COLUMBUS, Ohio _ The Ohio Supreme Court has declined to reconsider its decision rejecting an appeal from a Dayton-area abortion clinic ordered closed by state health officials.
The justices voted 4-3 on Aug. 21 not to review the case, with Chief Justice Maureen O'Connor, a Republican, and Democratic Justices Michael Donnelly and Melody Stewart voting to accept the case.
A motion by Women's Med Center for reconsideration failed Tuesday, with the same three justices in the 4-3 minority.
The Women's Med Center in Kettering had asked the court to overturn a decision by Ohio's 2nd District Court of Appeals upholding an order by the Ohio Department of Health for instructing the clinic to close because it failed to obtain a legally required patient transfer agreement from a Dayton-area hospital.
The only remaining abortion clinic in the Dayton area remains open while a separate lawsuit continues in federal court.
Health officials revoked the center's operating license in 2016 for not having a transfer agreement with a nearby hospital or naming enough backup physicians for emergencies.
State law enacted in 2013 requires an "ambulatory surgical facility," including an abortion clinic, to have a written transfer agreement with a nearby hospital unless it is granted a variance by the state health director. Public hospitals are not permitted to participate in transfer agreements. The clinic had been operating under a state waiver from the health director that was not renewed.
Abortion opponents say such agreements are needed to ensure patient safety. Abortion-rights supporters say the agreements are unnecessary because hospitals don't turn away people in need of care, and lawmakers' intent was to create hurdles for clinics to operate.