Testimony on Senate Bill 2414 (Repeal of Family Cap)
To: Senate Human Services Committee
From: Christopher Dodson, Executive Director
Subject: Senate Bill 2414
Date: February 7, 2001
The North Dakota Catholic Conference supports Senate Bill
2414 to remove the family cap provision from the Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families program and include delivery
coverage in the Childrens Health Insurance program.
The North Dakota Catholic Conference opposed the family cap
provision when it was enacted in 1997. The experience of
the Catholic Church and pro-life organizations, as well as
New Jersey’s experience with the family cap, led us
to believe, and still believe, that the provision
encourages abortion.
There is, however, a more fundamental reason why we oppose
the family cap. By discriminating against a child solely
because of the circumstances of his or her conception, it
violates the child’s dignity and the common good. In
a just and caring society we reach out a helping hand to
those in need without regard for where they live, their
race, who their parents are, or what their parents did.
Family caps, however, punish the child for something his or
her parents did, helping to perpetuate the poverty to which
that child was born.
We recognize that proponents of the family cap often had a
good intention, namely to reduce out-of-wedlock pregnancy.
However, it is never justifiable to use a means that
violates human dignity to achieve a desired good. Moreover,
there is no evidence that family caps in North Dakota have
reduced the rate of out-of wedlock pregnancy. Certainly, if
we want to encourage positive, self-respecting behavior by
parents, we can find better ways to do it than penalizing
the child.
It is for similar reasons that we support including
coverage for delivery in the childrens health insurance
program. If we are to build a culture of life so that no
child is left behind and every child welcomed, our state
programs must reflect it. A childrens health insurance
program that covers most every type of procedure but not
delivery places barriers to carrying the child to full
term. In addition, it sends a message that the state thinks
that giving birth, rather than being a blessed event that
should be praised, is something that should be discouraged.
We urge a Do Pass on Senate Bill 2414.