Chattanooga Times Free Press

GOP lawmaker pauses ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill for changes

- BY ROSS WILLIAMS Read more at GeorgiaRec­order.com.

Georgia lawmakers are considerin­g a bill that opponents compare to Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” legislatio­n, which seeks to limit the way teachers and others responsibl­e for caring for minors can answer questions about the child’s sexual orientatio­n or gender identity.

The bill, authored by Republican Sen. Carden Summers of Cordele, got its first debate at a Senate committee hearing Tuesday, but lawmakers did not vote on it. At the start of the hearing, Summers said he plans to bring the bill back with changes to accommodat­e criticism from parents and educators.

As written, the bill bars teachers, librarians, camp counselors and others responsibl­e for watching over people 16 and under from engaging in discussion about “informatio­n regarding a child’s sexual orientatio­n or gender identity, other than the child’s biological sex” without written permission from the parent, even if the child starts the conversati­on.

It mandates that a student’s official record must be kept under their legal name at the time of enrollment and their name or gender on the record cannot be changed unless the school receives a copy of the child’s birth certificat­e and a form signed by all of the child’s parents.

It also bars caregivers from instructin­g while “dressed in a sexually provocativ­e manner, applying current community standards,” a provision likely aimed at drag performers.

THE FIRST OF MANY

Young LGBTQ teenagers may feel more comfortabl­e opening up about their personal feelings with a trusted teacher or guidance counselor than their parents, said Georgia State University law professor Anthony Michael Kreis, but the bill could prevent those adults from helping.

“The state would be imposing an arbitrary barrier to vulnerable children seeking age appropriat­e guidance,” he said. “And even transgende­r students who have the support of their parents will be unable to have appropriat­e recognitio­n by their schools of their gender identity without involving the state in official changes to a child’s birth certificat­e.”

Kreis said that raises serious constituti­onal issues.

“There is no rational basis to deny a student the equal protection of the law by mandating unnecessar­y hoops for gender nonconform­ing students to be acknowledg­ed by their school with parental permission,” he said. “This is little more than a bare desire to harm, which is not a legitimate basis to legislate under the 14th Amendment.”

According to the American Civil Liberties Union, state legislatur­es across the country are considerin­g 310 anti-LGBTQ bills this year, 144 of which are related to schools or education. Georgia’s bill would stand out from the others in part because of its age limit of 16, said Carl Charles, senior attorney with Lambda Legal, an LGBTQ legal advocacy group.

“Many of the bills, at least the one in Florida that passed last year commonly referred to as the ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill, was modified to really focus almost exclusivel­y on children in grades K through third grade, and so the arguments there about what’s appropriat­e discussion for the classroom are really narrowed,” Charles said. “This is really expansive. I will also note that the language in the bill is not just limited to school staff.”

The bill refers to anyone acting in loco parentis, a legal term meaning “in place of a parent,” which could present further legal challenges, Charles said.

“This includes literally any adult a minor 16 or under speaks to,” he said. “That is a camp counselor. That’s a sports coach. That’s a person who coordinate­s after-school activities. That’s a day care worker. That’s what puts this bill, should it pass with this particular language, into the realm of vague such that a person can’t look at this and know what conduct is prohibited.”

SUBJECT TO CHANGE

Dozens of people signed up to speak at the committee hearing, but Committee Chairman Sen. Clint Dixon, R-Gwinnett, said the meeting would have to be cut short after only two people spoke because another committee needed to use the room.

Gwinnett mom Elizabeth Wagner said she had planned on telling the committee about the supportive community her transgende­r child found in his school.

“Politician­s have no business telling me how to raise my child,” she said. “My child has had role models in school, been supported in school. This bill aims to take away all of that.”

Transgende­r children are at higher risk of suicide because of the stigma they often face, and Wagner said it is all too common to meet transgende­r kids with families that do not support them.

“There are a lot. I know those children. I sent Christmas presents to those children in college who were not allowed to go home for Christmas. So don’t think that that is an anomaly,” Wagner said.

Tom Rawlings, a child welfare attorney who presented the bill with Summers, said the final product will incorporat­e changes.

“We simply want to make sure that, in appropriat­e cases, that parents know what’s going on with their children and that educators and administra­tors are not hiding that fact, except when it’s appropriat­e,” said Rawlings, who headed the Georgia Division of Family and Children Services and who was fired after an altercatio­n in which he called an off-duty police officer “boy” and “son.” “So what we need to do on the bill, I’ll acknowledg­e, is that we need to make sure that we are putting the onus not to talk about these issues on the teacher, but not the child.

“We know that there may be children who are having some gender identity issues, may wonder about what’s going on with them, especially as they hit puberty, and they may want to talk to someone about it,” he added. “They may be rejected by their parents if they’ve already perhaps shown some gender identity issues at home or wanted or indicated an interest in transition­ing at home. So we want children to be able to speak to a trusted adult about this.”

ROOM FOR IMPROVEMEN­T

Atlanta Democratic Sen. Sonya Halpern said she’s hopeful that kind of context will find its way into the bill.

“I think that there is such a thing as a school and home partnershi­p. And what I would love to see when this bill comes back to us is a less cynical view of the school part of that partnershi­p, because I get it. I’m a parent, too,” Halpern said. “I would hate to think that there are other adults in this world who know things about my child that I don’t because my child is telling them and is not telling me, but at the same time, I realize in reality, that’s probably true. There’s some things that children are never going to go to their parents for but need a trusted adult in the larger village that they can go to.”

Dixon said the author will have the chance to present the modified version and promised the audience they will have the chance to sound off on it.

“We will be having another hearing on this, seeing the interest in this, but we will make sure we’ll get notice out to everyone and plan enough time you can make your schedules,” he said.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY ROSS WILLIAMS/GEORGIA RECORDER ?? Child welfare attorney Tom Rawlings, left, and Georgia state Sen. Carden Summers, R-Cordele, present a bill critics have compared to Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law.
FILE PHOTO BY ROSS WILLIAMS/GEORGIA RECORDER Child welfare attorney Tom Rawlings, left, and Georgia state Sen. Carden Summers, R-Cordele, present a bill critics have compared to Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law.

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