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April 1, 2020 by admin

While The Courts—And Anti-Abortion Extremist Governors—Play Politics, Women’s Lives Are In Danger

Statement by NOW President Toni Van Pelt:

Washington, D.C. — Governors have just one job that matters today—to keep their citizens safe, healthy and protected from the coronavirus.  But anti-abortion politicians like Texas Governor Greg Abbott, as well as Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey and Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, are using the pandemic as an excuse to fuel their personal vendetta against abortion care.   

They issued bans on abortion, labeling the procedure as “non-essential.” This would force patients to delay this urgent and time-sensitive care or require them to travel hundreds of miles to another state—which travel bans may make impossible as well. 

On Monday, federal judges in Texas, Alabama, and Ohio blocked the governors’ brazenly political actions, but the next day the Texas 5th Circuit Court of Appeals put a hold on that order, allowing Gov. Abbott to proceed with his unconstitutional, cruel and dangerous executive action.    

And talk about hypocrisy!  While Gov. Abbot pretends to care about protecting health and safety by limiting women’s freedom, he refuses to tell churches to shut their doors during the crisis.  

Women already bear the brunt of this pandemic— homeschooling children, caring for sick relatives, working essential but often low-wage jobs and making up the majority of health care workers. For women stuck at home with an abusive partner, the risks of being forced to continue a pregnancy are even higher. These bans must not stand.  

NOW condemns the Texas court’s actions and supports efforts to overturn it on appeal.  In the meantime, we are continuing to defend women’s constitutional right to abortion care.  This is no time to play politics with women’s health.  

Contact

Kimberly Hayes, Press Secretary, press@now.org,

March 31, 2020 by admin

All Women’s Wage Gap Obscures Diversity in Earnings 

Statement by NOW President Toni Van Pelt:

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Today’s Equal Pay Day marks how far into the year women must work to be paid what men were paid on December 31st of the previous year. This date highlights a wage gap based on a ratio of median annual earnings for all women as compared to the median for all men: the wage gap for all women in 2019 was 18.5 percent. But the wage gap for women among racial and ethnic groups is quite different. 

Looking at the ratio of women’s to men’s median weekly earnings for full-time workers in 2019, based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau, reveal a significant variation between communities: 

Latinas    

  • Latina women are paid 56 cents to each dollar made by White, non-Hispanic men.  
  • While Hispanic men also have low earnings, Hispanic women face an added gender disparity, being paid 85.9 cents of Hispanic men’s dollar.

Black Women 

  • Black women are paid 61.4 cents to the dollar as compared to White men.   
  • Black women are also being paid 91.5 cents of every dollar Black men make.   

White Women   

  • White women are paid 78.4 cents of each dollar made by White men.  

Asian American Women   

  • Asian-American women are paid 89.4 cents to the dollar made by White men.   
  • Asian-American women are also paid only  76.7 cents to each dollar that  Asian-American men make.   
  • Even within these racial communities, there are other factors impacting women’s pay. In the Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) community, for example, Vietnamese women are paid 67 cents to the dollar as compared to White men, and 80 cents to the dollar as compared to AAPI men within the same ethnic group.  

Native American Women   

  • Native American women receive 57 cents to every dollar made by White men.   
  • There is a lack of data regarding pay gaps between Native American women and men, however, it is likely that this gap exists.   

The narrowing of the gender pay gap has slowed to a near standstill in the last 10 years, shrinking by less than half a percentage point. If the pace of change stays steady, it will take until 2059 for women and men to reach parity, and much longer for women of color.  

The gender pay gap hurts women, families, and our society at large. NOW is a longtime supporter of legislation such as the Paycheck Fairness Act, first introduced nearly 20 years ago, which would take modest steps towards narrowing the gender pay gap. But what is needed is a strong equal pay ‘for substantially similar work’ law as several states have recently adopted. 

 These disparities must be addressed by state and federal governments and by employers, and we must be aware that wage disparity is not an isolated issue. Equal pay must be paired with access to paid sick leave, health care, a higher national minimum wage, and other critical protections. Especially now that the country is continuing to face the fallout of the Coronavirus pandemic, women’s economic security is more important than ever.   

Contact

Kimberly Hayes, Press Secretary, press@now.org, 202-570-4745

March 25, 2020 by admin

Tell Texas Governor: Coronavirus Is No Excuse to Advance Your Anti-Abortion Agenda

Statement by NOW President Toni Van Pelt

03.26.2020

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Anti-abortion extremists are using the COVID-19 pandemic to accomplish what they can’t get done in the courts—a total ban on abortion care.  More than 50 anti-abortion groups have written to Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar calling on public health officials to tell abortion providers to cease and desist operations during this crisis. 

Texas is ground zero for this frightening display of politics and religious extremism over health care and women’s rights. Gov. Greg Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton have issued a directive to ban nearly all abortion services that they arbitrarily and ignorantly deem “unnecessary.” As a result, hundreds of patients seeking critical care are facing cancellations and delays that can put their health and safety at risk.   

National NOW and Texas NOW are encouraging our members in the state to call the offices of the governor and attorney general in protest of this gross abuse of citizens’ rights. NOW also strongly supports a lawsuit filed by Texas abortion providers to ensure that patients can continue to access their constitutional right to essential, time-sensitive abortion services during the COVID-19 epidemic.  As our nation faces the most serious medical crisis in over a century, now is the time to expand health care access, not take it away. 

Contact

Kimberly Hayes, Press Secretary , press@now.org , 202-570-4745

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