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- <text id=90TT2965>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1990: Do The Unborn Have Rights?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 08, 1990 Special Issue - Women:The Road Ahead
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- Do the Unborn Have Rights?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The law is looking into the womb. And expectant mothers who
- drink or use drugs may be held liable for damage to their
- fetuses
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Barbara Cornell/New York
- </p>
- <p> That Lynn Bremer is an attorney with a good job was not
- enough to keep her from developing a cocaine habit. The fact
- that she was pregnant was not enough to make her drop it. So
- when her daughter tested positive at birth for the presence of
- drugs in her urine, health officials in Muskegon County, Mich.,
- took the child into temporary custody. But, to Bremer's
- astonishment, there was more. The county prosecutor stepped in
- to charge her with a felony: delivery of drugs to her newborn
- child. The means of delivery? Her umbilical cord.
- </p>
- <p> After Bremer completed a drug treatment program, she
- regained her daughter, who is apparently healthy. But the
- criminal charges remain. "I could lose her," says Bremer. "I
- could go to prison, and she could grow up with who knows who."
- Prosecutor Tony Tague is unmoved. He says the threat of prison
- is sometimes the only way to get pregnant addicts to seek
- treatment: "Someone must stand up for the rights of the
- children."
- </p>
- <p> Similar cases involving prenatal drug delivery have cropped
- up in nine states across the country. Like the abortion issue,
- they raise serious questions about a woman's right to privacy
- and the obligations of the state and the individual toward the
- unborn. At the center of these cases lies a controversial legal
- concept: fetal rights. This notion also underlies one of the
- most important cases before the Supreme Court during its current
- term. At issue are "fetal-protection policies" used by many
- companies to forbid fertile female employees from taking jobs
- that might expose them to substances that could harm an unborn
- child. Fetal-rights advocates say such policies are needed to
- protect the unborn. Critics say they are an intrusion into the
- lives of women and a false comfort for a society that fails to
- offer adequate prenatal care for all women or workplace safety
- for all workers.
- </p>
- <p> Courts in the U.S. have recognized that third parties--for
- instance, a drunk driver who injures a pregnant woman--can be
- sued for doing harm to a fetus. More recent is the notion that
- expectant mothers can be held criminally responsible for
- problems suffered by their fetuses. Even pregnant women who are
- resigned to the legalisms pervading American life might wince
- to learn that the child forming inside them is also a budding
- legal entity, possessing rights that may put it at odds with its
- mother even before it emerges into the world. But the idea has
- gathered support with the growing spectacle of drug-damaged
- newborns. Maternity wards around the country ring with the
- high-pitched "cat cries" of crack babies, who may face lifelong
- handicaps as a result of their mothers' drug use.
- </p>
- <p> With some researchers estimating that each year as many as
- 375,000 newborns in the U.S. could suffer harm from their
- mothers' prenatal abuse of illegal drugs, district attorneys are
- tempted by what looks like the quick fix of pregnancy
- prosecution. "You have the right to an abortion. You have the
- right to have a baby," says Charles Molony Condon, prosecutor
- for the Charleston, N.C., area. "You don't have the right to
- have a baby deformed by cocaine." Courts have given a mostly
- skeptical reception to the attempt to apply existing drug laws
- in such a novel fashion, but eight states and Congress are
- considering legislation that would explicitly criminalize drug
- use and alcohol abuse by pregnant women that results in harm to
- the child.
- </p>
- <p> Critics of such measures say that a true effort on behalf
- of unborn children would focus on the needs of expectant mothers
- rather than punishing bad behavior after the fact. Few drug
- treatment programs, for instance, accept pregnant addicts. A
- study of New York City drug-abuse programs found that 87% turned
- away pregnant crack users. Says Sidney Schnoll, a psychiatrist
- at the Medical College of Virginia: "We seem more willing to
- place the kid in a neonatal intensive-care unit for $1,500 or
- $2,000 a day, rather than put $1,500 into better prenatal care."
- </p>
- <p> Some legal experts also warn that prenatal drug-use
- prosecutions could open the way to punishing women for many
- other kinds of behavior during pregnancy. What about drinking?
- Smoking? Taking prescription drugs? Or working too hard? "Are
- we going to be policing people's wine closets?" asks Stanford
- University law-school professor Deborah Rhode. Other legal
- scholars insist that such "slippery slope" arguments are
- exaggerated; laws commonly distinguish between reckless
- behavior and acceptable risk.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the efforts to protect the rights of the fetus have
- far-reaching implications, and not just for pregnant women. The
- UAW, et al. v. Johnson Controls case, now facing the Supreme
- Court, provides a dramatic example. In 1982 Johnson Controls,
- a Milwaukee-based company that is one of the nation's largest
- car-battery manufacturers, decided to forbid its fertile women
- employees to hold jobs that would expose them to lead levels
- potentially damaging to a fetus. High doses of lead--higher
- than any permitted by law in the workplace--have been linked
- to miscarriages and fetal death. Even lower levels, however, can
- result in learning problems and diminished growth for exposed
- babies. "This decision was not taken lightly," says Denise
- Zutz, director of corporate communications for Johnson Controls.
- "We were concerned about the risks to children." The company was
- also seeking to avoid later lawsuits by any children who might
- be harmed in the womb.
- </p>
- <p> That was not much comfort to Shirley Jean Mackey, who worked
- at one of the company's plants in Atlanta. A mother of one who
- had no immediate plans to get pregnant, she was forced to move
- from a job she liked, bundling lead plates, to another she
- hated, punching holes in hundreds of battery containers. "Each
- hole I punched, it was somebody's head," says Mackey. "That's
- just the way I felt." Along with the United Auto Workers, which
- represents many of Johnson Controls' employees, she is one of
- eight workers bringing suit against the company. They charge
- that its policy violates the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which bars
- employment discrimination on the basis of sex, pregnancy or
- related medical conditions unless the practice in question
- directly relates to the worker's ability to do the job.
- </p>
- <p> So far, two lower federal courts have ruled in favor of the
- company. But a California court went the other way, calling the
- policy "blatant" discrimination and adding, "A woman is not
- required to be a Victorian broodmare." If the Supreme Court
- rules for Johnson Controls, then by some estimates up to 20
- million jobs, many of them well paid, could eventually be closed
- to women. Gulf Oil, B.F. Goodrich, Du Pont and Eastman Kodak are
- just some of the companies that have instituted fetal-protection
- policies since a federal court upheld such measures in 1984.
- Johnson Controls estimates that more than half its production
- jobs are barred to fertile women.
- </p>
- <p> To some people, fetal-protection policies are merely a way
- to avoid making the workplace safe for men and women equally.
- Feminists also dismiss them as discrimination masquerading as
- compassion, a disguised way of keeping women out of more
- lucrative men's jobs. Critics of the fetal-protection policies
- also point out that toxic substances in the workplace may damage
- genes in male sperm. "A man or woman working in a plant should
- be told the dangers and make up their own minds," says Molly
- Yard, president of the National Organization for Women.
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, it was the Supreme Court's decision creating a
- right to abortion in Roe v. Wade that also provided some of the
- legal underpinning for fetal rights. The same ruling recognized
- a government interest in protecting the fetus during the last
- trimester of pregnancy. But while judges had a hand in creating
- fetal rights, courts will never be able to ensure real
- protection to an unborn child. That will have to come from
- mothers who take responsibility for the lives they carry within
- them--and a nation willing to provide the fetus with real
- prenatal care. For now, it seems more willing to provide a
- lawyer.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-