Go to Content Go to Navigation Go to Navigation Go to Site Search Homepage

PLANNED PARENTHOOD ACTION FUND OF NEW JERSEY

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

January 20, 2018

Contact: Casey Olesko 201.647.5502 / [email protected]

Planned Parenthood Action Fund of New Jersey Celebrates Women’s March Anniversary

MORRISTOWN, NJ — Planned Parenthood Action Fund of New Jersey supporters participated in this year’s Women’s March on New Jersey in a statewide rally to protect women’s rights, civil rights, and human rights.

The Women’s March in 2017 sparked an energy that continues to this day, as women and allies across the United States defeated the repeal of Obamacare, protected access to Planned Parenthood, spoke up against sexual harassment and assault, and stepped up and ran for office all across the country. In the past year, millions of women called and showed up at their member of Congress’s offices, including right here in New Jersey, demanding that their representatives vote against efforts to strip health care from millions of Americans and block women from getting preventive care at Planned Parenthood.

“2018 will be a pivotal year for women's health and women's rights, and women will be a potent political force,” said Christine Sadovy, Legislative and Political Director with Planned Parenthood Action Fund of New Jersey. “We’re going to use this energy and support to fight at the local level to ensure everyone in New Jersey has full equality, can control their own bodies, and can access health care without fear, shame, or stigma.”

In 2017, reproductive rights were under attack at both the federal level and in New Jersey. For the eighth consecutive year, former Governor Chris Christie vetoed funding for lifesaving preventive reproductive health care services from the state budget – funding that would have supported breast and cervical cancer screenings, birth control, and testing and treatment for sexually transmitted infections at Planned Parenthood health centers and other community providers across the state. Since he first eliminated this funding eight years ago, the number of cases of bacterial STDs has risen 35 percent across the state, and has risen nearly 50 percent or more in 11 out of New Jersey’s 21 counties.

At the federal level, Donald Trump and Mike Pence spent last year trying to block access to affordable birth control, defund Planned Parenthood, cut teen pregnancy prevention programs, and strip away women’s fundamental right to control their own bodies.

As a result of these attacks, Planned Parenthood saw an unprecedented outpouring of organizing, activism, and support. People across New Jersey and across the country marched, showed up at town hall meetings, flooded the Congressional switchboard with calls, organized online, and stood up for access to health care. Nationwide, in the last year, Planned Parenthood gained more than 250,000 volunteers and more than 1.5 million new supporters; held more than 2,700 organized events across the country to resist attacks on women and basic health care rights; and delivered more than 1.5 million petition signatures to members of Congress in opposition to defunding Planned Parenthood.

“One year ago, millions of women like me marched in the streets the day after Trump was inaugurated,” said Sara Goetz of Maplewood. “Today, I’m here to stand with Planned Parenthood and show that we still aren’t backing down – we’re just getting started!”

Planned Parenthood cares about your data privacy. We and our third-party vendors use cookies and other tools to collect, store, monitor, and analyze information about your interaction with our site to improve performance, analyze your use of our sites and assist in our marketing efforts. You may opt out of the use of these cookies and other tools at any time by visiting Cookie Settings. By clicking “Allow All Cookies” you consent to our collection and use of such data, and our Terms of Use. For more information, see our Privacy Notice.

Cookie Settings

Planned Parenthood cares about your data privacy. We and our third-party vendors, use cookies, pixels, and other tracking technologies to collect, store, monitor, and process certain information about you when you access and use our services, read our emails, or otherwise engage with us. The information collected might relate to you, your preferences, or your device. We use that information to make the site work, analyze performance and traffic on our website, to provide a more personalized web experience, and assist in our marketing efforts. We also share information with our social media, advertising, and analytics partners. You can change your default settings according to your preference. You cannot opt-out of our Necessary Cookies as they are deployed to ensure the proper functioning of our website (such as prompting the cookie banner and remembering your settings, to log into your account, to redirect you when you log out, etc.). For more information, please see our Privacy Notice.

Marketing

On

We use online advertising to promote our mission and help constituents find our services. Marketing pixels help us measure the success of our campaigns.

Performance

On

We use qualitative data, including session replay, to learn about your user experience and improve our products and services.

Analytics

On

We use web analytics to help us understand user engagement with our website, trends, and overall reach of our products.