Community Corner
Cobalt Spent Almost $500K For Abortion, Support Costs In Colorado Following Dobbs Decision In 2022
The figure is more than double its entire spending in previous years and represents an exponential increase in requests for abortion care.
January 23, 2023
The Cobalt Abortion Fund spent nearly half a million dollars on abortion procedures and support services for patients following the overturning of Roe v. Wade last summer, a figure that is more than double its entire spending in previous years and represents an exponential increase in the requests for help the organization is receiving from pregnant people seeking abortion care.
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Cobalt — a Denver-based advocacy group whose donor-supported Abortion Fund provides financial assistance to people seeking abortion care — said it spent close to $700,000 total in 2022, including about $475,000 for abortion procedures for 1,717 patients and about $220,000 on practical support services for 640 patients, which includes items like transportation and lodging.
The bulk of spending happened between late June and the end of the year, after the U.S. Supreme Court handed down its decision in Dobbs v. Jackson, which overturned the precedent that gave people the right to an abortion. As surrounding states banned or severely limited abortion following the decision, pregnant people seeking abortions came to Colorado, which codified the right to an abortion last year, to receive care.
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Last year, 3,670 pregnant people came to Colorado for an abortion, according to provisional data from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment. Nearly 2,300 traveled from Texas. Those numbers are markedly up from 1,631 people in 2021 and 1,318 in 2020.
Some of the people who came to Colorado in 2022 turned to organizations like Cobalt for help.
After the Dobbs decision, Cobalt spent about $300,000 on abortions for its patients and about $200,000 on practical support. That reflects about 70% of its spending for the entire year.
For comparison, the organization’s total spending in 2021 was just over $206,000 and about $204,000 in 2020. Practical support was the fastest growing area of need for Cobalt clients following Dobbs as patients coming from neighboring states needed help covering travel costs.
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