The Boston Globe

LGBTQ+ seen in state of emergency

Group offers guide, resources in call to action

- By Hannah Schoenbaum

The Human Rights Campaign declared a state of emergency for LGBTQ+ people in the nation on Tuesday and released a guidebook pointing to laws it deems discrimina­tory in each state, along with “know your rights” informatio­n and resources to help people relocate to states with stronger LGBTQ+ protection­s.

Sounding the alarm about the current political climate, the nation’s largest organizati­on devoted to the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r, and queer Americans said travel advisories aren’t enough to help people already living in states where lawmakers have targeted LGBTQ+ people.

“We need champions right now,” campaign president Kelley Robinson said in an interview. President Biden and other LGBTQ+ rights supporters with decision-making authoritie­s, she said, need to be more than just allies.

The declaratio­n is a call to action for “people in power at every level” of government and the business community, she said, urging them to fight for LGBTQ+ rights with the same fervor as they’ve fought for abortion rights since the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last summer.

“When Dobbs fell, you saw a federal response to deal with the abortion crisis that we’re in,” Robinson said. “We are in a crisis of even greater scale to the health and well-being of the LGBTQ+ community, and we need that same sort of response.”

Just a few days into Pride Month, the campaign said it’s taking action in response to an “unpreceden­ted and dangerous” spike in discrimina­tory legislatio­n sweeping state houses this year, with more than 525 anti-LGBTQ+ bills introduced and more than 70 signed into law so far in 2023 — more than double last year’s number.

In a report released Tuesday, it said the new laws are a result of coordinate­d Republican efforts, supported by “well-funded extremist groups.”

A recent Associated Press analysis found that many bills seeking to ban or restrict gender-affirming health care for transgende­r youth, who have been the primary targets of state legislatio­n this year, sprang not from grassroots or constituen­t demand, but from the pens of a few powerful conservati­ve interest groups.

The campaign’s guidebook, meanwhile, provides informatio­n about filing complaints for civil rights violations and points to resources for financing moves and finding employment, particular­ly in the 17 states with a trifecta of Democratic leadership in both legislativ­e chambers and the governor’s office.

It also offers tips on how to engage in local advocacy and how to navigate tough conversati­ons about LGBTQ+ policies with friends and family.

“The amount of calls I get every day from parents asking how they can move to another state because they’d rather mourn their home than their child is real,” Robinson said. “This is a different level of urgency and demanded a different level of response.”

The emergency declaratio­n is the first in the 43-year history of the campaign, which encompasse­s a foundation focusing on research, advocacy and education, national and state lobbying campaigns, and a political action committee that supports and opposes candidates for office.

It comes as Republican­dominated legislatur­es around the country have restricted various aspects of transgende­r existence, from pronoun usage and bathroom access to medical care and more.

Among the latest, one of a series of bills that could receive final passage as soon as Tuesday in Louisiana would broadly ban K-12 public school employees from discussing sexual orientatio­n or gender identity in the classroom.

The legislatio­n is similar to the Florida law critics call “Don’t Say Gay.”

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