In this appeal we must determine whether the recently enacted Illinois Abortion Parental Consent Act is constitutional. The question pivots upon three separate important interests — those of the pregnant minor, her parents, and the State — which compete and at times directly conflict with each other. The statute is an attempt by the Illinois General Assembly to balance these competing interests. Our job is to determine whether the General Assembly was, within constitutional contours, successful in its endeavor.
I
On November 16, 1977 the Illinois General Assembly enacted the “Illinois Abortion
No abortion shall be performed in this State if the woman is under 18 years of age and has not married except:
(1) By a duly licensed, consenting physician in the exercise of his best clinical medical judgment;
(2) After the minor, 48 hours prior to submitting to the abortion, certifies in writing her consent to the abortion and that her consent is informed and freely given and is not the result of coercion; and
(3) After the consent of her parents is secured and certified in writing.
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If such consent is refused or cannot be obtained, consent may be obtained by order of a judge of the circuit court upon a finding, after such hearing as the judge deems necessary, that the pregnant minor fully understands the consequences of an abortion to her and her unborn child. Such a hearing will not require the appointment of a guardian for the minor. Notice of such hearing shall be sent to the parents of the minor at their last known address by registered or certified mail. The procedure shall be handled expeditiously.
The Act thus requires that an unmarried minor must attempt to obtain consent of her parents before she can obtain an abortion. 3 If one or both of her parents refuse to consent, the statute allows a minor to petition the court to authorize her abortion. The petition must be granted if the court finds that the minor is capable of making an informed decision. The attempt to obtain parental consent is in all cases, however, a prerequisite to initiating the judicial proceeding. Minors who are married, divorced, or widowed are not covered by the Act. Furthermore, it does not apply to any abortion “which is necessary for the preservation of the life of the mother.” Any person who performs an abortion in violation of the Act commits a misdemeanor.
II
This action for declaratory and injunctive relief was commenced in the district court on January 23,1978. Asserting jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343(3) and seeking relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201 and 2202, plaintiffs claimed that the Parental Consent Act of 1977 violated the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The plaintiffs and the classes they represent are as follows:
(1) Jane Doe and Sally Roe, two unmarried minors under the age of eighteen, pregnant at the time of the filing of the suit, and residents of the State of Illinois. Each alleged that she wished to terminate her pregnancy without obtaining either parental consent or a judicial order. Plaintiffs were certified by thedistrict court as representative of a class of “all unmarried minor females desiring pregnancy terminations within the State of Illinois.”
(2) Ralph M. Wynn, M.D., Allan G. Charles, M.D., Jerzy Jozef Biezenski, M.D., and Marvin Rosner, M.D., four physicians licensed to practice in Illinois. Each is engaged in the practice of obstetrics and gynecology, and each performs pregnancy terminations as part of his medical practice. Plaintiff-physicians were certified as representative of a class of “all duly licensed physicians and surgeons presently performing or desiring to perform pregnancy terminations on minor patients in the State of Illinois and on behalf of minor patients desiring pregnancy terminations within the State of Illinois.”
The defendants and the classes they represent are as follows:
(1) William J. Scott, Attorney General of the State of Illinois.
(2) Bernard Carey, State’s Attorney of Cook County, who is responsible for enforcing the Act in Cook County, Illinois. Carey, sued in his official capacity, was certified as a representative of all State’s Attorneys of the various counties in Illinois.
(3) Paul Q. Peterson, M.D., Director of the Department of Health in the State of Illinois, who is charged under the Act with the responsibility of prescribing parental and judicial consent forms to be maintained by physicians on pregnancy terminations of unmarried minor women.
After the complaint was filed Eugene F. Diamond, M.D., a physician licensed to practice in Illinois and engaged in the practice of pediatrics, sought to intervene as a party-defendant. The district court permitted Dr. Diamond to intervene and represent his own interest as a parent of a minor of child-bearing age.
After hearing arguments on plaintiffs’ motion for a temporary restraining order, the district court on February 2, 1978 temporarily restrained the enforcement of the parental and judicial consent provisions [section 4(3)] of the Act. Thereafter the State’s Attorney moved to dismiss the case and plaintiffs moved for entry of a preliminary injunction. On February 23, 1978 the district court denied the motion to dismiss and preliminarily enjoined the state defendants from enforcing the parental and judicial consent provisions contained in section 4 of the Act.
In the memorandum decision accompanying its order, the district court rejected the State’s Attorney’s contention that plaintiffs lacked standing to bring this action. The court further denied his motion to dismiss on the grounds of abstention under
Railroad Commission v. Pullman Co.,
Reaching the merits the district court concluded that section 4(1), requiring a physician to exercise “his best clinical medical judgment,” was valid under
Doe v. Bolton,
[T]he 1977 Act does not provide a judicial remedy, in lieu of parental consent, which meets the Bellotti [v. Baird,428 U.S. 132 ,96 S.Ct. 2857 ,49 L.Ed.2d 844 (1976)] standards. The remedy is unduly burdensome. It is totally silent on procedures essential to its effective utilization. It makes parental consultation mandatory in all cases. The elements of the judicial inquiry are not limited to those which are constitutionally permissible. It is, in my judgment, void on its face.
Both the State’s Attorney and the intervenor-defendant appealed from that part of the judgment holding section 4(3) unconstitutional and enjoining enforcement thereof. 5 Plaintiffs have not challenged the district court’s upholding of the other sections of the Act.
Ill
At the outset, the State’s Attorney contends that the district court should have abstained. The doctrine of abstention is “an extraordinary and narrow exception to the duty of a District Court to adjudicate a controversy properly before it.”
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
A.
Pullman
-type abstention is appropriate “where an unconstrued state statute is susceptible of a construction by the state judiciary ‘which might avoid in whole or in part the necessity for federal constitutional adjudication, or at least materially change the nature of the problem.’ ”
Bellotti v. Baird,
We do not find the essential portions of the Parental Consent Act to be ambiguous. The requirements of the statute are plain: to obtain an abortion, every unmarried pregnant minor must obtain the written consent of both of her parents. If one or both refuse, she cannot obtain the abor
This case is therefore significantly different from
Bellotti v. Baird,
The picture thus painted by the [state defendants] is of a statute that prefers parental consultation and consent, but that permits a mature minor capable of giving informed consent to obtain, without undue burden, an order permitting the abortion without parental consultation, and, further permits even a minor incapable of giving informed consent to obtain an order without parental consultation where there is a showing that the abortion would be in her best interests. The statute, as thus read, would be fundamentally different from a statute that creates a “parental veto.”
On the other hand, the State’s Attorney here concedes that the requirements of the Illinois Act are unambiguous: parental consent is required in all cases and a judge can pass on an application for a consent order only after one or both parents have refused to consent to the abortion. He does not suggest that Illinois employ the mature-minor rule or any other rule which would negate or bypass the statute’s absolute requirement of parental notification. Thus, one of the plaintiffs’ basic constitutional challenges — the requirement of parental consent in all cases — could not be obviated by state court construction.
The State’s Attorney nonetheless argues that abstention is warranted because the procedural deficiencies found by the district court — absence of any provisions for counsel, anonymity, and timing of the hearing— can be provided by the state courts. While acknowledging that the Act does not mandate any of these safeguards, he argues that the state courts could, under existing practices and procedures, provide them in this setting. But even if state court construction could modify or even obviate some of plaintiffs’ constitutional challenges, we would still find Pullman -type abstention inappropriate.
The judicially-created abstention doctrine is rooted in equity. Accordingly, in determining whether to abstain, the need for clarification must be balanced against the effects of abstaining.
See Bellotti, supra,
As we have already noted, part of the Act is clear and unambiguous: all minors
Other more compelling considerations militate against abstention with regard to the judicial consent provision. Pullman-type abstention brings about delays while the federal court suspends consideration. The delay is aggravated here because, unlike Massachusetts, Illinois lacks a procedure whereby a federal court can certify questions qf state law to the Illinois Supreme Court for determination. Furthermore, it is doubtful whether a single state adjudication would be sufficient to clarify fully the statute. Unlike the typical abstention where the statute is unclear and can be clarified by a single lawsuit, here the judicial consent provision is incomplete — no procedures are specified in the Act. Because the circuit courts of each county are free to develop their own procedures, a definitive determination of all the procedures required by state law would undoubtedly entail a number of decisions before the statute could be sufficiently clarified. Until that time, the certainty of a law of substantial social impact would remain unsettled. More crucially, the delay inherent in such piecemeal adjudication would inhibit minors’ ability to exercise their fundamental right to privacy. 8 Of particular concern is that the denial of these rights would result in irreversible consequences. Moreover, piecemeal adjudication would cause a chilling effect bringing about the same result. 9 In sum, the burdens that Pullman-type abstention would place on plaintiffs is too great to be justified by the minimal benefits that such abstention may produce in altering the difficult constitutional questions presented in this case. 10
B. The State’s Attorney also contends that the district court should have refrained from exercising jurisdiction under the abstention doctrine as articulated in
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
The State’s Attorney is correct in asserting that the issues raised in this case bear on policy considerations of substantial public interest. But there is nothing about the nature of the questions which concern matters of traditional and predominant state interest or which involve a specialized aspect of local law. Nor is there anything in the history of state judicial experience which suggests that state courts have a particular expertise and therefore dictates that only they can decide the questions of federal constitutional law involved in this action.
A declaration that the Illinois Parental Consent Act is violative of the United States Constitution may indeed disrupt the State’s policy. But as Mr. Justice Marshall recently noted: “[Tjhere is, of course, no doctrine requiring abstention merely because resolution of a federal question may result in overturning a state policy.” Za
blocki v. Redhail,
IV
Much of the controversy between the parties centers on the rights and interests which are involved in this case. We believe that confusion can be avoided and the issues and analysis clarified by initially identifying those rights and interests, their nature, and their scope.
A.
Rights of
Minors.
11
Until recent years, minors were afforded little protection under the Constitution.
12
But the Supreme Court has come to recognize that minors also possess constitutional rights. “[Wjhatever may be their precise impact, neither the Fourteenth Amendment nor the Bill of Rights is for adults alone.”
In re Gault,
In
Planned Parenthood v. Danforth,
Although a minor possesses the right of privacy, defined as “the right of the individual . . . to be free of unwarranted governmental intrusion into . . . the decision whether to bear or beget a child,”
Eisenstadt v. Baird,
Although a state has broader authority to regulate the activities of minors, any state interference with a minor’s fundamental privacy right must be based on a “significant state interest,”
16
Carey, supra,
We find both interests significant. The State’s first interest, that the minor’s decision be an informed one, goes to the heart of the minor’s right to decide whether to terminate her pregnancy. Clearly the right cannot be exercised properly unless the decision is informed, with knowledge of available alternatives, if any, and the consequences of each. The State’s second interest, in protecting the family, is equally significant. Because the family is the primary unit through which social values and moral precepts are transmitted to the young, the State has an interest in not undermining that unit. Although the State’s interests are significant, the question remains whether the legislation here serves those interests, and whether the legislation is drawn so as to not unduly burden the exercise of the minor’s fundamental right.
B. Interests of the State. In support of the Illinois Parental Consent Act, the State asserts essentially two distinct interests: (1) its interest in protecting the minor, that is, ensuring that her decision either to complete or to terminate her pregnancy is an informed one, thus protecting the minor from her own improvidence; and (2) its interest in preserving the family as a viable and stable unit in society, and a related interest in safeguarding parental authority. 17
C.
Rights of Parents.
The rights of parents to supervise and direct the rearing of their children free from state interference is firmly established. For example, in
Wisconsin v. Yoder,
[T]his case involves the fundamental interest of the parents ... to guide the religious future and education of their children. This history and culture of Western civilization reflect a strong tradition of parental concern for the nurture and upbringing of their children. This primary role of the parents in the upbringing of their children is now established beyond debate as an enduring American tradition.
The ambit of parental authority afforded constitutional protection is broad in scope. The Supreme Court has recognized the right to include “the inculcation of moral standards, religious beliefs, and elements of good citizenship.”
Yoder, su
The constitutional rights of parents, as that of minors, are not absolute. “The power of the parent, even when linked to a free exercise claim, may be subject to limitation . . . if it appears that parental decisions will jeopardize the health or safety of the child, or have a potential for significant social burdens.”
Yoder, supra,
Parents may be free to become martyrs themselves. But it does not follow they are free, in identical circumstances, to make martyrs of their children.
Prince v. Massachusetts,
The rights of parents must also yield to the fundamental rights of their children. This was made clear in
Planned Parenthood v. Danforth,
Any independent interest the parent may have in the termination of the minor daughter’s pregnancy is no more weighty than the right of privacy of the competent minor mature enough to have become pregnant.
Because it is the minor, not the parents, who physically bears the child and faces the physiological and emotional risks attendant to childbirth, and because it is the minor, not the parents, who is responsible for the child once it is born, the Court held that parents do not have the right to stop an abortion if their mature daughter, with the consent of her physician, decides to terminate the pregnancy. Although the Court in Danforth held that the parental rights did not outweigh the minor’s rights when they are in direct conflict, the Court did not otherwise delineate the scope of the parental rights. The breadth of those rights, and the degree to which parents may participate in the minor’s decision are indeed the major questions before us today. With these considerations in mind, we turn to the challenged provisions of the Parental Consent Act.
V
A. The Act requires parental consent for a minor to obtain an abortion. If “such consent is refused or cannot be obtained,” a minor may then seek consent by a judicial order. These requirements mean that the minor’s parents must always be notified of their daughter’s desire. 19 Defendants justify this mandatory requirement as serving both the State’s interest in protecting minors from uninformed and possibly improvident decisions and in ensuring that the parental interests in their children are preserved.
The State first argues that the mandatory parental consent requirement is justified because it ensures that minors will receive adult guidance and thereby assures that the
The Act also makes no exception for unmarried minors who are mature or emancipated, or who receive counseling and guidance from physicians or others in regard to the consequences of the decision to have an abortion. 22 By requiring the minor to attempt to obtain the consent of both of her parents, the statute in effect creates a presumption of incompetence to consent. That presumption is inconsistent with Illinois’ own statutory scheme covering minors.
In Illinois, a pregnant minor who chooses to give birth may consent to any medical or surgical treatment without the necessity of parental consent. 23 Ill.Rev. Stat. ch. 91, § 18.1. That legislation presumes that pregnant minors are sufficiently knowledgeable and mature to consent knowingly. The State has suggested no reason why pregnant minors are less capable of deciding whether to terminate their pregnancy than they are to decide whether to carry their pregnancy to term, or even to have a Caesarian section, a far more dangerous procedure than a first trimester abortion. We hold, therefore, that the Act, at least in regard to the objective of informed decisions, is underinclusive because it excludes married minors and overinclusive because it includes mature and emancipated minors.
The interest of the State in preserving parental interests in raising their children presents a more difficult question. As noted earlier, parents have a substantial interest in participating in their daughter’s deci
The statute, by requiring in essence that both parents be informed in every case, does not take into account the fact that such notice frequently might be inconsistent with a minor’s best interests. 24 That it may not be in the minor’s best interests to have her parents informed of her condition in all cases is recognized by the Illinois General Assembly. A number of statutes enable minors to receive medical care without the parents being informed. For example, a minor can receive birth control devices and treatment for venereal disease and drug use without parental notice. Ill. Rev.Stat. ch. 91, §§ 18.3 & 18.7. Legislation of this type recognizes that in certain situations when minors may be hesitant to inform their parents of their condition, enabling those minors to obtain counseling and medical care without involving their parents may not only be in their best interests but may also serve the public interest in assuring that medical care is provided.
We do not hold that parents cannot be notified of their daughter’s condition. To the contrary, because we believe that parents should be involved in their minor’s decision whenever possible, they generally should be informed. Nor do we hold that a minor should be free not to inform her parents merely because such disclosure may cause familial disharmony. The objectionable feature of the statute is rather that it requires that the parents be informed in all cases, thereby precluding an independent assessment, whether by a court or physician, that it would not be in the minor’s best interests for her parents to learn of her condition. 25
B. If one or both of the parents refuse to consent to the abortion, the Act requires that the minor must initiate judicial proceedings to override this veto. We find this to be an undue burden such as that held unconstitutional in
Doe v. Bolton,
A decision to obtain a court order presupposes an awareness of the existence of the remedy, an awareness simply not possessed by many minors. In these circumstances, as the district court correctly noted, “[i]f she is uninformed in this regard [availability of a judicial remedy] the parents’ de facto refusal becomes a de jure veto . . .”
The difficulties that a minor faces are not less formidable for one who is aware of the procedure. Even if aware, the minor is faced with the enormous burden of going to court, without legal assistance and in opposition to her parents’ wishes. Many minors may simply not go to court and instead resort to an illegal or self-procured abortion. This would clearly contravene the State’s interest in the health of the mother and the welfare of minors.
For those minors sufficiently determined to initiate court proceedings over parental opposition, the Act still places an undue burden upon them. Such proceedings, with parents present as opposing parties, will certainly destroy what was left of the fami
The minor, accordingly, is in a no-win situation. If she loses the judicial proceedings, it will be a personal blow, and scarcely a redemption of the ill feeling and tension that undoubtedly resulted from her parents’ refusal of consent and her taking them to court. If she wins, according to defendants’ own expert, she is likely to find herself in an even worse position.
Furthermore, the delay involved in first trying to obtain parental consent followed by the delay inherent in any judicial proceeding is unreasonable. 26 It might force the minor into either a second trimester abortion which is more dangerous and expensive 27 or into not having an abortion at all if the second trimester has expired. For these reasons, we hold that the statutory requirement of parental consent as a precondition to a judicial proceeding plus the foregoing burdens created by having to go to court erect unconstitutional barriers to the exercise of a minor’s fundamental right to terminate her pregnancy.
Plaintiffs urge us to declare that requiring any judicial proceeding is per se unduly burdensome and therefore unconstitutional. Although plaintiffs advance persuasive arguments for their position, we find it unnecessary to reach the issue because the judicial proceeding as presently drafted does not meet constitutional standards.
The Act makes no provision for the appointment of counsel.
28
It does not guarantee a speedy proceeding with provision for expedited review.
29
Nor does the Act provide any safeguard for preserving the anonymity of the pregnant minor. (Indeed, if the right to privacy means anything, it means that the minor should be free to make her decision without fear that the decision she makes will be exposed to public scrutiny.) In short, the Act totally fails to provide any of the essential features which the Supreme Court intimated were minimally necessary.
See Bellotti v. Baird,
Defendants argue that all these safeguards are presently available, though they concede that they are available only at the discretion of the judge. We cannot agree that the mere possibility that these procedures may be employed can save the statute from attack. Because of the fundamental nature of the rights involved, because of the lack of legal sophistication of minors generally, and because of the urgency inherent in an abortion decision itself, it is imperative that the procedure be spelled out in detail in the statute itself. We fully concur with the district court when it said:
When, however, a new judicial proceeding is created which has as its purposethe restriction or, at the very least, the superintendence of the exercise of a right guaranteed by the Constitution, all of the steps in and dimensions of that proceeding must be visible before a constitutional assessment of the proceeding can be made.
C. We also find the Parental Consent Act to be deficient because it fails to provide for minors who do not understand the consequences of an abortion. The only judicial inquiry permitted by the Act is whether “the pregnant minor fully understands the consequences of an abortion to her and her unborn child.” Consequently, if a court finds that a minor is unable to understand fully the consequences of the act, the parents’ decision to refuse to consent will prevail because the court can take no further action. 30
Under the statute, a parent’s opposition always prevails with regard to this type of minor. Although the parents’ views may be entitled to greater weight when such minors are involved,
Danforth
does not permit the parents to have “an absolute, and possibly arbitrary, veto over the decision of the physician and his patient to terminate the patient’s pregnancy, regardless of the reason for withholding the consent.”
VI
Although the Illinois Abortion Parental Consent Act of 1977 attempts to balance the competing rights of the minor and her parents, it leaves the rights of the pregnant minor in a precarious position on the light side of the scale. She is the one who is required to shoulder all the burdens of trying to obtain her parents’ consent and, if unsuccessful in that regard, of commencing and satisfactorily treading the inadequate judicial framework delineated in the Act— all at a time when she is experiencing one of the most physically and psychologically critical periods of her life. To pass constitutional muster, a statute such as this must be drafted in a way to aid the minor by easing her burdens rather than adding to them. As presently drafted the Act does not meet that prerequisite; instead, it impermissibly impairs the exercise of a pregnant minor’s constitutional rights.
The order of the district court is affirmed.
APPENDIX
ILLINOIS HOUSE BILL 480
ILLINOIS ABORTION PARENTAL CONSENT ACT OF 1977
Section 1. Legislative Intent. It is the intent of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois that the rights and responsibilities of parents be respected, that the health and welfare of minors and their unborn children be protected, and that no minor child who has not married shall be allowed to undergo an abortion operation without the consultation and consent of her parents, or a court order as part of the informed consent of the minor child seeking the abortion.
Section 2. Title of Act. This Act shall be known and may be cited as the Illinois Abortion Parental Consent Act of 1977.
Section 3. As used in this Act, “abortion” means the use of any instrument,
Section 4. No abortion shall be performed in this State if the woman is under 18 years of age and has not married except:
(1) By a duly licensed, consenting physician in the exercise of his best clinical medical judgment;
(2) After the minor, 48 hours prior to submitting to the abortion, certifies in writing her consent to the abortion and that her consent is informed and freely given and is not the result of coercion; and
(3) After the consent of her parents is secured and certified in writing.
If one of the parents has died, has deserted his or her family, or is not available, consent by the remaining parent is sufficient. If both parents have died, have deserted their family, or are not available, consent of the minor’s guardian or other person standing in loco parentis is sufficient.
If such consent is refused or cannot be obtained, consent may be obtained by order of a judge of the circuit court upon a finding, after such hearing as the judge deems necessary, that the pregnant minor fully understands the consequences of an abortion to her and her unborn child. Such a hearing will not require the appointment of a guardian for the minor. Notice of such hearing shall be sent to the parents of the minor at their last known address by registered or certified mail. The procedure shall be handled expeditiously.
The Department of Public Health shall prescribe a written form for such consent. Such form shall be signed by the proper person or persons and given to the physician performing the abortion who shall maintain it in his permanent files.
Nothing in this Section shall be construed as abolishing or limiting any statutory or common law rights of any other person or persons relative to consent to the performance of an abortion for purposes of any civil action or any injunctive relief. This Section does not apply to any abortion performed which is necessary for the preservation of the life of the mother.
Section 5. Any person who performs an abortion in violation of this Act commits a Class A misdemeanor.
Section 6. This Act takes effect January 1, 1978.
Notes
. The 1977 Parental Consent Act supplemented section 3(4) of the Illinois Abortion Law of 1975, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, § 81-23(4), which prohibited an unmarried woman under the age of eighteen from obtaining an abortion without the consent of one of her parents. This provision, almost identical to that struck down in
Planned Parenthood v. Danforth,
. If both parents are not available the Act provides:
If one of the parents has died, has deserted his or her family, or is not available, consent by the remaining parent is sufficient. If both parents have died, have deserted their family, or are not available, consent of the minor’s guardian or other person standing in loco parentis is sufficient.
. The district court declined to rule on plaintiffs’ challenge to the definition of “abortion” contained in section 3 of the 1977 Act, as a similar definition contained in section 2(6) of the Illinois Abortion Law of 1975 was, at the time the decision was entered, preliminarily enjoined by a three-judge court. That definition was later declared unconstitutional in
Wynn v. Scott,
Plaintiffs in this action also challenged section 1 of the Parental Consent Act on the basis that it purportedly protects non-existent rights of unborn children. The district court refused to entertain this challenge as the section is not
. Defendants Scott and Peterson did not file notices of appeal and did not participate in the appeal.
. The defendants in
Bellotti
also asserted that the statute required that parents regard only the minor’s interests in considering whether to consent and that a court could permit an abortion without parental consent for a minor incapable of rendering informed consent provided the abortion is found to be in the minor’s best interest.
See
. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in
Baird v. Attorney General,
Mass.,
. As we noted in
Zbaraz v. Quern,
The importance of this consideration is not entirely abated by the possibility that the state courts might issue a preliminary injunction pending a decision on the statutory construction issues which appellants would raise.
. This case is therefore different from the situation presented in
Yesterday’s Children v. Kennedy,
. We also note that
Pullman
-type abstention may increase rather than decrease the tensions between federal and state courts, as illustrated by the history of
Bellotti v. Baird.
In that case a three-judge court held the Massachusetts parental consent provision unconstitutional.
. We use the word “minor” in this opinion with some misgiving. We recognize that there are vast differences between a child and an adolescent, and an adolescent and a mature teenager, all of whom are minors.
. Traditionally, minors were entitled “not to liberty, but to custody.”
In re Gault,
. Minors are entitled to constitutional protection for freedom of speech,
Tinker v. Des Moines School Dist.,
. This right of privacy is not unlimited even for adult women as a state may limit the availability of abortions during the later stages of pregnancy and may circumscribe the time, place, and conditions under which they may get abortions.
See, e. g., Carey v. Populations Services International,
. For example, in
Ginsberg v. New York,
. This standard of judicial review is apparently less rigorous than the “compelling state interest” test applied to restrictions on the privacy rights of adults.
See Carey, supra,
[Wjhen a State . . . burdens the exercise of a fundamental right, its attempt to justify that burden as a rational means for the accomplishment of some significant State policy requires more than a bare assertion that the burden is connected to such a policy.
Id. at 696, 97 S.Ct. at .2022.
. As with any abortion, the State also has an interest in protecting prenatal life and safeguarding maternal health.
Roe v. Wade,
. In none of the cases establishing the constitutional doctrine of parental rights vis-a-vis the state were the rights of minors raised in contradistinction to those of their parents. Thus, although the Meyer-Pierce-Yoder line of cases may be helpful, they cannot be regarded as controlling when a minor’s constitutional rights are in conflict with those of her parents.
. Parental notification is further assured under the Act by notice to the parents of the minor’s application for judicial relief.
. As spousal consent statutes are unconstitutional,
Planned Parenthood v. Danforth,
.
See Rinaldi v. Yeager,
. The statute overlooks the guidance which physicians provide in determining whether an abortion should be performed. The Supreme Court in
Roe
v. Wade,
. Illinois recognizes that a minor has the capacity for self-determination in other areas as well. For example, she can consent to treatment for venereal disease, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 91, § 18.3, and can receive contraceptives without parental consent. Ill.Rev.Stat., ch. 91, § 18.7. If a minor is presumed to be able to consent to obtain medical treatment to avoid an unwanted pregnancy by getting contraceptives, it makes little sense to say that she cannot consent to an abortion where contraceptives were unavailable or unsuccessful. Furthermore, the Act itself requires the minor’s written consent that her decision is “informed and freely given and is not the result of coercion.” Section 4(2). By this provision the minor is statutorily acknowledged to be able to consent to the abortion.
. There are a variety of reasons why it could be inconsistent with a minor’s best interests to have one or both of her parents know of her pregnancy. For example, parents may physically abuse the minor upon disclosure of the pregnancy. Rather than inflicting physical harm, parents may force the pregnant minor to enter into a marriage which she does not want.
Others may compel the minor to continue her pregnancy simply as punishment.
. Such an independent assessment is made for minors who receive treatment for venereal disease or drug use. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 91, § 18.5 provides that it is within the discretion of the attending physician to inform the parents of any treatment given or needed.
. Even if the minor obtains a court order, she must wait an additional 48 hours before she can actually obtain the abortion. See § 4(2) of the Act. Furthermore, if one considers the delays involved in appellate review, the matter may become moot.
. All second and third trimester abortions must be performed in a hospital. See § 4 of the Illinois Abortion Law of 1975.
. It appears that Legal Services Corporation attorneys will be unable to handle actions under the Act. See 42 U.S.C. § 2996f(b)(8) (prohibiting the use of Legal Services Corporation funds where an individual seeks to procure a non-therapeutic abortion). Thus, a minor is required to navigate at least the initial stages of a judicial procedure either on her own or with private counsel. Yet, it is obvious that private counsel will be beyond the resources of most teenagers.
. Speed is critical in the abortion context. “Risks during the first trimester are admittedly lower than during later months.”
Doe v. Bolton,
. In such circumstances, an abortion will not be performed even though the minor wants the abortion, one of her parents consents to the abortion, and the court finds that an abortion would be in the minor’s best interests.
