Miami Herald

Federal appeals court strikes down bans on LGBTQ youth conversion therapy

- BY BILL RANKIN Bill Rankin writes for The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. Email: brankin@ajc.com

JUDGE BRITT GRANT, WRITING FOR THE

MAJORITY, SAID: ‘IF THE SPEECH RESTRICTIO­NS IN THESE

ORDINANCES CAN STAND, THEN SO CAN THEIR INVERSE.’

THE COURT STRUCK DOWN BANS ENACTED IN BOCA RATON AND PALM BEACH COUNTY.

The federal appeals court in Atlanta has thrown out bans that prevented therapists from performing conversion therapy on children grappling with their sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

The court, in a 2-1 decision, struck down bans enacted in both Boca Raton and Palm Beach County. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling sets precedent for the three states under its jurisdicti­on: Georgia, Alabama and Florida.

In Georgia, six Democratic lawmakers introduced the Youth Mental Health Protection Act to ban conversion therapy statewide, but the bill went nowhere.

Also last year, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms got the City Council to pass a resolution stating the city’s opposition to the practice. It also called on the state to enact a ban.

Practices that “inflict persecutio­n and suffering on LGBTQ individual­s — particular­ly young people — should end immediatel­y,” Bottoms said.

The Florida bans were challenged by two licensed therapists who counsel minors with “unwanted same-sex attraction­s or unwanted gender identity issues,” said the 11th Circuit’s ruling, issued Friday. The therapists believe their speech-based therapy can help clients reduce their same-sex behavior and attraction.

The city and county argued that the bans safeguard the physical and psychologi­cal well-being of minors and submitted reports and studies setting out the harms.

But Judge Britt Grant, writing for the majority, cited a 2009 report from the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n that found there had been a complete lack of “rigorous recent prospectiv­e research” on the practice.

“This decision allows speech that many find concerning — even dangerous,” wrote Grant, joined by Barbara Lagoa, a fellow appointee of President Donald Trump.

“But consider the alternativ­e,” Grant said. “If the speech restrictio­ns in these ordinances can stand, then so can their inverse. Local communitie­s could prevent therapists from validating a client’s same-sex attraction­s if the City Council deemed that message harmful.”

Grant wrote, “We understand and appreciate that the therapy is highly controvers­ial. But the First Amendment has no carveout for controvers­ial speech.”

In dissent, Judge Beverly Martin, a President Barack Obama appointee, said the city and county had a compelling interest in protecting minors from a harmful medical practice. And she cited “a mountain of rigorous evidence” that conversion therapy is dangerous and can cause depression and suicidal thoughts.

“The scientific and medical communitie­s have done their jobs, the state has done its job and now it is time for us to do our job in the simple applicatio­n of the law,” Martin wrote.

IN DISSENT, JUDGE BEVERLY MARTIN SAID THE CITY AND COUNTY HAD A COMPELLING INTEREST IN PROTECTING MINORS FROM A HARMFUL PRACTICE.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States