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Black smoke signals no pope was elected on first day of Vatican conclave; Nine in 10 people surveyed back climate action; 'Three-Fifths' comments ignite Indiana controversy; In Minnesota, SNAP benefits reach farmers markets, other parts of the economy.

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As Congress debates Medicaid cuts and emissions rollbacks, former presidential candidate John Kasich calls for protecting vulnerable Americans, veterans link fossil fuel dependence to military deaths, and federal funding cuts threaten health and jobs.

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DOGE guts a 30-year-old national service program, cuts are likely but Head Start may be spared elimination in the next budget, moms are the most vulnerable when extreme weather hits, and there's a croaking sound coming from rural California.

Expansion of Safe Haven Baby Boxes across Mississippi counties underway

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Tuesday, December 10, 2024   

Advocates said Mississippi is taking a big step toward infant safety with the expansion of Safe Haven Baby Boxes in the state.

Nationwide, more than 280 boxes are available to support families in crisis, and five of those boxes are in Mississippi.

Monica Kelsey, founder and CEO of Safe Haven Baby Boxes, said their secure boxes at fire stations and hospitals let parents anonymously surrender healthy newborns. The organization, which began in Indiana, started installing boxes in Mississippi last year and plans further expansion to other states.

"This is a last resort option," Kelsey, explained. "Our job at Safe Haven Baby Boxes is to keep babies out of dumpsters. We're not an alternative to abortion. We're an alternative to abandonment, and the women that are utilizing our services have already carried their pregnancy to term."

The boxes adhere to the Mississippi Infant Safe Haven law, which permits safe surrender of newborns up to 45 days old without prosecution, reducing unsafe abandonments.

Kelsey added they have seen high rates of abandonments in New Mexico, California and New York. She pointed out Texas, despite strict abortion laws, also has many abandonments and it has not changed since the Roe vs. Wade decision was overturned.

Kelsey noted inside the baby boxes is an orange bag with resources for the mother. She added they operate a 24-hour national hotline for mothers in crisis, offering options such as information about parenting or adoption plans, assistance with surrendering a child at a facility and guidance on using the baby box.

"We counsel moms and it's free for them," Kelsey stressed. "We've also offered medical care to some. We've had legal help for some of these moms, where we've had to hire an attorney to protect their identity or protect them."

So far, the Safe Haven Baby Box hotline has handled more than 9,000 calls, supporting parents across all 50 states, including referring more than 500 women to crisis pregnancy centers, assisting with 10 adoption referrals, and facilitating more than 150 legal Safe Haven surrenders.


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