Gov. Mark Gordon signed legislation that will place new and more onerous regulations on Wyoming clinics that perform abortions, potentially forcing the state’s lone provider of in-clinic abortions
Gov. Mark Gordon signed legislation Thursday that will place new and more onerous regulations on Wyoming clinics that perform abortions, potentially forcing the state’s lone provider of in-clinic
Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon (R) signed a new bill into law regulating surgical abortions in the state. Gordon signed House Bill 42 late Thursday night which adds “additional safety requirements” to surgical abortion facilities in Wyoming while the state’s “the state’s abortion prohibition is being considered by the Wyoming Supreme Court,
Gov. Mark Gordon vetoed a bill Monday night that would require women in Wyoming get ultrasounds before getting the abortion pill. He called the
Gov. Mark Gordon signed legislation that will place new and more onerous regulations on Wyoming clinics that perform abortions, potentially forcing the state’s lone provider of in-clinic abortions to
Gov. Mark Gordon has until midnight Thursday to decide on a bill to add new restrictions to clinics that provide abortions, which would make it difficult for the lone facility
Gov. Mark Gordon vetoed a bill last year that would require surgical abortion centers to be licensed as an ambulatory surgical center.
Wyoming's only full-service abortion clinic stopped providing abortions Friday, but it remained open after Gov. Mark Gordon approved a law requiring that such facilities be licensed as surgical centers.
Wyoming’s only full-service abortion clinic stopped providing abortions Friday, but it remained open after Gov. Mark Gordon approved a law requiring that such
Women planning pill abortions in Wyoming will need to get an ultrasound after lawmakers overrode the governor’s veto of the law.
Gov. Mark Gordon vetoed a bill last year that would require surgical abortion centers to be licensed as an ambulatory surgical center. An identical bill is headed back to the governor’s desk this year after the House of Representatives voted to concur with the Senate on House Bill 42,