti-choice,” and 7 anti-choice state laws.

One of those anti-choice laws is in fact a TRAP law, which specifies where abortion services may be provided.

Susan Yolen, a spokesperson for Planned Parenthood of Southern New England, said NARAL Pro-Choice America’s grade for RI was “quite out of line with other New England states” that earned marks of A (Maine and Connecticut), A- (Vermont), and B- (New Hampshire and Massachusetts). Mississippi, on the other hand, earned an F.

Current Abortion Legislation Efforts in Rhode Island

According to Yolen, of Planned Parenthood, every year for over 15 years there’s been a multifaceted bill proposed in the Rhode Island that seeks stricter mandates for abortion providers — additional counseling for patients, printed information instead of a website, and harsher penalties for physicians who do not adhere to the laws.

In January, Rep. Karen MacBeth (D-Cumberland) introduced legislation that would require a woman to review her ultrasound before the procedure is performed. Opposed to such legislation is Rep. Edith Ajello (D-Providence) who said in an interview the physician would be required to describe the ultrasound image, including the “gestational development of the fetus, the size, and the parts,” to the woman seeking an abortion. Rep. Ajello explained, “There was nothing in the legislation that allows her to say, ‘I don’t want to hear it.’”

In Rhode Island, there are already laws enforcing informed consent, which ensures women are knowledgeable about the abortion procedure and alternatives. “When legislators talk about informed consent, they are making it even more detailed,” said Rep. Ajello. “And this is unusual, in that it would be legislators putting in law how doctors practice their profession,” Rep. Ajello commented.

Low-Income Women Most Affected by Abortion Providers Shutting Down

What affect would it have on women if abortion providers were to shut down within a state?

Rep.  Ajello imagines, “abortion will become more expensive, just because of the increased travel time.  Difficulty because of the time away from home, time away from care of other children, or time away from work — making it a lot more expensive.”

Yolen added, “Think about that person without resources, the young person, the college student, the single mom, the woman who is in a battering relationship and can’t escape from home long enough from her husband’s control to really take that kind of a trip… it always hits low-income women the hardest.”

Currently, Rhode Island law does not allow insurance plans to cover abortion care for women on Medicaid or state employees. Yolen argues, although these laws are not given the title, they are certainly “traps” for women seeking an abortion.

Comparing Rhode Island and Mississippi

Rhode Island and Mississippi share significant similarities in the abortion debate as there is an increased amount of anti-abortion legislation being proposed, there are a limited number of abortion providers currently available, and both state senates are pro-life.

The big difference between the two states is that Rhode Island’s House is mixed, whereas Mississippi’s House is overwhelmingly pro-life. Rhode Island is not facing as extreme impacts against abortion because of the split between pro-choice and pro-life house members.

The multifaceted bills that pro-life activists and legislators have proposed every year for over 15 years are not gaining enough support to be passed.

In order to be certain that Rhode Island does not turn into the next Mississippi, progressive representatives are working together to create a strong presence on the legislative floor with pressure and support from community members.

Yolen said she believed legislators in Mississippi are setting themselves up to be a state where a constitutional right doesn’t apply, “you certainly do hope that it is doesn’t materialize in other states.”

Doherty Hosts Texas Extremist at Hope Club


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Brendan Doherty, Republican candidate for David Cicilline’s seat in Congress, will parse himself as a political moderate as he tries to snatch the seat away from the Democrats. But inviting Congressman Pete Sessions, R- Texas, to his fundraiser at the Hope Club tomorrow afternoon won’t help with that message.

This from the Rhode Island Democratic Party:

“Who is Pete Sessions? In addition to being the chair of the National Republican Campaign Committee, Sessions has been one of the biggest cheerleaders for the radical Republican agenda in Congress. Sessions just last year introduced a bill to privatize Social Security. He also offended women from coast to coast by saying he failed to understand the problem with insurance companies charging women higher premiums than men. Sessions defended the practice by comparing women to people who smoke, somehow suggesting that being a woman, like chain-smoking, should be considered a pre-existing condition.”

There’s currently a bill making its way through the legislature that would make it illegal to charge women higher insurance premiums based on their gender. In fact, Planned Parenthood plans to hold a protest outside of the private social club for the elite.

“We hope you will join us on the evening of March 8th on the public spaces outside of the Hope Club to protest the presence of Congressman Pete Sessions (TX-32) and Congressman Jeff Fortenberry (NE-1) who have consistently voted against women and access to reproductive health care and who are in town to fundraise for Congressional Candidate Brendan Doherty.

We know that Rhode Islanders support basic reproductive health care like access to birth control with no co-pays! We know that women are watching! We know that women will vote! Let’s send Pete, Jeff and all other anti-women legislators a strong message of solidarity!”

Hope to see you there…

DL Providence presents: Faces you should know – Feb. 22 from 7 – 9pm

2012 is already shaping up to be an exciting year in politics.  Not only is it a presidential election year, but we have our local politics to keep us entertained.  With the ongoing redistricting fight, the many social and economic issues that will be at play in elections, and Netroots Nation coming to RI in June, we are getting the gang back together and kick-starting Drinking Liberally Providence.  New hosts – Kate Brock, Paula Hodges and Dawn Euer have joined Chris Blazejewski & David Segal to set things in motion.  So, with new hosts in tow, it is  fitting to make February’s DL theme about some other faces with new political gigs in Rhode Island.

On the Docket for next Wednesday:

Jamie Rhodes, RI State Director, Clean Water Action

Jamie formerly served as Clean Water Action’s canvas director from 2006 – 2009 before heading to law school in 2009.  For now, he’ll be splitting time between the Clean Water Action office on Westminster Street and his final semester at Roger Williams University School of Law in Bristol until he graduates in May.  Rhodes has also worked for Ocean State Action and for David Segal’s Congressional Campaign.

Paula Hodges, RI Public Policy & Advocacy Director, Planned Parenthood of Southern New England

Paula is a Missouri native who just relocated to Rhode Island in December. She last worked as Political Director for Missouri National Education Association (MNEA), the state’s largest public employee union and prior to that coordinated progressive labor, environmental and women’s groups’ electoral plans at the America Votes – Missouri table. Paula previously served as deputy director of policy for Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan.

Kristina Fox, Organizing Director, Ocean State Action
Kristina is a native Rhode Islander now living in Providence. After serving two years in AmeriCorps she organized with UNITE HERE! Local 217 and helped win contract victories at the Westin Hotel, Dunkin Donuts Center and East Bay School Lunch Collaborative. Before coming to Ocean State Action she co-managed a nutrition education program for low-income families with Farm Fresh Rhode Island.

So, please join your new hosts in welcoming new faces and Drinking Liberally at a new (slightly earlier) time 7-9pm, and the same great location (Wild Colonial).

RI Choice Coalition to Commemorate 39th Anniversary of Roe v. Wade at State House on Thursday


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The Rhode Island Choice Coalition will gather in the RI State House Rotunda on Thursday, January 19th at 3pm to recognize the 39th anniversary of the landmark Roe. v. Wade decision. In Roe, the Supreme Court found that a woman’s right to decide whether to become a parent deserves the highest level of constitutional protection.  The commemoration event will recognize decision makers who play a vital role in protecting women’s health in the state of Rhode Island.

Advocates from all walks including nonprofit leaders, legislators and members of the clergy will convene to discuss the state of reproductive justice in Rhode Island and the ongoing efforts to ensure access to reproductive health services within the state’s newly formed health care exchange.

The Rhode Island Choice Coalition exists to preserve, promote and protect all aspects of women’s reproductive health care and reproductive justice through advocacy and legislative action statewide and nationally.

With special guests

  • First Lady Stephanie Chafee
  • Senator Josh Miller (D-28)
  • Representative Edith Ajello (D-3)
  • Representative Teresa Tanzi (D-34)
  • Rabbi Peter Stein
  • PPSNE President & CEO Judy Tabar

For more information contact Paula Hodges, RI Policy & Advocacy Director for PPSNE at 401-421-7820 x3145 or paula.hodges@ppsne.org.


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