The Morning Call

Bills similar to Fla. ‘Don’t Say Gay’ law pass state Senate committee

Wolf vows to veto both measures if they’re approved

- By Andrew Goldstein

The state Senate Education Committee on Tuesday passed two bills intended to address discussion­s of gender identity and sexual orientatio­n in Pennsylvan­ia schools.

The proposals, which Gov. Tom Wolf has promised to veto if they land on his desk, have similariti­es to legislatio­n enacted in Florida earlier this year that opponents criticized for marginaliz­ing the LGBTQ community and labeled as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill.

Republican state Sens. Scott Martin and Ryan Aument, both of Lancaster, said they proposed the bills because of concerns they have received from parents about age-inappropri­ate conversati­ons occurring prematurel­y and without parental knowledge in elementary school classrooms.

“Parents should know what their children are being exposed to in school, period,” Aument said in a statement. “And beyond that, they should have the opportunit­y to opt their child out of exposure to certain explicit curriculum and be provided with alternativ­e options by the school. At the end of the day, parents — not the government — should have final say in how their children are educated.”

The bills — known as the “Empowering Families in Education Act” and “Parental Control of Sexually Explicit Content” bill — still need to be approved by the full Senate and House before they would go to the governor.

The bills would forbid classroom instructio­n on gender identity and sexual orientatio­n for pre-kindergart­en through fifth grade. In addition, the bill would require schools to adhere to existing state standards of age-appropriat­e content for any discussion­s of gender identity and sexual orientatio­n that occur in grades 6-12.

They would also make public schools create a policy for notifying parents when there is a change to a student’s services or monitoring and prohibit a school from withholdin­g informatio­n from parents in accordance with existing state and federal laws.

The language in the legislatio­n resemble Florida’s “Parental Rights in Education” bill which drew the “Don’t Say Gay” moniker from opponents across the nation.

The senators countered the notion that the bills were Pennsylvan­ia’s version of the Florida’s legislatio­n because they do not prohibit organic, student-initiated discussion­s of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity for any age group. The bill only bans formal discussion­s and instructio­n led by the teacher, they said.

The Pennsylvan­ia State Education Associatio­n and the Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers both expressed apprehensi­on over what the bill would mean for an already marginaliz­ed group of students as well as the limits it would place on teachers.

And State Sen. Lindsey Williams, D-West View, who serves as the minority chair of the Senate Education Committee, noted that parents and guardians already have the right to review curriculum and opt their children out of lessons that conflict with religious or deeply held beliefs.

The proposal of the bills comes amid a wave of antiLGBTQ legislatio­n filed this year in states across the country.

NBC News reported in March that the annual number of anti-LGBTQ bills filed rose from 41 in 2018 to 238 in less than three months of 2022. In 2021, 191 anti-LGBTQ bills were filed, according to NBC News.

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