Current:Home > ScamsOpponents are unimpressed as a Georgia senator revives a bill regulating how schools teach gender -Wealth Empowerment Academy
Opponents are unimpressed as a Georgia senator revives a bill regulating how schools teach gender
View
Date:2025-04-24 18:00:00
ATLANTA (AP) — A Georgia state senator is trying to revive a proposal aimed at stopping teachers from talking to students about gender identity without parental permission, but both gay rights groups and some religious conservatives remain opposed to the bill.
That combined opposition was fatal to Senate Bill 222 in the regular session earlier this year.
Supporters of the bill say the new version they unveiled at a Wednesday hearing of the Senate Education and Youth Committee was more narrow.
“All we’re simply saying is that if you’re going to talk gender to a child under 16 years old, you need to talk to the parent,” said Sen. Carden Summers, the Cordele Republican sponsoring the bill.
But opponents say little has changed. Liberals say it remains a thinly veiled attack on LGBTQ+ students, while conservatives say the law is a flawed and unwise attempt to regulate private schools.
“There have always been and always will be students who identify as transgender, or whose own sense of gender identity doesn’t fit neatly into a specific binary box,” said Jeff Graham, the executive director of LGBTQ+ advocacy group Georgia Equality. “This legislation will only add to the stigma they face and make their lives more challenging and difficult.”
Opponents have said the measure is a Georgia version of Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill aimed at handcuffing teachers from discussing or even acknowledging a student’s sexuality. Summers denies that is the case.
“It is not a ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill. It is not,” Summers said Wednesday.
Under the revised version of the bill, private schools would have to obtain written permission from all parents before instruction “addressing issues of gender identity, queer theory, gender ideology, or gender transition.”
Public schools would have to create policies by Jan. 1, 2025, which would determine how the schools would handle issues of gender identity or a child wanting to dress as a different gender. The law would bar any changes to any school records based on a child’s change in gender identity without written parental permission.
Schools that violate the law would be banned from participating in the Georgia High School Association, the state’s main athletic and extracurricular body. Private schools that violate the law would be banned from getting state money provided by vouchers for children with special educational needs. Public schools could see their state funds withheld for violations, while public school teachers and administrators would be threatened with the loss of their state teaching license.
Kate Hudson of Atlanta, who founded Education Veritas, a group that says it is fighting against liberal indoctrination in private schools, told state lawmakers they need to regulate private schools. She said the schools are engaged in a “calculated, coordinated, multipronged effort to break down and destroy our society at the expense of our children.”
“We are connected to thousands of parents across Georgia that are having to navigate these dark waters of indoctrination and feel zero transparency is taking place,” Hudson told the committee. “Parents are faced with deprogramming their kids every day and feeling trapped in a private or public school where the agenda cannot be escaped.”
But other conservatives spurn regulation of private schools. They say the bill unwisely enshrines the concept of gender identity in state law and would let public schools override Georgia’s 2022 parental bill of rights, which gives every parent “the right to direct the upbringing and the moral or religious training of his or her minor child.”
“This bill, while attempting not to, undermines parental rights in our code, accepts the indoctrination it tries to prevent, and inserts the government in private schools’ ability to operate free from government coercion,” Taylor Hawkins of the Frontline Policy Council told lawmakers.
All but one senator on the majority-Republican committee voted to shelve an earlier version of Summers’ bill this year in the face of combined opposition from liberals and conservatives.
veryGood! (54)
Related
- Small twin
- Shein lawsuit accuses fast-fashion site of RICO violations
- Can India become the next high-tech hub?
- Listener Questions: baby booms, sewing patterns and rural inflation
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- As a Senate Candidate, Mehmet Oz Supports Fracking. But as a Celebrity Doctor, He Raised Significant Concerns
- We Bet You Didn't Know These Stars Were Related
- DOJ sues to block JetBlue-Spirit merger, saying it will curb competition
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Inside Clean Energy: The Right and Wrong Lessons from the Texas Crisis
Ranking
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- At Haunted Mansion premiere, Disney characters replace stars amid actors strike
- Warming Trends: Swiping Right and Left for the Planet, Education as Climate Solution and Why It Might Be Hard to Find a Christmas Tree
- Germany moves toward restrictions on Huawei, as Europe sours on China
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Accused Pentagon leaker appeals pretrial detention order, citing Trump's release
- TikTok to limit the time teens can be on the app. Will safeguards help protect them?
- China is building six times more new coal plants than other countries, report finds
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Kick off Summer With a Major Flash Sale on Apple, Dyson, Peter Thomas Roth, Tarte, and More Top Brands
Last Year’s Overall Climate Was Shaped by Warming-Driven Heat Extremes Around the Globe
A multiverse of 'Everything Everywhere' props are auctioned, raising $555K for charity
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
Microsoft's new AI chatbot has been saying some 'crazy and unhinged things'
A trip to the Northern Ireland trade border
While The Fate Of The CFPB Is In Limbo, The Agency Is Cracking Down On Junk Fees