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May 1, 2026 by Florida NOW

FL NOW Condemns Florida’s Escalating Abortion Restrictions and Calls for Immediate Protection of Reproductive Freedom

For Immediate Release: May 1, 2026  President Julie Kent, Florida NOW,

Six‑week ban, criminalization threats, and shrinking access endanger the health and autonomy of millions of Floridians

Orlando, FL — [May 2026] — The Florida National Organization for Women (FL NOW) is sounding the alarm as Florida’s abortion restrictions intensify, creating one of the most dangerous and inaccessible reproductive‑health landscapes in the country. With the six‑week abortion ban now in effect and additional restrictions advancing through state agencies and courts, FL NOW warns that pregnant Floridians are facing unprecedented barriers to timely, safe, and medically necessary care.

“Florida’s escalating abortion restrictions are not about health — they are about control,” said Julie Kent, President of FL NOW. “A six‑week ban is a near‑total ban. It denies people the ability to make decisions about their own bodies, their families, and their futures. These policies are putting lives at risk.”

Under the current law, most Floridians do not even know they are pregnant before abortion becomes illegal. Providers report widespread confusion, delayed care, and fear among patients who are unsure whether they can legally receive treatment for pregnancy complications. Advocates warn that the restrictions have already led to:

  • Death of women with pregnancy complications
  • Delays in emergency care
  • Patients being turned away until their conditions worsen
  • Increased travel out of state
  • Heightened risks for survivors of violence
  • Disproportionate harm to Black, Brown, rural, and low‑income communities

“These laws are forcing doctors to choose between their medical training and the threat of prosecution,” Debbie Deland, VP FL NOW said. “No one should have to wait until they are hemorrhaging or near death to receive care. Republican White Men in power continue to attack and reduce women’s rights.”

FL NOW also notes that Florida’s abortion restrictions are unfolding alongside rising maternal mortality rates, especially among Black women, and a growing exodus of OB‑GYNs from the state. The organization warns that the combined effect is a collapsing reproductive‑health system that leaves pregnant people with fewer options and greater danger.

“Florida cannot claim to value life while simultaneously creating conditions that endanger pregnant people,” Deland said. “Reproductive freedom is a fundamental human right. These escalating restrictions violate that right and undermine the health and dignity of women.”

FL NOW is calling for immediate statewide action, including:

  • Restoration of meaningful access to abortion care
  • Protection for healthcare providers who act in the best interests of their patients
  • Clear, medically grounded standards for emergency care
  • Investment in maternal health, especially for communities facing the highest risks
  • Legislative and judicial accountability for policies that endanger pregnant Floridians

“Floridians deserve compassion, autonomy, and evidence‑based healthcare,” Kent said. “FL NOW will continue to fight — in every county, every courtroom, and every legislative chamber — until reproductive freedom is fully restored.”

Media Contact: Debbie Deland, 407 234-6408, vp@flnow.org

May 1, 2026 by Florida NOW

FL NOW Demands Immediate Action as Florida’s Maternal Mortality Crisis Deepens

NOW logo broad small.jpgFor Immediate Release: May 1, 2026 President Julie Kent, Florida National Organization for Women (FL NOW

Rising deaths, extreme racial disparities, and state inaction endanger pregnant Floridians

Orlando, FL — [May 2026] — The Florida National Organization for Women (FL NOW) is calling for urgent statewide action as Florida’s maternal mortality crisis continues to worsen, with Black women facing the highest risk of pregnancy‑related death. Despite escalating dangers, the state has failed to provide transparent oversight, timely reporting, or meaningful policy solutions to protect pregnant people.

“Florida is failing its mothers,” said Julie Kent, President of FL NOW. “Maternal deaths are rising, Black women are dying at alarming rates, and the state continues to restrict reproductive healthcare while withholding the transparency needed to save lives. This is a public health emergency — and a moral one.”

Recent data show that Florida’s maternal mortality rate has increased over the past several years, mirroring national trends but with sharper racial disparities. Black women in Florida are several times more likely to die from pregnancy‑related causes than white women. Advocates warn that the state’s restrictive reproductive laws — including a six‑week abortion ban — have created additional barriers to timely, safe, and medically necessary care.

Compounding the crisis, Florida’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee has faced criticism for lack of transparency, delayed reporting, and limited public accountability. These committees are responsible for identifying why mothers are dying and recommending life‑saving interventions — yet Florida’s process remains opaque.

“Maternal mortality reviews are supposed to shine a light on preventable deaths,” said Debbie Deland, VP FL NOW. “Instead, Florida has kept families and communities in the dark. Without transparency, there can be no accountability — and without accountability, there can be no change.”

FL NOW is calling for immediate statewide action, including:

  • Full transparency in maternal mortality review processes, including public reporting and open meetings
  • Restoration and expansion of reproductive healthcare access, including medically necessary abortion care
  • Targeted investment in Black maternal health, including community‑based care models
  • Legislative oversight to ensure maternal deaths are reviewed promptly and recommendations are implemented
  • Evidence‑based policies that prioritize the health, safety, and dignity of pregnant Floridians

“Every maternal death is a family shattered, a community grieving, and a failure of public policy,” Deland said. “Florida must act now — not with political theater, but with real solutions that save lives.”

FL NOW urges lawmakers, healthcare leaders, and community partners to join in demanding accountability and advancing policies that protect pregnant people across the state.

Florida NOW remains committed to fighting for reproductive justice, racial equity, and the right of every Floridian to survive pregnancy and childbirth.

Media Contact: Debbie Deland, 407 234-6408, vp@flnow.org

April 30, 2026 by Florida NOW and Kaitlyn Kirk, Communications Director

Great News: Teenage Pregnancy Rates Have Gone Down! Republicans Suggest That Is Somehow A Bad Thing

Written by Kaitlyn Kirk / Communications@flnow.org

The need for real, comprehensive sex education in this country is urgent. Not just for young people, but for adults who continue to shape what information is allowed, restricted, or erased.

This is not just about anatomy or pregnancy prevention. It is about power, language, and safety. When young people do not have the words to describe what is happening to them, when they are not taught what consent actually looks like in practice, it leaves them more vulnerable to harm.

That is part of how rape culture continues. 

Teen pregnancy is often misrepresented in public conversation. It is frequently framed as a result of teenage peer relationships or “poor decisions” between similarly aged young people. The data tells a more serious story.

Research shows that adult men are responsible for a significant portion of teen pregnancies. One large study found that approximately 49 percent of births to teenage mothers were fathered by men age 20 or older. Other research has found that around two-thirds of babies born to teenage mothers have fathers who are adult men, often several years older than the teen mother.

But there is some good news: Teen pregnancy rates are down.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the teen birth rate in the United States has dropped by more than 70 percent since the early 1990s.

Some Republicans have been publicly arguing that the drop in teen pregnancy rates is a “problem”. This is not an isolated talking point. In recent years, conservative commentators and political figures have increasingly framed declining teen birth rates as part of a broader “fertility crisis,” sometimes arguing that fewer teen births contribute to population decline and should be reversed through policy changes.

Fewer teen pregnancies means fewer young people being pushed into parenthood before they are ready. It means more people finishing school, more economic stability, and more control over their own lives.

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