Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Missouri bill would halt LGBTQ lessons

Legislatio­n stricter than Florida’s ‘Don’t Say Gay’ measure, activists say

- SUMMER BALLENTINE

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Public school teachers and counselors would be largely outlawed from talking about LGBTQ people under a Missouri proposal more restrictiv­e than what critics call Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law.

Republican state Sen. Mike Moon’s bill, which received a Tuesday committee hearing in the GOP-led Missouri state Senate, is among several filed across the nation this year that are similar to Florida’s new law.

The Missouri proposal goes farther than the Florida law, which bars instructio­n on sexual orientatio­n, gender identity and other lessons deemed not age-appropriat­e in kindergart­en through third grade.

Missouri’s bill would only allow licensed mental health care providers to talk to students about gender identity and LGBTQ issues in public schools serving kindergart­en through 12th grade, and only if guardians first give permission.

“The bill follows the lead of Florida’s ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill but does so with broader impact and implicatio­ns than any bill being considered in the nation,” said Katy Erker-Lynch, executive director of the LGBTQ state advocacy group Promo.

Supporters of the Missouri proposal argued Tuesday that parents should be informed about conversati­ons between teachers or counselors and students about gender and sexuality.

“This is protecting vulnerable children and attempting to protect them from conversati­ons that need to be had with the approval of the parent and potentiall­y at home,” Moon told a Senate education committee.

Democratic state Sen. Greg Razer, who serves on the committee, called the measure the “most disrespect­ful bill” he has seen since taking office in 2017. Razer said it would prohibit teachers in his Kansas City legislativ­e district from letting students know that he is Missouri’s only openly gay state senator.

“What is so offensive about me that it can’t be talked about in schools?” Razer asked Moon.

Erker-Lynch told committee members that the legislatio­n “systematic­ally and very specifical­ly erases LGBTQ identity and presence from classrooms.”

“The fact that the bill was dignified by being given a Senate committee should be appalling to any person paying attention and a wake-up call to those who are not,” she said.

The Missouri measure’s chances of advancing are unclear, but other transgende­r-related legislatio­n seems likely to pass.

Senate President Pro Tem Caleb Rowden has said Senate Republican­s are unified against letting transgende­r girls play on girls’ sports teams, and lawmakers are considerin­g bills to ban gender-affirming treatments for minors.

Transgende­r medical treatment for children and teens is increasing­ly under attack in many states, labeled child abuse and subject to criminaliz­ing bans. It has been available in the United States for more than a decade and is endorsed by major medical associatio­ns.

Meanwhile, in North Carolina, senators were expected to vote Tuesday on legislatio­n to prohibit instructio­n about sexuality and gender identity in K-4 public school classes. The proposal would require schools in most circumstan­ces to alert parents before a change in the name or pronoun used for their child.

In Kansas, top Republican legislator­s are focusing on helping conservati­ve parents remove their children from public schools over what’s taught about gender and sexuality. The effort has become their alternativ­e to pursuing a version of the Florida law.

 ?? (AP/David A. Lieb) ?? Republican Missouri state Sen. Mike Moon speaks in February 2022 at his Capitol office in Jefferson City, Mo.
(AP/David A. Lieb) Republican Missouri state Sen. Mike Moon speaks in February 2022 at his Capitol office in Jefferson City, Mo.

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