OKLAHOMA CITY — Leg is lation that would mandate Oklahoma’s public schools to teach that life begins at conception may fail not because of its controversial nature but because the suddenly financially strapped state could have trouble paying for the course materials.
The National Right to Life Committee backs the Oklahoma bill and calls it the first of its kind in the nation. Under it, public high schools would be required to provide the information “for the purpose of achieving an abortion-free society.” Parents would be able to pull their children from the classes, and none of the state funding could be used for abortion counseling or sex education.
Opponents, including Democrats, have questioned whether it is appropriate to confront high school students in grades nine to 12 with such a politically divisive issue. “My caucus wants to do all we can to reduce the number of abortions in Oklahoma,” said House Democratic Leader Scott Inman of Oklahoma City, who voted against the measure.
Although House members passed the bill 64-12 on March 1 and the Senate has yet to take it up, its future could be determined more by how the program would fit within Oklahoma’s budget, which is expected to have a $1.3 billion hole in the next fiscal year. A fiscal impact statement prepared by the state Department of Education estimates it would cost up to $160,000 to develop materials for the program and that implementing it at each school district would cost about $10,000 per high school, or $4.78 million total.
The bill’s Senate GOP sponsor says it will require several changes. “The goal is to alleviate any fiscal impacts to our school districts,” said Sen. A.J. Griffin, R-Guthrie.
The Humanity of the Unborn Child Act would require the state Department of Education to start a program for high schoolers “about the humanity of a child in utero,” including details about how a fetus develops at various stages of a pregnancy.