Pregnancy resource network leaders meet

Every year directors and staff of local pregnancy help centers, maternity homes and after-birth homes come together for a day to share and learn from one another.

The latest gathering, Heartbeat 2.0 Retreat, took place on Sept. 5, 2025, at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Retreat Center in Venice, and covered a wide variety of topics.

The retreat, hosted by the Diocese of Venice, included a presentation by Sara Johnson, from Florida Voters Against Extremism, on the ongoing fight to seek an end to abortion in Florida.

Johnson provided an update on the political landscape of Florida and the United States in the wake of the major 2024 ballot initiative. While Amendment 4, a proposed extreme amendment which would have catastrophically expanded access to abortion in Florida, went down to defeat, Johnson warned that the sentiments on abortion in Florida make the state vulnerable to more attempts to change the laws.

“The numbers are clear, 63% of Floridians think abortion should be legal,” Johnson said. “That is a huge number and makes Florida vulnerable. However, most Floridians think the Heartbeat Protection Act, the current law which prevents abortion after six weeks of gestation, with six exceptions, is reasonable and restrictive enough.”

While the Florida law does not eliminate access to abortion, it is a big step, Johnson stressed. The support behind expanding abortion access dumped $120 million into the Amendment 4 campaign and more money is being raised for ballot amendments in the coming election cycles, if not in 2026, but perhaps 2027 and more likely in 2028.

“It is a coordinated attack to enshrine this agenda of death,” Johnson said. “None of us believe abortion should be legislated or exist at all. Now is the opportunity to educate what it is we are trying to accomplish, that is saving the unborn.”

Pam Stenzel, from BrightCourse and Community Pregnancy Clinics, said the Florida law has many flaws and the perception of it has changed the way girls/women are approaching their decision to choose life or not.

“There is a 24-hour waiting period for getting an abortion, and that is the only time we have to connect with these girls,” Stenzel said. “If she calls one of the pregnancy resources centers (in the Diocese), someone has to be available to answer that inquiry within 15 minutes to answer the immediate need, or else she is gone.”

This reality exists because there is ready access to a chemical abortion through a pill prescription, which is not as regulated as a surgical abortion which takes place in a facility.

Stenzel spoke about a service that is available through Infinite Worth that links pregnancy resource centers to a nationwide response network which offers services through online or phone calls 24/7.

The final speaker was Karin Barbito from Support After Abortion. Because the majority of women and men who have experienced abortion want healing but don’t know where to go for help, Support After Abortion offers compassion and support for all of those impacted by abortion.

Barbito also spoke about Project Rachel, which offers retreats for women who have had an abortion, as well as Walking with Moms in Need, a U.S. Bishop’s program which operates at the Parish level, to increase support for pregnant and parenting mothers in need. It works to ensure that any woman who finds herself unexpectedly pregnant, or parenting in difficult circumstances, can turn to her local Catholic Church and be connected with the resources she needs.

For a list of the Pregnancy Resource Centers who support Walking with Moms in Need, please visit https://dioceseofvenice.org/pregnancyhelp/.

If you have any questions about Respect Life activities in the Diocese of Venice, or would like to get involved, contact Tavia Ames at 941-484-9543 or ames@dioceseofvenice.org.