PITTSBURGH, Pa. – Only one member of the Pittsburgh Public Schools’ board of education raised potential issues with Planned Parenthood when the board approved the agency to administer sex education to middle school students this week.

Mark Brently Sr. was alone in his opposition and the only board member to vote against the district joining with Planned Parenthood to educate middleschoolers about sex, pregnancy prevention, STDs, abstinence and other issues in the curriculum, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports.

Brently criticized Planned Parenthood’s tumultuous history and questioned the role it would play in schools, but was overwhelmed in a 6-1 vote approving a memo of understanding to contract with the pro-abortion group.

MORE NEWS: Know These Before Moving From Cyprus To The UK

“Dara Ware Allen, assistant superintendent for student support services, said she has reviewed all 24 modules — 12 for grade 7 and 12 for grade 8 — and said they addressed helping students to identify risky behavior, setting personal boundaries and practicing skills to avoid risky behavior,” according to the Post-Gazette.

“She said that abortion is not part of the curriculum, that the curriculum emphasizes abstinence and that it is in keeping with the district’s program. Parents can opt their children out of the program, which would be taught alongside the classroom teacher.”

Like most of Planned Parenthood’s services, the sex education is expected to be paid for with a grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, though it likely won’t be finalized until this summer.

Planned Parenthood has secured similar grants to administer sex education classes to middle and elementary aged students in school districts across the country for years, and the resulting classroom instruction has enraged parents in many places.

Parents in Lafayette, California in December raised a ruckus when they found out Planned Parenthood sex ed instructors were encouraging 13- and 14-year-old students to consider whether they are ready for sex. Those instructors also allegedly used a “genderbread” person – basically a gingerbread cookie person – to get kids thinking about whether they are non-gender, bi-gender, or multi-gender, according to media reports.

In Hawaii, the state sex education program co-authored by Planned Parenthood, Pono Choices, has drawn criticism from parents, lawmakers, educators and others for normalizing homosexual activities, and downplaying the risk of deviant sexual practices. That program garnered investigations that revealed embarrassingly inaccurate or incomplete information presented to students, including the classification of the anus as a sex organ and the omission of accurate data on STDs, STOPP reports.

MORE NEWS: How to prepare for face-to-face classes

In Pittsburg, board member Brentley suggested that the district consider expanding its existing partnership with the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center to provide sex education training, or to consider other options in addition to the Planned Parenthood program.

Other board members argued Planned Parenthood has evolved over the years, and that the group has worked in the district before. Sylvia Wilson supported the move because she believes it’s “critically important” students get good information to make healthy decisions, according to the Post-Gazette.

Parents would be “intricately involved” in the Planned Parenthood sex education, board member Regina Holley said.

Experts on Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers involved in public schools, meanwhile, are working to root the abortion giant out of schools.

Carol Everett, a former abortion clinic manager in the Dallas-Forth Worth area, explained to EAGnews how pro-choice groups like Planned Parenthood have leveraged their position in public schools to create a pipeline of clients to abortion clinics.

Everett, now a converted pro-life advocate, contends that Planned Parenthood backed sex ed instructors have been known to “break down the natural modesty (of students) … separate them from their parents and values, and eventually give them low-dose birth control they know they’ll get pregnant on.”

“They don’t tell parents what they’re doing,” said Everett, who oversaw roughly 35,000 abortions while managing four different abortion centers between 1977 and 1983.

“We went to the schools as early as kindergarten,” she said.

Ultimately, the goal is often to create a steady stream of students from public schools to abortion centers, which make millions each year from the scheme, Everett said.

“It’s more deceptive than people realize,” Everett said. “The abortion industry sells and re-sells their product.

“Our goal was three to five abortions per student for every student we could get.”

In fiscal year 2013, Planned Parenthood’s net revenue came in at $1.21 billion, with roughly $540.6 million coming from taxpayer-funded government health services grants, according to a Planned Parenthood annual report cited by CNSNews.com.

Planned Parenthood clinics in six states also received $655,192 to serve as Obamacare “navigators,” CNSNews.com reports. That means the staff at those clinics help convince the public to sign up for the president’s subsidized health insurance program.