Blue Herald
18
Jul
Abstinence Education Faces an Uncertain Future
by Jim Swanson • 11:43 pm

By LAURA BEIL
from The New York Times

Texas has seen the smallest decline in pregnancy and birth rates despite receiving the most money for abstinence education.

HALLSVILLE, Tex. - When Jami Waite graduated from high school this year in this northeastern Texas town, her parents sat damp-eyed in the metal bleachers of Bobcat Stadium, proud in every way possible. Their youngest daughter was leaving childhood an honor graduate, a band member, a true friend, a head cheerleader - and a steadfast virgin.

Eric Love, director of the East Texas Abstinence Program, travels by “Virginity Van” to talk to students. “Sex was designed to bond two people together,” he says.

“People can be abstinent, and it’s not weird,” she declared. With her face on billboards and on TV, Ms. Waite has been an emblem of sexual abstinence for Virginity Rules, which has risen from a single operation in nearby Longview to become an eight-county abstinence franchise.

For the first time, however, Virginity Rules and 700 kindred abstinence education programs are fighting serious threats to their future. Eleven state health departments rejected abstinence education this year, while legislatures in Colorado, Iowa and Washington passed laws that could kill, or at least wound, its presence in public schools.

Opponents received high-caliber ammunition this spring when the most comprehensive study of abstinence education found no sign that it delayed a teenager’s sexual debut. And, after enjoying a fivefold increase in their main federal appropriations, the abstinence programs in June received their first cut in financing from the Senate appropriations committee since 2001.

read more at The New York Times


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