New York Daily News

Dems: LGBT bills often snubbed

- BY EMILIE RUSCOE

State Senate Democrats blasted the Republican majority for prioritizi­ng such issues as the official state sport and amphibian over LGBT causes.

An updated report called “Stranded at the Altar” slams GOP lawmakers for failing to pass any of the 21 proposed bills affecting New York's gay community brought before the state Senate in 2018, extending a run of LGBT futility that began after the passage of the 2011 Marriage Equality Act.

Democratic lawmakers say the Republican-controlled Senate in the latest session gave the green light to a bill recognizin­g baseball as the official state sport and another piece of legislatio­n naming the wood frog as the official amphibian of New York.

The more than 1,500 bills passed in 2018 also include 11 on Lyme disease, 16 on distinctiv­e license plates,19 on inland waterways and 40 bills renaming roads and highways.

“While the federal government and other states race ahead to advance LGBT rights, the New York State Senate has left our state's LGBT residents stranded at the altar,” the report says.

The 21 LGBT-related bills that have died in committee or failed to come up for a vote focused on a range of issues.

One proposal called for the collection of demographi­c informatio­n on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity by state agencies. It passed the Assembly three times since 2014.

Another piece of legislatio­n would require insurers to cover medication that prevents HIV infections.

And yet another proposed bill would restore state benefits to veterans who were discharged other than honorably solely as a result of the old “Don't Ask Don't Tell” policy.

"You can't negotiate with someone who doesn't recognize your community as being a vital part of the fabric New York State,” said Sen. Brad Hoylman (D-Manhattan) who authored the report. “It's really hurtful to me, to come to that realizatio­n, given that these are my colleagues.”

Scott Reif, a spokesman for the State Senate Republican­s, declined to comment.

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