Boston.com THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

State failed in rebuffing abstinence option

RISING GLOUCESTER High School junior Kacia Lowe, in speaking of her young classmates who reportedly made a pact to get pregnant, said it best: "No one's offered them a better option." That is sad but true, and Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick is largely to blame.

Patrick refused to accept $700,000 in federal funds for abstinence-centered education, effectively killing the program that taught youngsters to respect themselves, have a vision for their future, and delay sex until they are older, preferably married.

Abstinence programs in Massachusetts by law must be presented in conjunction with contraceptive-based sex ed.

Budget limitations didn't allow the program to be offered in Gloucester. And without federal funding, abstinence-centered education most certainly will disappear in Massachusetts altogether.

Condoms and birth control pills could not have saved these young girls. But abstinence-centered education starting in middle school may have.

Too bad Patrick stopped giving kids that chance.

KRIS MINEAU, President, Massachusetts Family Institute, Woburn 

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