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Pro-lifers suspicions’ raised by Vancouver abortuary closing

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Pro-life activists Glen Reed and Mary Wagner are questioned by police before being arrested at the Everywoman’s Health Centre abortion clinic in East Vancouver in 2001.

B.C. Catholic file photo

Canadian Catholic News
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Vancouver

Just days after a small group of pro-lifers gathered in driving rain to mark the midpoint event of 40 Days for Life in the Archdiocese of Vancouver, an abortion-related announcement has left pro-lifers reacting with cautious hope: after 35 years of performing abortions, the Elizabeth Bagshaw Clinic will close its doors by the end of June.

In a statement, the clinic cited funding uncertainty and changes within the provincial health-care system as key reasons for the decision.

The clinic’s board said the closure was driven by structural challenges, including Vancouver Coastal Health’s (VCH) plan to consolidate reproductive health services into a single-provider, single-site model. It said relocating did not make financial sense due to limited funding and an upcoming lease expiry.

CBC News reported that VCH is considering merging the three reproductive health clinics it funds — Elizabeth Bagshaw, Everywoman’s Health Centre and Willow Reproductive Health Services — into one location to increase service capacity and financial sustainability. However, details on the exact impact of this transition on patient care remain unclear.

“We’re just absolutely devastated by the loss,” said Dr. Renee Hall, a physician at the Elizabeth Bagshaw Clinic and medical director at the nearby Willow Reproductive Health Centre, in an interview with CBC. Hall noted that the closure would put additional strain on an already overburdened system.

Health Minister Josie Osborne said protecting access to abortion services remains a priority for the province. 

“There will be no stop or ending of that access,” she told media during a recent news conference.

Pro-life advocates were largely pleased by the news, while also having reservations about the announcement. 

Fr. Larry Lynn, pro-life chaplain for the Archdiocese of Vancouver, welcomed the clinic’s “potential closing,” saying “any time an abortion mill closes is good news.” 

He credited “our prayer and witnessing, our diligence and faithfulness” as having “some effect on that huge abortion juggernaut,” adding, “I think I see a crack in their seemingly impenetrable armour.”

The announcement could “change hearts and minds throughout the country, one soul at a time,” he said, and pointed to the United States, where he said “The tide is turning.”

“Planned Parenthood is in a shambles mostly due to the prayer and witnessing of 40 Days for Life, the March for Life and many other initiatives.”

John Hof, who was arrested in 1989 while protesting outside the Everywoman’s Health Clinic in East Vancouver, said he is “happy that our prayers appear to have been answered. Elizabeth Bagshaw is set to close its doors and that is a good thing.”

At the same time, he pointed out there are still two other Vancouver abortion clinics and “35 hospitals in B.C. are still cited in legislation as ‘abortion hospitals.’ We continue to pray that these will follow Elizabeth Bagshaw and stop the evil practice of taking preborn children’s lives.”

Hof also has some skepticism about the closing announcement. 

“They have run out of money? Forgive me for being a little suspicious of this announcement,” he said. “We currently have a government that never stops advocating for abortion on demand and has bent over backwards to accommodate every program protecting the right to abortion. Something about this announcement doesn’t add up.”

Pro-life advocates questioned the allocation of public funds to non-essential “reproductive services” at a time when health-care resources are increasingly strained. They also raise concerns about the lack of public funding for adoption services or support for women facing crisis pregnancies who choose to carry to term.

As the debate continues, both supporters and opponents of the clinic’s services agree that access to comprehensive health care is essential. However, they differ on whether abortion services should take precedence over other family support initiatives.

The Elizabeth Bagshaw Clinic is set to close on June 30. Efforts are underway to ensure that services like abortions, IUD insertions and vasectomies will continue elsewhere during the transition.

The B.C. Catholic reached out to the Bagshaw Clinic for comment but did not hear back by publishing time.

A petition on Change.org asking supporters to “lend your voice to prevent the closure of the Elizabeth Bagshaw Clinic” had gathered 1,764 signatures as of early April.

A version of this story appeared in the April 13, 2025, issue of The Catholic Register with the headline "Pro-lifers suspicions’ raised by Vancouver abortuary closing".

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