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  1. Mabel Musings

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    January 27, 2017

    Here’s a guide to what’s got our attention this week. If you think we should include an article or update for our community next time, please let us know!

    With record-breaking women’s marches across the globe, the 44th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, and inauguration of a new president, the week is full of both inspiration and “alternate” facts. We rely on real facts, especially when they educate us on the dozens of harmful proposals lurking, and help us to make informed decisions about policies that affect our health and lives. So, for this week, here are the most pressing issues facing Mabel Wadsworth Center along with a few articles to highlight brave, resilient voices from our community.

    Fighting abortion stigma to help reduce the shame and isolation women feel is critically important. This woman’s story highlights how stigmatizing this experience can be, even for someone who’s worked as a reproductive rights advocate and clinic worker.

    Constitutional lawyer Kristina Kippins has a poignant piece in Glamour on breaking her silence to share her own abortion story as a woman of color amidst white male politicians less educated on the issues attempting to frame abortion restrictions in the guise of “helping” black women.

    Here in Maine, our Woman Power recipient Ruth Lamdan was featured in an article alongside other feminist leaders with a reminder for the younger generation to stay engaged and deepen our activism.

    Less than a week into office, President Trump is wreaking havoc on women’s health and rights. Feminist writer and activist Jessica Valenti has a fantastic summary in The Guardian. While it’s terrible news, it’s not surprising that Trump has reinstated the global gag rule. Also known as the “Mexico City” policy, this rule prohibits international aid organizations that provide or promote abortion from receiving any federal funding or foreign aid. Unfortunately, presidents have been doing this since Reagan.  Click here to learn more about Mabel Wadsworth Center’s funding.

    Whether you get your health coverage from Obamacare’s Marketplace or not, your health care will be impacted by attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Our friends at Consumers for Affordable Health Care have a helpful list of questions to ask Senator Collins about her so-called “replacement” plan.

    As you probably know, Congressional Republicans are also trying to de-fund Planned Parenthood. A former Republican state legislator has an op-ed in the Press Herald with detailed, fact-based reasons for her opposition. While we agree this is a horrendous plan that should be opposed, it’s essential that we continue to talk about the importance of funding for abortion care and not further stigmatize abortion in this debate. It is equally shameful that Congress cut off funding for women’s health services like pap smears and birth control, as it is to refuse to allow federal funds for abortion care as they did in passing H.R. 7, a bill to make the Hyde Amendment permanent and prohibit any public funds or insurance companies from covering abortion care. Now, more than ever, we must call out politicians who fail to connect meaningful abortion access with women’s health. So when you share your concerns about funding for Planned Parenthood with your member of Congress, please be sure to also voice your concerns about H.R. 7 and its discriminatory impact on women of color, women with low income and young women.

    The administration’s indication that it may cut Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) programs that serve people affected by sexual assault and domestic violence and support efforts in prevention is also troubling. According to our friends at Spruce Run-Womancare Alliance, “this funding is a significant support for the Alliance and the services we provide in Penobscot and Piscataquis Counties, to our sister projects across the state, and to a unified response to abuse in our country.”

    Trump will announce his Supreme Court nominee soon, likely someone with a record of hostility to women’s health and rights.

    Finally, to continue Roe week, we recommend you check out a reading in Bangor this Saturday by author Mira Ptacin, sponsored by the Norumbega Collective. The Peaks Island, Maine-based author describes her own abortion experience in her memoir, Poor Your Soul.

    To end on a high note, if you’re feeling helpless or hopeless right now, read this by Amy Hagstrom Miller, the owner of Whole Woman’s Health and a leading advocate for reproductive rights. And then print it out and tape it on your fridge to read it again to be reminded of hope and find strength in our collective voices, resistance, and power.

     

  2. New Name and Mission

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    A Statement from Executive Director, Andrea Irwin:

    We are pleased to announce a revised mission, updated website and new logo and name for Mabel Wadsworth Women’s Health Center. This announcement is part of a lengthy and thoughtful decision-making process and transition that began back in 2014.

    The Center began serving transgender clients in 2014 when Lindsey Piper, NP, joined us. We’ve since determined that the best way to create a space that is welcoming and affirming is by serving people of all genders.

    In 2016, our board and staff made an important decision to begin serving men. We recognized a real gap in confidential, accessible STI services in our community. Upon deep reflection and careful consideration of how this would impact our female clients at both the staff and board levels, we agreed that this service expansion better demonstrates inclusivity.

    Effective Jan. 1, 2017, the Center is now known simply as Mabel Wadsworth Center. We’ve also revised our mission: To provide health care using a feminist model focused on sexual and reproductive health through education, advocacy, and clinical services.

    Together with the revised mission, we’ve also developed a new statement on our values:

    • We empower women to celebrate their sexual and reproductive lives and make informed decisions about their own bodies.
    • We provide compassionate, non-judgmental, client-centered care regardless of a person’s age, ability, race or ethnicity, sexual orientation, economic resources, religion, immigration status, and gender identity or expression.
    • We seek to offer a gender-affirming and inclusive environment so that all people feel safe and welcome.
    • We neither seek nor accept government funding (other than direct reimbursements for clinical care) so we may remain independent and ensure a continued, uncensored voice in reproductive rights policy, education, and advocacy.
    • We advocate for meaningful access to abortion care for all people and believe that abortion care is part of the full spectrum of reproductive health care.
    • We strive to contribute to and engage with the broader reproductive justice movement by working to identify and lift all barriers to reproductive healthcare.
    • We honor the unique and diverse experiences of women’s lives as a feminist organization in Maine for the enrichment of all people.

    We are incredibly proud of our feminist history and our reputation built over 32 years as a safe and affirming place for women to seek sexual and reproductive health care. We are thrilled to broaden this commitment to all people and excited to begin a new chapter. We believe the new mission, values, logo and name reflect a more inclusive approach that still prioritizes the values of feminism and gender equality that have defined our work since 1984. Women’s health and serving women will always be core to our mission but we hope that this name change will invite even more folks to seek health care and community at the Center.

    For additional questions, please contact us. Thank you for your ongoing support.

  3. Happy New Year with host Abbie Strout

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    We hope you all had a great holiday season and New Year’s celebration. For the first episode of 2017, Andrea Irwin, executive director of Mabel Wadsworth Center, guest hosts to give our listeners a chance to get to know your host Abbie Strout. On this episode, Abbie discusses how she got involved in reproductive rights and at Mabel Wadsworth Center. She also provides an overview of the education and community engagement work at the Center and announces some news.

    There wasn’t time for “Ask Mabel” this month, but we promise to answer your sexual and reproductive health questions in February. If you have a question for “Ask Mabel” you can email it to us here.

  4. Redefining Roe

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    Our Annual Roe v. Wade Anniversary Celebration
    Join us for sweets, treats, and conversation to honor the 44th anniversary of the Supreme Court case that made abortion a legal right in the United States. The program will include a screening of a short film by Dawn Porter (filmmaker of the award-winning documentary Trapped) and panel discussion about abortion access in the U.S. and what we can do to take action when politicians threaten our reproductive health, rights, and justice.
     
    When: 
    January 26, 2017
    5:30 PM- 7:30 PM
     
    Where:
    Specialty Sweets Downtown
    31 Main St., Bangor, ME
    Limited seating and RSVP required to attend. Email educate@mabelwadsworth.org or call 207-947-5337 to secure your spot today!
  5. News from Partner Organizations

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    Maine NEW Leadership: 
    Maine NEW (National Education for Women) Leadership will host its annual six-day residential undergraduate student leadership training program June 1 – June 6, 2017 at the University of Maine. They are looking for a diverse group of students who are motivated to learn about the importance of women’s participation in public life and to develop their own leadership skills. Applications are due by February 1, 2017. Here is the link for more information.


    Hardy Girls, Healthy Women:
    Women’s Action Group on January 19 from 6 PM – 8 PM in Bangor 
    Hardy Girls, Healthy Women has been supporting the activism of girls for a long time but they have received feedback that there is a great need for convening and supporting the activism work of adult women too.  You are already calling senators, sending postcards, donating. But you want to do more. You are not alone. This is a chance to bring together, in coalition, the many women in our state who’ve thought to themselves, “I can’t just sit here. I need to do something.” The location will be determined soon, to learn more, click here