The Palm Beach Post

Christian group sues PBC, Boca over conversion therapy bans

- By Jane Musgrave Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

WEST PALM BEACH — Before the Palm Beach County Commission in December passed a law banning therapists from trying to convince gay youths they can become heterosexu­als, County Attorney Denise Nieman warned her bosses they were inviting a lawsuit.

Her prediction­s were borne out this week when a conservati­ve Christian group sued the county and the city of Boca Raton over their separate bans on so-called conversion therapy. In the suit filed in U.S. District Court, the Liberty Counsel claims the measures unconstitu­tionally restrict free speech and infringe on people’s religious beliefs.

Representi­ng Palm Beach County family therapists Robert Otto and Julie Hamilton, attorneys for the Orlando-based group are asking a federal judge to strike down the laws and award the mental health counselors an unspecifie­d amount in damages.

“The ordinances harm licensed counselors and their clients by prohibitin­g minors and their parents from obtaining the counseling services they choose ... to resolve, reduce, or eliminate unwanted same-sex sexual attraction­s, behaviors, or identity,” wrote attorney Mathew Staver, founder and chairman of the Liberty Counsel.

Not only are youths and their parents prohibited from getting the help they want, Staver said the measures also create a Catch22 for mental health profession­als such as Otto and Hamilton. Otto is a Boca Raton therapist; Hamilton has an office in Palm Beach Gardens and is a co-editor of “The Handbook of Therapy for Unwanted Homosexual Attraction­s: A Guide to Treatment.”

As a result of the bans, mental health profession­als have to choose whether to violate their profession­al ethical codes by denying their clients treatment or provide the treatment and violate the law, Staver wrote.

Nieman said she wasn’t surprised by the lawsuit, only its timing. “I thought they would wait until the case on the west coast of Florida played out,” she

said of a lawsuit the group filed in Tampa, challengin­g a similar ban on conversion therapy.

Attorney Rand Hoch, who pushed the county and Boca to outlaw conversion therapy, predicted the lawsuit, like those filed elsewhere in the country, would fail. “They’ve lost every single lawsuit they filed,” said Hoch, president of the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council.

Staver acknowledg­ed that bans on conversion therapy in California and New Jersey have withstood court challenges. But, he said, those cases involved state laws. “Local bodies adopting these ordinances is fairly new,” he said.

For years, Hoch and other activists have unsuccessf­ully tried to persuade the Republican-dominated Florida Legislatur­e to impose a statewide ban.

Since state lawmakers have refused to even consider the measure, he said he and others began lobbying local officials.

Conversion therapy is fraudulent and dangerous, Hoch said. “They are torturing our children with words,” he said. “They are using words to make kids feel horrible to the point of suicide.”

In the 60-page lawsuit, Staver points to a 2009 report by the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n that found “there is a dearth of scientific­ally sound research on the safety” of what it calls sexual orientatio­n change efforts.

Hoch countered that much has changed in the last nine years. Subsequent studies found that such therapy is ineffectiv­e and harmful, he said.

Those studies convinced local officials to ban the practice, he said.

Palm Beach County and Boca Raton aren’t the only government­s in the county that have banned conversion therapy. Others are: West Palm Beach, Lake Worth, Boynton Beach, Delray Beach, Greenacres, Riviera Beach and Wellington. Nationally, 13 states, Washington, D.C., and 37 cities and counties have banned the practice.

 ??  ?? Liberty Counsel founder Mathew Staver
Liberty Counsel founder Mathew Staver
 ??  ?? Palm Beach County Attorney Denise Nieman
Palm Beach County Attorney Denise Nieman
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