Chattanooga Times Free Press

Arkansas high court strikes down city’s LGBT protection­s

- BY ANDREW DEMILLO

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — The Arkansas Supreme Court on Thursday struck down a city’s ordinance banning discrimina­tion based on a person’s sexual orientatio­n or gender identity, but it stopped short of saying whether a state law aimed at prohibitin­g such local LGBT protection­s is constituti­onal.

The justices reversed a judge’s decision that Fay- etteville’s anti-discrimina­tion ordinance didn’t violate a state law prohibitin­g cities from enacting protection­s not covered by state law. Fayettevil­le, a liberal enclave in northweste­rn Arkansas, is one of several cities that approved local protection­s for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r people in response to the 2015 law.

Arkansas’ civil rights law doesn’t cover sexual orientatio­n or gender identity. In the unanimous ruling, the justices rejected the argument that Fayettevil­le and other cities with such ordinances have made, that such protection­s are covered elsewhere in state law.

The court ruled these other laws, including an anti-bullying law, aren’t related to anti-discrimina­tion laws and don’t create new protected classes. They noted the 2015 law states its intent to have uniform anti-discrimina­tion measures in the state. “(Fayettevil­le’s ordinance) violates the plain wording of Act 137 by extending discrimina­tion laws in the city of Fayettevil­le to include two classifica­tions not previously included under state law,” the court said. “This necessaril­y creates a nonuniform nondiscrim­ination law and obligation in the city of Fayettevil­le that does not exist under state law.”

The justices said they couldn’t rule on the law’s constituti­onality since it wasn’t addressed by the lower court and they sent the case back to the Washington County judge who upheld Fayettevil­le’s ordinance. Attorney General Leslie Rutledge, whose office had asked the court to uphold the state law, said she was grateful for the court’s ruling.

Fayettevil­le City Attorney Kit Williams said he disagreed with the court’s ruling and will now focus on challengin­g the law’s constituti­onality in the lower court.

“They can’t, by not using express terms, accomplish the same result which is truly what their intent was, which was to prevent the city from enacting protection­s for its gay and lesbian residents,” Williams said, referring to the Legislatur­e’s passage of the 2015 law.

Eureka Springs, a mountain resort town known as a gay-friendly tourist destinatio­n, also approved broad anti-discrimina­tion protection­s for LGBT people in 2015. More limited measures covering only government agencies and contractor­s were enacted in the state capital, Little Rock, the surroundin­g county and in Hot Springs.

The court’s ruling did not address whether the other local ordinances violate the state law. Little Rock and Pulaski County officials said they would continue enforcing their measures. Rutledge said in a 2015 advisory opinion that the ordinances aren’t allowed under the law, but her office said it’s too early to say whether the other cities’ protection­s are affected by Thursday’s ruling.

 ??  ?? Leslie Rutledge
Leslie Rutledge

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