Latinas are Watching in Arizona [View all]
Women are Watching blog
5.23.12
Arizona is simply overflowing with ideas about keeping Latinos in check. First, it was SB 1070 a broad and strict anti-undocumented immigration measure that caused Latinos all over the United States to stand up in protest. Then Arizona banned ethnic studies classes in public schools, which eventually gave the Tucson school board the green light to ban their Mexican-American studies programs. And now? Now we learn that Arizona Governor Jan Brewer has signed House Bill 2800, a bill banning state funding for Planned Parenthood health centers in the state, called the Whole Womans Health Priorities Act. The result? Arizona will significantly reduce access to affordable health care for Latinas living in the Grand Canyon State.
Latinos make up 30 percent of Arizonas population a total of 1.9 million people. Twenty-eight percent of them are uninsured. While Gov. Jan Brewer argues that House Bill 2800 is necessary to make sure that no taxpayer money is funding abortions, elected officials, more than anyone else, should know that taxpayer money is very strictly monitored and cannot legally fund abortions. The only result of this bill will be that hundreds of Latinos will lose access to the basic health care that they need. The people most affected by this bill are the people that need affordable health care the most.
While I was in Texas last month fighting for the Womens Health Program (the battle in Texas still continues), I met many promotores community health educators who were extremely concerned about the 130,000 low-income women who would lose access to affordable health care because of Gov. Rick Perrys attacks against Planned Parenthood. I met Angela*, a middle-aged promotora who tried very hard not to cry as she told me of the women she encounters every day when she goes out to the colonias, the rural parts of town. She told me of a particular woman she managed to get to a Planned Parenthood health center after visiting her at home a few times. The woman hadnt been to a doctor in 10 years, but with Angelas help and guidance, she finally felt comfortable getting a checkup. A week after the results came in from the womans exam, she found out that she had full-blown cervical cancer. Angela did not tell me the rest of the story. She didnt have to.
Elected officials in Arizona have followed in Texas misguided footsteps. They have vowed to put womens health and lives at risk just to make a political point. What is even more disturbing to me is that Mitt Romney, if elected president, would construct an America very similar to if not worse than todays Arizona and Texas. It would be an unhealthy America, and one that is not friendly to women or Latinos.