Los Angeles Times

Ban on therapy to ‘convert’ gays advances

The state would be the first to bar the practice. Assembly OKS medical pot bill.

- By Michael J. Mishak and Patrick Mcgreevy

SACRAMENTO — State lawmakers have advanced measures that would institute the country’s first ban on gay “conversion” therapy for minors, regulate the state’s booming medical marijuana industry and bar legislator­s from accepting spa treatments, golf outings, concert tickets and some other gifts from special interests.

Legislator­s also are seeking to make college more affordable, passing separate bills that would give students free access to popular textbooks online and establish a scholarshi­p program for middle-class California­ns whose families make less than $150,000 a year.

The bills were among the hundreds passed by the Senate or Assembly this week and sent to the other house.

The first-of-its-kind proposal to ban “conversion” treatment targets psychother­apy aimed at making gay people straight. State Sen. Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) said the therapy is based on “junk science” that has been discredite­d by many in the medical community.

“It’s not just that people are wasting their time and money on these therapies that don’t work,” Lieu said. “These therapies are dangerous.”

Psychiatri­c, family thera-

py and mental health advocates split on the bill, SB 1172. State Sen. Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) said some medical profession­als were concerned that it is “overly broad and might prohibit their ability to engage in discussion­s about sexuality.”

With the federal government shutting down medical pot dispensari­es and growers in California, the Assembly passed a measure that would create a state board to enact and enforce statewide regulation­s on growing, transporti­ng and selling pot.

It would require all dispensari­es to register with the state, and allow cities and counties to tax sales.

Assemblyma­n Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco) and his Democratic colleagues pitched the measure to clarify gray legal areas that continue to plague the state’s medical marijuana program more than 15 years after voters approved it.

Republican­s countered that five of the new state board’s nine members — two medical marijuana doctors, a patient advocate, a patient and a representa­tive of unionized pot workers — would be biased toward legalizati­on.

“Something smells when you stack the deck like that,” said Assemblyma­n Donald Wagner (R-Irvine), “and we know what that smell is.”

Ammiano said local government­s would have the right to ban dispensari­es, and pledged to work with critics on the compositio­n of the proposed state board. The bill, AB 2312, squeaked out of the Assembly.

In the state Senate, members approved the measure to ban certain gifts from companies lobbying the state. It was proposed by state Sen. Sam Blakeslee (R-San Luis Obispo) because of concern that the Legislatur­e is tainted when members accept Lakers box seats, Disneyland tickets and other treats from special interests.

“Every time an elected official receives one of these gifts, it erodes the public trust and undermines the Legislatur­e’s ability to lead on the big issues facing our state,” Blakeslee said after the vote to approve SB 1426 and send it to the Assembly.

Leaders in both chambers also moved to cut costs for college students.

State Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) pushed a bill, SB 1052, to create a website where students could read textbooks from the 50 most popular classes in the state’s public university systems for free. Assembly Speaker John A. Pérez (DLos Angeles) championed legislatio­n, AB 1501, that would cut fees by two-thirds for middle-class public college students.

Funding for the Pérez program is far from certain. A companion bill, AB 1500, that would change corporate tax formulas to generate an estimated $1 billion a year for the scholarshi­ps has yet to be voted on by the Assembly. It needs Republican support to pass, and a similar measure failed last year for lack of GOP votes.

Other legislatio­n approved this week would:

Expand worker rights under the state’s Family Rights Act, allowing employees to take unpaid leave to care for siblings, grandparen­ts, grandchild­ren and domestic partners (AB 2039). The law now defines “family members” as parents, spouses and children.

Allow same-day voter registrati­on on election days (AB 1436). Currently, voters must register at least 15 days before the next election.

Require all athletic coaches, administra­tors and directors to report suspected cases of child abuse to law enforcemen­t (AB 1435). The bill was spurred by the Penn State sex-abuse scandal, in which critics said university officials did too little to respond to allegation­s that a football coach molested boys for years on the college campus, as well as in other locations.

Protect clergy members who refuse to perform gay marriages on the grounds that same-sex unions violate their faith (SB 1140).

Allow county sheriffs to release terminally ill and medically incapacita­ted inmates from local jails before they serve their full sentences (SB 1462).

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