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People in the News

Friday, July 11, 2025

People in the News

Friday, July 11, 2025

Planned Parenthood of Illinois Vows to Stay Open After Trump Defunding Bill

The Chicago Defender

Planned Parenthood of Illinois (PPIL) promised Friday that no patient would be turned away, even after President Donald Trump signed a sweeping measure that cuts federal support for the organization and slashes Medicaid funding nationwide.

Almost 30,000 PPIL patients rely on Medicaid for birth control, cancer screenings, STI testing and treatment, prenatal services, gender-affirming care, and abortion. Tonya Tucker, PPIL’s interim president and CEO, said those services will continue “with little to no disruption” in the months ahead.

“We refuse to stop providing care to our patients, especially those who are the most vulnerable,” Tucker said. “We are grateful that our state government and supporters understand that health care is a human right for everybody. Our doors remain open, and we are doing everything in our power to ensure our patients continue to receive the care they need and deserve for as long as we can.”

Tonya Tucker, interim CEO at Planned Parenthood of Illinois. (Photo via NNPA)

PPIL has served Illinois residents for a century and is the state’s largest provider of sexual and reproductive health care. In the last fiscal year alone, the organization:

  • Treated more than 66,000 patients
  • Logged nearly 30,000 contraception visits
  • Performed over 100,000 STI tests

The organization’s leaders have been working with state officials and private donors on contingency plans to offset the loss of federal dollars. While the exact timeline for funding reductions is still being finalized in Washington, Tucker stressed that patients should keep their appointments and expect normal service.

PPIL’s position underscores the unique role Illinois plays in the Midwest’s reproductive-health landscape. With neighboring states rolling back access, Illinois clinics have become a regional hub—one reason, advocates say, that maintaining Medicaid coverage is crucial.

For now, PPIL staffers are focused on business as usual. Clinics across the state remained open Friday, fielding calls from patients worried that their insurance cards might suddenly be declined.

Founded in 1923, PPIL offers comprehensive, inclusive, medically accurate care regardless of income, immigration status, or ZIP code. That mission, Tucker insisted, will not change.

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