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Another Ohio Abortion Clinic Closes, Cutting the Total in Half Under Stringent State Laws

Kellie Copeland, Executive Director of NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio
NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio
Kellie Copeland, Executive Director of NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio

Another surgical abortion clinic in Ohio is closed.  As of late Thursday, the doors were locked and phones shut off at Akron Women’s Medical Group on East Market Street. 

Kellie Copeland, Executive Director of NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio
Credit NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio
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NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio
Kellie Copeland, Executive Director of NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio

There's no word on why the surgical abortion facility closed.  The state Health Department says its license is in good standing.

Kellie Copeland leads the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League in Ohio.  She thinks abortion regulations passed during the administration of Gov. John Kasich have been driving clinics out.

“It has been kind of a slow motion tragedy for Ohio women in terms of access, because it has happened one clinic at a time since 2011."

Katie Franklin, Communication Director, Right to Life Ohio
Credit Linked In
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Linked In
Katie Franklin, Communication Director, Right to Life Ohio

Katie Franklin, of the anti-abortion group Right to Life, agrees that new laws have had an effect, but says abortion requests have also dropped.

“So we believe that this is the consequence of a variety of factors that are building toward a culture of life.”

Since 2010 the number of surgical abortion clinics in Ohio has gone from 16 to eight.  

Several weeks ago, Cleveland Women's Medical Group, an affiliate of the Akron clinic, also closed.

However, it  had been removed from the count  of 16 surgical abortion clinics in the state already.  The owners had voluntarily reduced the practice in Cleveland to non-surgical status in 2014. 

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Tim Rudell
Tim Rudell has worked in broadcasting and news since his student days at Kent State in the late 1960s and early 1970s (when he earned extra money as a stringer for UPI). He began full time in radio news in 1972 in his home town of Canton, OH.