Maryland will develop into the primary state to make use of cash collected from a surcharge on insurance coverage bought below the Reasonably priced Care Act to fund a program to pay for abortions, no matter a affected person’s insurance coverage protection, below a measure signed into legislation Tuesday by Democratic Gov. Wes Moore.
The legislation will make about $25 million accessible when it takes impact July 1, as a result of a $1 surcharge has been unused and rising during the last 15 years for the reason that ACA took impact in 2010. It’s estimated to make about $3 million accessible yearly in future years.
“The lieutenant governor and I have been very clear from Day 1 — that Maryland will at all times be a protected haven for abortion entry,” Moore stated, highlighting the measure amongst some 170 payments signed at a ceremony.
This system shall be paid for by the switch of sure insurance coverage premium funds collected by carriers that may solely be used for abortion protection in accordance with the ACA. Supporters say different states have entry to an identical surplus of funds by their state change insurance coverage techniques.
“If applications like ours are duplicated throughout the nation, we might assist hundreds of thousands of People entry important abortion care — with out counting on taxpayer {dollars},” stated Del. Lesley Lopez, a Democrat from Maryland’s Montgomery County, within the suburbs of the nation’s capital.
Officers in New York and Illinois have already got reached out to Maryland officers to study extra about this system, stated Lopez, who sponsored the invoice.
A dozen states require abortion protection in ACA market plans, in accordance with KFF, a nonprofit that researches well being care points. They’re California, Colorado, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Washington.
“This cash exists in each state that has abortion as a required sort of care below their state’s profit exchanges,” Lopez stated. “It’s mainly all of the blue states that mandated abortion be coated when the Reasonably priced Care Act was beginning to be carried out.”
The legislation creates a grant program fund within the state’s well being division to enhance entry to abortion medical providers. It requires the division to award grants to nonprofit organizations to help equitable entry.
Lynn McCann-Yeh, co-executive director of the Baltimore Abortion Fund, which helps pay prices related to abortion for individuals who reside in Maryland or who journey there, stated it’s arduous to maintain up with an annual price range of about $2 million.
“We would wish many, many extra occasions over that to totally have the ability to meet the total logistic and medical help for every caller,” she stated.
She stated the $3 million that might be made accessible yearly below the brand new legislation might make a serious distinction. The fund might apply to manage a share of that cash.
“The $3 million is a superb begin, however it should take greater than that and it’ll take sustained funding,” she stated.
Maryland’s legislature is managed by Democrats, who maintain a 2-1 benefit over Republicans in voter registration statewide. Final yr, Maryland voters accredited a constitutional modification with 76% help to enshrine abortion rights within the state’s structure, in response to the 2022 determination by the U.S. Supreme Court docket to overturn Roe v. Wade. The courtroom’s determination within the Dobbs v. Jackson Girls’s Well being Group gave management over abortion to the states.

“I feel earlier than the Dobbs determination, there simply wasn’t fairly the identical sort of urgency as there may be now,” Lopez stated. “We’ve seen abortion bans in some type or one other in double digits in states throughout the nation, so we’ve acquired to ensure that we shore up all of the help we are able to in a state like Maryland that has it as a constitutionally protected proper.”
Twelve states at the moment implement abortion bans with restricted exceptions in any respect phases of being pregnant. 4 extra have bans that kick in after about six weeks, which is earlier than many ladies know they’re pregnant.
The Dobb determination and an inflow of individuals from different states looking for abortions in Maryland has made the monetary want extra pressing, supporters of the legislation say.
Maryland has been seeing a rise in sufferers from different states the place abortion has been banned. Final yr, 15% of abortions in Maryland have been obtained by sufferers from different states, in accordance with the Guttmacher Institute, a analysis group that helps abortion rights. That’s a lower from 20% in 2023.