
The “Clean Water for All Life Act” in Wisconsin demands accountability for chemically tainted placenta tissue, blood, and the bodies of tragically lost preborn babies being flushed into our waterways via Chemical Abortions
Students for Life Action (SFLAction) students and volunteers will head to Madison, Wis. Feb. 10 in support of pro-life legislation, including SFLAction’s own “Clean Water for All Life Act” (AB718 in the House and companion bill SB734 in the Senate).
The “Clean Water for All Life Act” aims to hold those trafficking Chemical Abortions Pills responsible for the entire process, requiring them to be physically present and conduct physical exams during Chemical Abortions. It also aims to address the tons of chemically tainted placenta tissue, blood, and bodies of the tragically lost preborn babies being flushed into our waterways via Chemical Abortions.
The use of Chemical Abortion Pills has skyrocketed in recent years, with 642,700 reported abortions being committed via Chemical Abortion Pills in 2023 alone. Many of these abortions happen at home without proper biohazard disposal, sending more than 50 tons of placenta tissue, blood, and bodies of tragically lost preborn babies into our waterways each year, all chemically tainted by the Chemical Abortion Pills. Clearly, legislation like the “Clean Water for All Life Act” is becoming increasingly important.
As previously reported by SFLAction, Wisconsin has the opportunity to make history if it passes this trailblazing legislation. While multiple states have introduced this legislation previously, a state is yet to pass it.
Current Wisconsin law illegalizes abortion at 20 weeks since fertilization – FIVE MONTHS into pregnancy.
The Big Picture:
- This legislation aims to address a far too long unaddressed issue: the harm coming to Americans across the country via human tissue, human remains, and Chemical Abortion Pill remnants being flushed into our waterways.
- Chemical Abortion Pills are dangerous for women, who far too often are mailed the Chemical Abortion Pills after online purchase or free handout. Requiring medical exams can help prevent life-threatening complications.
- Requiring healthcare providers to be present and conduct physical exams during and after Chemical Abortions could dramatically decrease the number of Death-by-Mail and telehealth abortions, protect the environment, and save lives.
READ: Legislators Beware: New Undercover Videos Show Just How Easy It Is to Get Chemical Abortion Pills
Bill Breakdown:
- Healthcare providers are required to be physically present and conduct a physical examination during a Chemical Abortion, as well as conduct a follow-up visit within seven days of the administration or use of Chemical Abortion Pills.
- The use of a “catch kit” with a biohazard/medical waste bag is required in a Chemical Abortion for proper disposal of the chemically tainted placenta tissue and blood, as well as the body of the preborn baby, tragically lost.
- Patients may not be prosecuted and ectopic pregnancy care (which is NOT an abortion) is protected.
- Chemical Abortion Pill manufacturers and distributors are held civilly liable for environmental contamination caused by endocrine-disrupting chemicals in wastewater, with a fine of $100,000 per violation of dumping pathological medical waste.
- Licensed medical professionals are held criminally and civilly liable for providing catch kits and instructing women on how to use them, as well as for scheduling a follow-up appointment within seven days of the administration or use of Chemical Abortion Pills, with up to 5 years imprisonment and/or fines up to $50,000 per violation.
Who’s Sponsoring the “Clean Water for All Life Act”:
AB718 was introduced in the House by Reps. Lindee Rae Brill, Nate L. Gustafson, Elijah R. Behnke, Rob Kreibich, David Murphy, and Chuck Wichgers. SB734 was introduced in the Senate by Sen. André Jacque.
What We’re Watching:
Multiple states introduced the “Clean Water for Life Act” during their 2025 legislative sessions. With the introduction of the “Clean Water for Life Act” in Wisconsin, there is clear momentum in the push for required regulation of Chemical Abortion Pills in our waterways.
Watch for more states to introduce and vote on legislation like the “Clean Water for Life Act” in the coming weeks. The increase in attention to this issue on the state level could also add pressure to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to add Chemical Abortion Pills to its monitoring list. SFLAction will continue to push for monitoring of Chemical Abortion Pills in our waterways on both the state and federal level, as well as for federal regulations of Chemical Abortion Pills by HHS and the FDA.
READ: It’s Time for the EPA to Start Monitoring Abortion Pill Chemicals in Our Water
