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End Of Life Act Passes Out Of Senate, Heads To Governor Brown’s Desk

The End of Life Act was passed by the California State Senate Friday and now heads to the Governor’s desk.


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ABX2-15 would allow mentally-capable, terminally-ill adults the option to request a doctor’s prescription for aid-in-dying drugs to painlessly and peacefully hasten their death, according to a news release.

The bill passed out of the Senate in a 23 to 14 vote and now heads to the Governor’s desk.

The bill was passed by a vote of 43 to 34, according to a news release. It now moves to the Senate, which passed a similar version of the legislation, SB-128, in June. The authors face a deadline of Friday, September 11 to pass ABX2-15.

Assemblyman Scott Wilk, R-Santa Clarita, voted against the bill in Wednesday’s session.

Senator Sharon Runner, R-Antelope Valley, says she is against the End of Life Act.

Previous Story: End of Life Act Heads To Assembly, Christy O’Donnell, Senator Sharon Runner Share Views

“This bill strikes a very personal chord for me, as I was terminally ill just a few years ago,” Runner said. “I would not be here today without my lung transplant. It was a long and difficult process, and I struggled through many painful days. But, look at the life I have now. I believe life is sacred; it begins at conception and ends when it is meant to end. We should not force the issue.”

The bill passed out of the special session health committee in a vote of 10 – 3 last week. It also passed the Assembly Finance Committee with a 5-3 vote.

Santa Clarita resident Christy O’Donnell, who is also a single-mom, civil rights attorney and former LAPD sergeant, has brain, liver, lung, rib and spine cancer. She’s morphine intolerant and is going to die painfully from her illness.

She is also the lead plaintiff in a suit asserting the California constitution and state law allow terminally ill adults the option of medical aid in dying.

Related Story: KHTS AM-1220 Talks To Santa Clarita Woman Fighting To Die With Dignity

“The pain is pretty significant now (compared) to when I was in here, what a month ago,” O’Donnell said. “I take a lot of percocet. I take a lot of it and it barely takes the edge off the pain. I’m really at the end of my treatment.”

O’Donnell is just one of hundred of terminally ill patients in the Santa Clarita Valley, she says. She belongs to a stage IV cancer support group with many of them.

For more information about the End of Life Act, visit the Compassion & Choices website.

News Release: Compassion and Choices

For the first time in five tries since 1995, the California legislature has passed a bill to allow terminally ill adults facing unbearable suffering the option to request a doctor’s prescription for medication that they could take to painlessly die in their sleep.

Today the Senate passed the by a vote of 23 to 14. On Wed., the Assembly passed AB2-15 with bipartisan support 44 to 35. Gov. Jerry Brown has 12 days to sign or veto the bill after he receives it from the legislature, which is expected to be the end of next week. If he takes no action in 12 days, the legislation automatically becomes law.

“Passing this historic bill is a monumental victory for terminally ill Californians like Christy O’Donnell who just a want a way to end horrific suffering in their final days,” said Compassion & Choices President Barbara Coombs Lee, a lawyer, former ER and ICU nurse and physician assistant who coauthored the Oregon Death With Dignity Act. “We are optimistic Gov. Brown will sign this law because he is a compassionate person who understands Californians in agony cannot wait another year.”

Dozens of supporters, some in wheelchairs with oxygen tanks, shed tears as legislators debated the issue on the Senate floor. Some closed their eyes as others held hands before the Senate passed the legislation.

“I thank our legislature for responding to the voices of terminally ill Californians who are pleading for the option of medical aid in dying,” said Compassion & Choices Campaign Director Toni Broaddus. “We urge Gov. Brown to sign this bill to give them this option to die peacefully if their end-of-life suffering is too great to endure.”

The End of Life Option Act was co-authored by Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman, Senate Majority Leader Bill Monning and Senate Majority Whip Lois Wolk.

“Yesterday I was visited in my office by Christy O’Donnell, who has been a warrior for this cause while fighting terminal cancer, and all I can think of now is of her, of her struggle, of her daughter, of their courage and strength, and the comfort that I hope that we have provided to her, and the many more for whom she has been called to speak so powerfully,” said Assemblymember Eggman. “This is their day.”

The news brought tears to the eyes of Christy O’Donnell, a 47-year-old single mother from Santa Clarita dying from lung, brain, spine, rib and liver cancer, who testified in support of the bill before the Senate and the Assembly. Unfortunately, her doctors say she will likely die painfully within the next few months from the rapidly spreading cancer.

“The second win today in the Senate reaffirms to my daughter, Bailey, and I that our legislators are finally listening and ‘representing’ us — the thousands of terminally ill Californians,” she said. “Bailey and I are crying tears of joy! I do not want my daughter to carry with her forever the emotionally damaging memory of watching me die painfully over several days or weeks. I ask the governor NOW to open his heart and mind to signing this bill.”

Senator Monning thanked legislators for “listening to the overwhelming public sentiment supporting this issue and responding with a sense of compassion and urgency.”

Senator Wolk also urged the governor to sign the bill.

”I trust the governor to recognize the importance, urgency and significance of this legislation and to answer the pleadings of those terminally ill Californians who want this option and the strong majority of all Californians who support making it available,” she said.

The legislature’s passage of the End of Life Option Act comes 10 months after the death ofBrittany Maynard, a 29-year-old Californian with terminal brain cancer. She brought international attention to this issue when she had to move to Oregon to utilize its death-with-dignity law last November. In the final weeks of her life, Maynard and her family partnered with Compassion & Choices to launch a campaign on Oct. 6, 2014, to make aid in dying an open and accessible medical option.

“I am very grateful to the senators who have honored Brittany’s dying wish by voting to give other dying Californians facing intolerable suffering the option to die painlessly and peacefully as she did,” said Maynard’s husband, Dan Diaz, who lives in Alamo. Diaz testified before the Assembly last week in support of the End of Life Option Act and has met with legislators urging them to vote for the bill since the introduction of the first version of the legislation, SB-128, in January.

“Brittany would be very proud if Gov. Brown signs this bill and her home state becomes the first state to pass medical aid-in-dying legislation since she died.”

Maynards’s mother, Debbie Ziegler, stood in disbelief as senators cast their vote. She broke into tears as her husband, Gary Holmes, assured her the vote tally was final.

“How does one say thank you to legislators who offered the option of a peaceful death to terminally ill patients who face a prolonged and agonizing death?” said Ziegler, who lives in Carlsbad. She has testified before the Senate in support of the End of Life Option Act and also has met with lawmakers one-on-one urging them to vote for the bill since its introduction in January. “From the bottom of my heart and in memory of my daughter, Brittany, thank you, kind statesmen and women.”

The End of Life Option Act is closely modeled after the death-with-dignity law in Oregon, which has worked well for 17 years, without a single documented case of abuse or coercion. Currently, three other states authorize medical aid in dying: Washington, Montana and Vermont.

Three out of four Californians support the End of Life Option Act, including 82 percent of Democrats, 79 percent of independents and 67 percent of Republicans, according to a new poll released last week by the Institute of Governmental Studies (IGS) at the University of California, Berkeley. Yet, two decades after Oregon voters passed our nation’s first death-with-dignity law in 1997, California still has not authorized this end-of-life option.

Dr. Robert Olvera, a Harvard-trained physician from Santa Ana, caressed the photo of his 25-year-old daughter, Emily Rose, who suffered horribly from leukemia before her death in 2014.

“My daughter did not die in vain,” he said tearfully. “This is what she wanted for herself to end her suffering. Gov. Brown, please sign our bill and give dying Californians that option so they don’t have to suffer the way my daughter did.”

Do you have a news tip? Call us at (661) 298-1220, or drop us a line at community@hometownstation.com.

KHTS AM 1220 - Santa Clarita Radio

End Of Life Act Passes Out Of Senate, Heads To Governor Brown’s Desk

4 comments

  1. I’m happy that Senator Sharon Runner got her lung transplant but that goes to show she was NOT terminal since there was a way for her to over come her illness. Now when someone is able to do a spinal cord and brain transplant then this to will not be considered terminal. A doctor is the one to make the decision and the option should be allowed! I have a friend with 2 brain tumors and lupus and would like the option should it become necessary. I have MS and it is not directly terminal but should it put me in a state of bed ridden and blind I would not be considered terminal. Please keep your individual religious beliefs out of this decision.

  2. a YEAR AGO i WAS AT DEATHS DOOR BUT i SURVIVED. sURVIVAL DOES NOT MEAN PAIN FREE AND i AM LEFT WITH A TORTURED LIFE. wHEN HOPE IS GONE, i WANT A CHOICE. mY dnr WAS IGNORED THE FIRST TIME, THIS IS ROUND 2. sORRY, i HAVE TWO TYPING FINGERS LEFT AND i HIT CAPS LOCK.

  3. please give us a simple way to email Gov. Brown with our hopes of him signing this Act. I am Catholic and want this choice for myself, family and friends

  4. I think it’s sad that people want to die like this instead of trying to live as long as you can. Life is precious and every minute or second counts. God is the giver of life and taker of life. Basically in doing this a person is saying “I am God and I will decide when I die.” I know not everyone thinks of it that way but that is what it boils down to. We have so devalued life in America through abortion, non enforcement of our criminal laws, disrespect for one another that it is spilling over to how we treat ourselves and not thinking about others and how this “choice” will affect those we love. You say…it’s none of your business it’s not your choice…that’s true but it’s not your choice or the person who has the “terminal” disease’s choice either. Does anyone make their heart beat? No. All I’m saying is it’s a virtue to die when it’s time not when it’s “your decision” to die. Don’t do it!

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About Jessica Boyer

Jessica is an award-winning journalist, photographer, videographer and artist. She has worked with news organizations including NBC Los Angeles, KHTS AM 1220, and the Pierce College Roundup News. She is studying to receive a Bachelor’s degree in Journalism with an emphasis on Photojournalism and a minor in Communications at California State University, Northridge. She has studied and worked in many fields including filmmaking, journalism, studio photography, and some graphic design. She began her journalism journey at the Arroyo Seco Conquestador News Network and the Saugus High School News Network.