A federal judge on Thursday asked lawyers battling over Louisiana's new, restrictive abortion law for an agreement that apparently could let clinics stay open - at least for a while - after the law takes effect Sept. 1.
U.S. District Judge John deGravelles said that if the two sides cannot agree, he will rule Friday on a request from clinics and doctors for a temporary order blocking enforcement of the law while a lawsuit seeking to overturn it remains in court.
The law will require doctors who perform abortions to have admitting privileges to a hospital within 30 miles of their clinics. The Center for Reproductive Rights filed the court challenge last week, saying doctors haven't had enough time to obtain the privileges and the law likely would force Louisiana's five abortion clinics to close.
Attorneys for the state said in court Thursday that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit barred enforcement against doctors who have requested admitting privileges but don't yet have responses from the hospitals they applied to.
DeGravelles asked whether a state pledge to refrain from enforcing the law against all such doctors would convince attorneys for two doctors and three clinics to drop their request for a temporary restraining order to stop the law from taking effect. The clinics are in northwest Louisiana and in a New Orleans suburb.
The state's refusal to include doctors at clinics in New Orleans and Baton Rouge had been a sticking point in attempts to reach an agreement, attorneys for both sides said.
Kyle Duncan, who represents Health and Hospitals Secretary Kathy Kliebert, said he would try to file a statement from her Thursday.
DeGravelles sought statements from both Kliebert and the state Board of Medical Examiners. He also wants Kliebert to state that only her department has the power to enforce the law. Attorneys for state Attorney General Buddy Caldwell said he did not plan to get involved unless asked by the health department.
The lawsuit filed last Friday said the 81 days between Gov. Bobby Jindal's signature and the Sept. 1 effective date was too little time for doctors to get responses from the hospitals, so the law probably would shut down Louisiana's five abortion clinics. Each hospital has its own rules, and some are more complicated than others.
Admitting-privilege laws have passed across the South.
A panel of the Fifth Circuit court, which has jurisdiction over Louisiana, upheld a similar Texas law. But in July, a different panel of the Fifth Circuit voted to overturn Mississippi's law, which would have shuttered the state's only abortion clinic, saying every state must guarantee the right to an abortion.
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(Published by Philly.com - August 29, 2014)