AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Abortion providers cheered a move by the U.S. Supreme Court to temporarily block part of a Texas law that would have closed more than half the state's 19 remaining abortion clinics. [...] anti-abortion advocates insisted Monday's ruling, while at least a short-term victory for abortion providers, isn't as sweeping as those groups hope. Both sides agree the two-paragraph order blocks a requirement that would mandate abortion facilities be constructed like surgical centers. [...] abortion rights groups say the regulations have only one aim: to make it harder, if not impossible, for women to get abortions in Texas. Miller's group closed facilities in Austin and Beaumont in 2014 because of the construction requirements that demanded clinics meet hospital-level operating standards, a checklist that includes rules on minimum room sizes, staffing levels and air ventilation systems. Owners of traditional abortion clinics, which resemble doctor's offices more than hospitals, have said they would be forced to close because they can't afford such upgrades.