Orlando Sentinel

Critics accuse DeSantis of declaring ‘war on LGBTQ’ citizens after vetoes

- By Kate Santich

Just days from the five-year remembranc­e of Orlando’s Pulse nightclub massacre, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Wednesday vetoed $150,000 in state funds that would have provided counseling for survivors — despite a budget that has $9.5 billion in reserves. And in what advocates describe as “war” on LGBTQ+ Floridians, the governor also eliminated $750,000 approved by the Florida Legislatur­e for the Orlando-based Zebra Coalition to create housing for homeless gay and transgende­r youth.

The move comes one day after DeSantis signed a bill banning transgende­r athletes from competing in girls’ and women’s school sports.

“Let’s be clear about what this is: Governor DeSantis has declared war on Florida’s LGBTQ community,” said Brandon Wolf, a Pulse survivor who now works for Equality Florida, the statewide LGBTQ

civil rights organizati­on. “Before the 2019 remembranc­e ceremony, Gov. DeSantis stood on hallowed ground, steps from where I escaped the building in 2016, and promised me that he would always support those of us impacted by the Pulse nightclub shooting. Today, almost two years later to the date, he vetoed mental health services for us. I will never forget.”

DeSantis’ press secretary, Christina Pushaw, called the characteri­zation of the governor’s vetoes “patently false” and noted that overall spending for community-based mental health services grew by $212 million statewide.

“Governor DeSantis has been a champion on mental health since day one — and he absolutely supports each and every Floridian who has experience­d such horrific trauma, which has a lifelong impact on survivors,” Pushaw wrote in an email. The increase for community-based mental health programs will help all Floridians, she added, including those in the LGBTQ community.

But Heather Wilkie, executive director of the Orlando-based Zebra Coalition, which supports LGBTQ+ youth, said the governor’s actions indicate otherwise.

“I was just taken aback because [the appropriat­ion] got to his desk,” she said. “It takes so much work to get it through the Legislatur­e, but it passed, and even yesterday with the trans sports bill — which is a terrible, terrible thing for our kids — I still had hope. But now we’re going to be left picking up the pieces and there’s not even going to be support for housing for them.”

Researcher­s say at least 40% of the nation’s homeless youth identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r or gender-nonconform­ing. They are also more likely to be suicidal and struggle with substance abuse, unemployme­nt and depression.

The Zebra Coalition had secured an arrangemen­t with Park Lake Presbyteri­an Church to renovate the former Davis Park Motel on East Colonial Drive to house up to 35 youths. Wilkie said her organizati­on is still committed to the project but will need to find the money for renovation­s and operations through grants.

“We’re going to make this happen,” she said, “but it has definitely put up a huge barrier in our path to being able to open sooner rather than later.”

State Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Orlando, said the timing of DeSantis’ vetoes — two days into Pride Month, celebratin­g the LGBTQ+ community, and 10 days before the Pulse remembranc­e — seems especially callous.

“I think people see these acts as totally heartless,” he said. “It adds insult to injury that it comes during Pride Month, not even 24 hours after he signed a bill to expel transgende­r kids from sports teams and humiliate them in front of their peers. What message is the governor trying to send to LGBTQ Floridians with these actions?”

At The LGBT+ Center Orlando, the governor’s veto puts counseling for survivors of the June 2016 Pulse massacre in jeopardy, leaders said. The shooting left 49 dead, more than 60 critically injured and hundreds psychologi­cally traumatize­d. The center took over the Orlando United Assistance Center, dedicated to helping survivors, from the Heart of Florida United Way last year.

It’s the second year in a row that the governor has vetoed state spending for the counseling fund. In 2020, he cut $50,000 that had been approved by the Legislatur­e — less than a tenth of the original request.

The LGBT+ Center’s executive director, George Wallace, said his staff must now find another source to support the program, but options may be limited. The United Way previously struggled to secure grants for the effort.

“Yesterday marked the first day of Pride Month and Gov. DeSantis has once again proved that he is one of the most homophobic and transphobi­c governors in the United States,” Wallace said.

State Rep. Anna Eskamani, D-Orlando, said the expenditur­es appeared to be the only LGBTQ+ program spending in the state budget.

“It’s super frustratin­g that $150,000 toward a mental health program gets the veto pen when the governor brags about his leadership in mental health,” she said. “So those two projects in particular — [the vetoes are] a punch in the gut.”

 ?? STEPHEN M. DOWELL/TNS ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his wife, Casey, carry flowers to the site of the Pulse nightclub in Orlando on June 12, 2019, marking the three-year remembranc­e of the mass shooting that killed 49 people, many Hispanic and LGBTQ. Just days from the five-year remembranc­e of Orlando’s Pulse nightclub massacre, DeSantis on Wednesday vetoed $150,000 in state funds that would have provided counseling for survivors — despite a budget that has $9.5 billion in reserves.
STEPHEN M. DOWELL/TNS Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his wife, Casey, carry flowers to the site of the Pulse nightclub in Orlando on June 12, 2019, marking the three-year remembranc­e of the mass shooting that killed 49 people, many Hispanic and LGBTQ. Just days from the five-year remembranc­e of Orlando’s Pulse nightclub massacre, DeSantis on Wednesday vetoed $150,000 in state funds that would have provided counseling for survivors — despite a budget that has $9.5 billion in reserves.

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