Texas gave anti-abortion group millions for women's health, despite warnings
David Fahrenthold Retweeted
The Texas experiment: What happens when you give millions of dollars meant for low-income pregnancy care to a politically connected anti-abortion activist with no contracting or clinical experience?
Here's the report from @jblackmanChron: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/politics/texas/amp/Texas-gave-anti-abortion-group-millions-for-13638235.php
TEXAS POLITICS
Texas gave anti-abortion group millions for women's health, despite warnings
By Jeremy Blackman, Austin Bureau | on February 25, 2019
On a Monday evening in May 2016, Carol Everett sent an email to fellow anti-abortion activists detailing an extraordinary pro-life opportunity. Her nonprofit, the Heidi Group, she said, had spent the past year pushing for nearly $40 million in funding to help Christian pregnancy centers bless many poor women across Texas. ... It is no exaggeration to say this is the greatest possibility for expansion of pro-life care for the poor ever, she wrote.
The enthusiasm might have sounded familiar to those who knew Everett, whose decades of work in the anti-abortion movement had earned her accolades from the states leading conservatives. But this wasnt an advocacy project she was describing, and these werent private dollars. It was an application she had just submitted to become one of the states leading family planning providers.
Everett had never contracted with the state and had no clinical background. Many of the pregnancy centers she cited dont provide contraception, a core service. Yet state health officials gave her much of the money anyway, ignoring warning signs and overruling staff who recommended millions less in funding, according to a review of the contracting by the Houston Chronicle. When Everetts clinics began failing, the state delayed for months in shifting money to higher performing clinics, instead devoting vast amounts of time to support Everett and her small, understaffed team.
Though its impossible to say how many more women could have been served had the resources been shifted sooner, several competing clinics burned through their funding early in the grant cycle, surpassing their targets for both spending and patients treated. Had they been sent some of the $6.75 million sitting in wait for the Heidi Group, the door could have opened for thousands more women to receive access to contraception, STD screenings and breast exams.
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jeremy.blackman@chron.com
Twitter.com: jblackmanChron