JEFFERSON CITY, MO – Anti gay legislation made its comeback in the Missouri legislature. House Bill 2051, sponsored by Rep. Steve Cookson (R-153), was referred to the Elementary and Secondary Education Committee.
This bill is co-sponsored by many members of the House Majority
leadership such as Speaker-elect Tim Jones (R-089), Rep. John Diehl
(R-087) and current Speaker Steven Tilley (R-106). The text of the bill
is short, but the intent is wide-ranging:
170.370. Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, no
instruction, material, or extracurricular activity sponsored by a public
school that discusses sexual orientation other than in scientific
instruction concerning human reproduction shall be provided in any
public school.
The bill, widely believed to violate the First Amendment guarantee
of Freedom of Speech, not only attempts to prohibit schools from even
discussing gay and lesbian issues; it also aims to keep Gay-Straight
Alliances from meeting on school grounds as approved extracurricular
entities.
For the last several years - PROMO,
Missouri's statewide LGBT advocacy organization and its allies have
worked to advance pro-lgbt legislation, and have seen steady, continuing
success.
"Filing this bill is a desperate tactic by frightened, bigoted,
cynical individuals who are terrified at the advancement the LGBT
community has made in breaking down the barriers to full and equal
treatment under the law," said PROMO Executive Director, A.J. Bockelman.
"Why else would they file a bill so clearly out of step with the
growing trend for fairness in this state when similar legislation filed
in Tennessee last year led that state’s legislature to become the object
of national ridicule?"
"It’s clear that this proposed bill does absolutely nothing to
protect students," continued Bockelman. "In some ways, however, these
enemies of Freedom of Speech have done us a favor. By attempting to
coerce teachers and students into making this core reality of our lives
literally unspeakable, they have only proved why LGBT students need
greater, better, and stronger protection in our schools."
Missouri is not the first state to push the so-called "don't say gay"
bill. Tennessee advanced similar legislation through multiple votes
last year, drawing national ridicule, as well as opposition from their
Republican governor, Bill Haslam. Despite that legislation's failure -
Tennessee lawmakers introduced a nearly identical bill this session,
which was approved by the state House earlier this week.
To stay up to date on the pending "Don't Say Gay" bill and send a
message to the Missouri State Legislature, sign PROMO's petition: http://equalityfederation.salsalabs.com/o/35019/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=902)
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