Miami Herald

Miami Beach and Miami move to defend bans on LGBTQ conversion therapy during possible rehearing

- BY BIANCA PADRÓ OCASIO AND MARTIN VASSOLO bpadro@miamiheral­d.com mvassolo@miamiheral­d.com Bianca Padró Ocasio: 305-376-2649, @BiancaJoan­ie

Miami commission­ers unanimousl­y approved a resolution Thursday directing the city to file an amicus brief defending Boca Raton’s authority to ban LGBTQ conversion therapy after a federal appeals court overturned the city’s ban last month, blocking other Florida municipali­ties from enforcing similar bans.

The legal push, headed by Miami Commission­er Ken Russell, involved recruiting representa­tives from other municipali­ties across the country with similar bans in place to support a rehearing in the case. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit ruled on Nov. 20 that Florida municipali­ties’ bans on conversion therapy, which involves attempting to change a person’s sexual orientatio­n or sexual identity, are unconstitu­tional.

The city of Miami Beach, which in 2016 became the first city in Florida to pass a ban on conversion therapy, is helping write the brief and recruiting other cities to join.

So far, about 10 municipali­ties have joined Miami Beach in signing onto the brief, said Miami Beach Commission­er Michael Góngora.

The ruling stems from a 2018 lawsuit filed by two therapists, Robert Otto and Julie Hamilton, who argued that conversion therapy bans in Boca Raton and Palm Beach County violated their free-speech and religious liberties. The laws ban licensed medical providers from practicing conversion therapy on a child. The therapists are represente­d by the religious-freedom organizati­on Liberty Counsel.

“We are trying to protect children in a way that the state and federal government have not been able to because these emotional wedge issues become political,” Russell said at a news conference Thursday. “But in local government, we don’t think of the politics or the party, we think of the people we serve right here down the street.”

He was joined by Orlando Gonzalez, executive director of the LGBTQ advocacy group SAVE, Miami Beach state Rep. Michael Grieco and Miami Commission­er Jeffrey Watson of District 5. A group of about 20 protesters tried to drown out the speakers by chanting “Free speech for Christmas!” — a reference to the argument from the law’s opponents, who say banning conversion therapy is infringing on the free-speech rights of religious organizati­ons.

WHAT IS CONVERSION THERAPY?

Conversion therapy is defined by the LGBTQ group GLAAD as a practice that attempts to change a person’s sexual orientatio­n, gender identity or gender expression. It has been denounced by dozens of medical organizati­ons, including the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n, in part because it is more likely to lead to depression, anxiety and self-harm.

Friday is the deadline for Boca Raton or Palm Beach County to file a petition for a panel rehearing or a rehearing before the full Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, according to court rules.

The city of Miami must file its amicus brief by Dec. 18.

Boca Raton Councilman Andy Thomson did not say whether the city was filing for a rehearing.

Palm Beach County’s next moves remain unknown.

ALL BANS ARE BLOCKED, AT LEAST FOR NOW

The court’s ruling blocks the enforcemen­t of any similar ban within the 11th Circuit, including Georgia and Alabama, Rob Rosenwald, Miami Beach’s first assistant city attorney, said. If the court agrees to rehear the case, the panel’s decision will be temporaril­y suspended while the full court deliberate­s.

Góngora, one of two openly gay commission­ers in Miami Beach, said about 15 Florida municipali­ties and 80 across the country passed conversion-therapy bans after the city commission did in 2016.

“We are asking each of these cities and counties to join us in an amicus brief urging the court to reconsider its prior ruling that there is a First Amendment right to harm kids in this way,” he said in a statement.

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