and thank you Governor Bush. I knew he would do the right thing!
 
Brain-Damaged Fla. Woman Receiving Fluids
3 minutes ago

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By JACKIE HALLIFAX, Associated Press Writer

CLEARWATER, Fla. - Acting on orders from Gov. Jeb Bush, a hospital began
giving fluids to a brain-damaged woman Tuesday, six days after her feeding
tube was removed in one of the nation's longest and most bitter right-to-die
battles.

A judge later rejected a request by the woman's husband to overturn the
governor's order.

Terri Schiavo was being rehydrated after the Legislature rushed to pass a bill
designed to save her life, according to her parents' lawyer. Schiavo's
parents have fought to keep her alive. Her husband, Michael Schiavo, says she
would rather die.

An ambulance took Schiavo from a Pinellas Park hospice to Morton Plant
Hospital after Bush issued his order to resume feeding her. A crowd cheered
outside as she left.

"I'm ecstatic she's being fed again," said her brother, Bob Schindler Jr. "I
don't think I can describe the way I feel right now. It's been unreal."

Hours earlier, the Senate voted 23-15 for legislation to save Schiavo. Within
minutes, the House voted 73-24 to send the bill to Bush. The governor signed
it into law and issued his order about an hour later.

"It's restored my belief in God," said Schiavo's father, Bob Schindler.

Michael Schiavo, meanwhile, was "deeply troubled, angry and saddened that his
wife's wishes have become a political pingpong," said his attorney, George
Felos. "He, as many others, is absolutely stunned at the course of events."

Terri Schiavo's feeding tube was removed last Wednesday. Doctors said the
39-year-old woman would die within a week to 10 days without nutrition and
water.

Suzanne Carr, the woman's sister, called lawmakers' action "a miracle, an
absolute miracle."

Her mother, Mary Schindler, broke down and cried after the Senate vote.

Felos scrambled to try to stop Bush's order. He filed a request for an
injunction, but Pinellas Circuit Court Judge George Greer denied it on
technical grounds. Felos refiled the request and State Circuit Judge W.
Douglas Baird also refused to grant it.

"We won. Terri won," her father said after the ruling.

Felos will have five days to file additional arguments with the judge and the
state will have five days after that to respond. The judge will then hold
another hearing.

"It is simply inhumane and barbaric to interrupt her death process," Felos
said. "Just because Terri Schiavo is not conscious doesn't mean she doesn't
have dignity."

Although the Legislature acted swiftly, even some who supported the bill
expressed concern about it.

"I hope, I really do hope we've done the right thing," said Senate President
Jim King, a Republican. "I keep on thinking 'What if Terri didn't really want
this done at all?' May God have mercy on all of us."



Schiavo never signed a living will, which lets people exercise their right to
die should they become comatose and need machines or feeding tubes to keep
them alive.

But her husband says she told him she would never want to be kept alive
artificially. Her parents said he never told them of the wish.

"Let us err on the part of not condemning this woman to a painful death that
she can feel," said Republican Sen. Anna Cowin.

Opponents said government was stepping in where it had no business being.

"How dare this Legislature and this governor substitute its judgment for the
family's?" said Sen. Steven Geller, a Democrat.

Earlier in Tampa, U.S. District Judge Steven Merryday denied a request by an
advocacy group that Schiavo be kept alive so it could investigate whether
removal of the tube was abusive.

The bill sent to Bush was designed to be as narrow as possible. It is limited
to cases in which the patient left no living will, is in a persistent
vegetative state, has had nutrition and hydration tubes removed and where a
family member has challenged the removal.

Court-appointed doctors have described Schiavo as being in a vegetative state,
caused when her heart stopped in 1990 from a suspected chemical imbalance.

Bush last week promised the woman's parents that he would help them if he
could find a way.

The Florida Supreme Court (news - web sites) has twice refused to hear the
case, and it also has been rejected for review by the U.S. Supreme Court
(news - web sites). Last week, a Florida appeals court again refused to block
removal of the tube.

Felos said he believes the legislation is unconstitutional. It is Terri
Schiavo's right under the Florida Constitution to not be kept alive
artificially, and the courts have affirmed that, he said.

Former Florida Supreme Court Justice Stephen Grimes said it is not clear
whether the law will be upheld.

"It presents a new legal issue that I've never heard of," Grimes said.
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