As some states look to Texas to replicate its “Heartbeat bill,” the law that prohibits abortion after a heartbeat is detected, there are caveats from some ground-level pregnancy/health workers whose job it is to advise women to avoid life-altering abortions, said a pregnancy resources director. Major long-term funding available for women in Texas who choose to keep their babies is woefully under-reported, a spokeswoman for the Human Coalition told the Epoch Times. “’Heartbeat’ is saving babies, certainly, and that’s a good thing,” said Bev Kline, Director of Living Alternatives in Garden Valley, Texas, on Feb. 10. “But we at Living Alternatives lost an effective avenue convincing young women to keep their babies.” Nonetheless, Kline is a supporter of S.B. 8, the so-called “Heartbeat” legislation that restricts abortions in the state after a fetal heartbeat is detected, about six weeks into pregnancy. The bill, authored by Texas State Sen. Bryan Hughes (R.), took …