Florida’s newly enacted state budget includes a $500,000 allocation for a telecare hotline operated by Human Coalition, a national pro-life organization. The group utilizes dedicated call centers and targeted online outreach to connect with individuals looking for abortion services, subsequently routing them to local crisis pregnancy centers.
Pro-Life Efforts in Florida
The appropriation lands alongside a separate $29.45 million renewal for the Florida Pregnancy Care Network. State contract records show this larger, multiyear grant funds an “Option Line” and promotional campaigns designed to steer callers toward subcontracted pregnancy resource centers across the state.
According to Florida Senate spreadsheets, the $500,000 funding appeared as a specific line item labeled “Human Coalition – Florida Telecare Program” for the 2026-27 fiscal year. Representative Jenna Persons-Mulicka originally sponsored the appropriation request, initially seeking $1 million. Governor Ron DeSantis signed the final budget package, which went into effect on July 1, 2026.
Texas-based Human Coalition states that its core mission is to make abortion both unthinkable and unnecessary. The organization employs a national contact-center model to pair callers with staff and nearby support centers. According to the group’s internal impact data, its telecare program had served more than 1,450 families in Florida by 2024.
Reproductive-rights advocates and watchdogs argue that the growing taxpayer-funded network is difficult to monitor and lacks public visibility. They point out that detailed public records and contract specificities regarding Human Coalition’s exact operations within Florida remain scarce.
The funding arrives as Florida’s landscape for reproductive health undergoes major changes. A six-week abortion ban took effect in the state on May 1, 2024. Data from the Guttmacher Institute shows that the number of licensed abortion clinics in Florida dropped to 49 by 2025, a decline critics attribute to recent policy changes and subsequent facility closures.
Original reporting: Tampa Free Press — read the source article.