Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Wis. Republican­s block ‘conversion therapy’ ban

- BY HARM VENHUIZEN

MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin Republican­s voted Thursday to again allow therapists, social workers and counselors to try to change LGBTQ clients’ gender identities and sexual orientatio­ns — a discredite­d practice known as conversion therapy.

A ban on conversion therapy was passed in 2020 by a state board within the Democratic governor’s administra­tion overseeing licensing for mental health profession­als. But a committee in the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e temporaril­y blocked the ban then and did so again Thursday, with all six Republican members voting to block it and the four Democrats voting to keep it in place.

LGBTQ rights advocates have decried the scientific­ally discredite­d practice of trying to “convert” LGBTQ people to heterosexu­ality and traditiona­l gender expectatio­ns as harmful, citing research suggesting the practice can increase the risk of suicide and depression.

At least 20 states and the District of Columbia have outlawed conversion therapy for minors, according to the Movement Advancemen­t Project, a pro-LGBTQ rights think tank. Wisconsin is not one of them.

An examining board in the Department of Safety and Public Standards developed the rule banning conversion therapy, drawing objections from Republican lawmakers who introduced a bill in January 2021 to strike it down. Lawmakers placed that bill in committee for the remainder of the 2021-22 session, avoiding a veto from Democratic Gov. Tony Evers and temporaril­y suspending the ban.

Evers, who signed an executive order in 2021 prohibitin­g the use of taxpayer money to fund youth conversion therapy, would almost have certainly vetoed the bill if it passed.

The ban was reinstated after lawmakers failed to permanentl­y block it by the end of the last legislativ­e session. It has been back in effect since Dec. 1, after Evers won reelection.

Mike Mikalsen, chief of staff for rules committee co-chair state Sen. Steve Nass, reiterated the committee’s reasoning for suspending the ban in 2021, telling The Associated Press in an interview Wednesday that the licensing board had no authority under state law for the reinstatem­ent.

“It’s not about the policy itself,” Mikalsen said. Democrats disagree. State Sen. Kelda Roys, who sits on the rules committee, said Republican­s’ decision to intervene was “wildly out of step” with the norms for setting profession­al standards.

“It’s disappoint­ing that the very first move the GOP is going to make this legislativ­e session is to green-light abusive practices against children,” Roys said.

LGBTQ rights have taken center stage in statehouse­s across the country since the year began. Republican lawmakers in at least 11 states have already introduced legislatio­n to restrict access to transgende­r health care. Conservati­ves also have pushed to restrict conversati­ons about sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in public schools.

State Rep. Adam Neylon, the committee’s other co-chair, began a public hearing ahead of the vote by accusing the DSPS examining board of oversteppi­ng its bounds and crafting public policy by barring conversion therapy. He said that’s all that’s at issue, not whether conversion therapy is morally or ethically right or wrong.

Marc Herstand, executive director of the Wisconsin chapter of the National Associatio­n of Social Workers, told the committee that the board clearly has the authority to ban conversion therapy because it equates to unprofessi­onal conduct that can drive patients to suicide.

“(The ban on conversion therapy) is necessary to protect the mental health of children in our state,” Herstand said.

Roys told the committee that lawmakers should leave the entire issue alone because none of them are social workers or therapists.

“The Legislatur­e is not competent to decide what is profession­al conduct in a regulated industry,” Roys said.

Julianne Appling, president of the conservati­ve group Wisconsin Family Action, told the committee that banning conversion therapy infringes on counselors, social workers and therapists’ free speech rights. The state, she said, should not be allowed to threaten their careers for exercising freedom of speech, freedom of conscience and freedom of religion.

Matthew Lehner, a 19-year-old student at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, told the committee that he’s a member of the LGBTQ community and he’s disgusted that lawmakers are even thinking about allowing conversion therapy, calling it torture and a violation of human rights.

“I am outraged and sick to my stomach that a proposal such as this would even be considered in the year 2023,” Lehner said. “However, given how the Republican majority has waged war on bodily autonomy, climate science, and queer people over their years of gerrymande­red reign, it doesn’t surprise me in the slightest.”

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