Yuma Sun

Arizona Senate passes bill to outlaw diversity programs

SB 1694 would ban use of government funding for any such program

- BY HOWARD FISCHER

PHOENIX – Saying he was doing what the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. would have wanted, a Queen Creek senator got Republican colleagues to vote to outlaw diversity, equity and inclusion programs in state and local government­s and the university system.

SB 1694, crafted by Jake Hoffman, bans the use of government money for any such program. It also forbids a public agency from requiring workers to engage in those programs, allowing those employees to sue.

But Hoffman told colleagues that he’s not against the ideas. What he opposes, he said, is what these programs include, ideas Hoffman argued actually work against the concepts of inclusion and equality.

“That’s a problem,’’ he said.

“The bill says we don’t want public entities influencin­g the compositio­n of their workforce based on race,’’ Hoffman said.

He then quoted a line from King about children living “in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.’’

“This bill seeks to do what MLK Jr. advocated for,’’ he said.

But Sen. Juan Mendez, D-tempe, said proponents fail to understand that not everyone is coming from the same starting point and born with the same advantages.

“For those of us who did not win the cultural lottery, much of one’s life outcome can still be predicted by the biases towards race, class, ability and identity,’’ he said.

“Diversity, equity and inclusion programs are only set out to help us understand and prepare our citizens for what it means to live in a diverse and inclusive society,’’ he said. “It’s through these diversity, equity and inclusion programs that institutio­ns are beginning to investigat­e and correct structural roadblocks that limit the access to the resources and opportunit­ies that improve lives and communitie­s for everyone.’’

As approved, SB 1694 has a laundry list of what would be off limits.

For example, programs could not describe or expose systems, relations of power, privilege or subordinat­ion on the basis of race, sex, color, gender, ethnicity, gender identity or sexual orientatio­n. Nor could they describe methods to dismantle or oppose those systems.

Also off limits would be advancing any theories of a host of theories ranging from unconsciou­s or implicit bias and systemic oppression to inclusive language and neopronoun­s.

That last category includes words that go beyond the traditiona­l “he’’ and “she’’ which, by their nature, identify the gender of the person to whom it refers. Instead it includes pronouns that do not express gender like “ze’’ and “zir.’’

Also outlawed would be concepts of “anti-racism.’’ Hoffman describes that as the idea that “the only answer to past racial discrimina­tion is present discrimina­tion.’’

All of that, he said, goes to what he said is the goal of SB 1694 to treat people as equals.

Mendez, however, said all that ignores what he believes are the real intent of these programs. That, he said, seeks to educate that there are people in society who have not necessaril­y been treated equitably – and that something should be done about that.

“But this proposal attempts to broaden the cultural wars, claiming that equity and inclusion and diversity is racist because it doesn’t put white, male, heterosexu­al, conservati­ve views on a pedestal to remain unquestion­ed,’’ he said. “It should not be our job taking apart programs that are helping our citizens work together and work toward progress.’’

The party-line vote late Monday now sends the measure to the Republican-controlled House.

 ?? JANUARY 2023 FILE PHOTO BY HOWARD FISCHER/CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES ?? “THE BILL SAYS WE DON’T WANT PUBLIC
ENTITIES influencin­g the compositio­n of their workforce based on race,’’ says Sen. Jake Hoffman, R-queen Creek.
JANUARY 2023 FILE PHOTO BY HOWARD FISCHER/CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES “THE BILL SAYS WE DON’T WANT PUBLIC ENTITIES influencin­g the compositio­n of their workforce based on race,’’ says Sen. Jake Hoffman, R-queen Creek.

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