As state legislatures gather across the country to start their 2016 legislative sessions, Protect Thy Neighbor is gearing up to monitor and fight legislation that would allow individuals, businesses, and government employees to harm others in the name of religion. Now, you can follow along too by using PTN’s new legislative tracking page. Keep up with the latest news, bill information, and ways to take action in the states and on the federal level. We will update the status of the bills in our state tracker every Tuesday and Friday, and will also continue to provide you with latest legislative news as it occurs.
Over the next few weeks, The Shield will highlight and explain many of the bills that have already been filed in the states. We begin today by presenting:
The 5 Worst State Legislative Ideas of the Year . . . So Far.
1. Georgia Lawmakers Look to Pass RFRA and FADA
Georgia could be ground zero in the fight over so-called “religious freedom” bills this session. First, three Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) bills (HB 29, HB 218, and SB 129) will carry over from the 2015 session. RFRAs authorize religious exemptions to each and every state law on the books. If any state law or policy is deemed to place a “substantial burden” on the religious beliefs of a person—or even a for-profit corporation—the state must show that it has a “compelling interest” and that the law is “narrowly tailored” to fulfilling that interest. Although RFRAs were originally intended to protect genuine religious freedom, many states are now adopting RFRAs in order to override nondiscrimination laws and deny women reproductive healthcare.
RFRA bill SB 129 passed the Senate last year but stalled in the House Judiciary Committee after the bill was amended to prohibit it from being used to trump non-discrimination laws. Republicans, opposed to this amendment, tabled their own bill. But Senator Josh McKoon has vowed to continue to push for his RFRA bill this year. He says that he wants to amend his bill so that it mirrors the federal RFRA, but we all know that the federal RFRA is now also being used to justify discrimination and to deny access to healthcare. Other members of the Georgia General Assembly and the Georgia business community don’t seem quite as excited about the bill or optimistic about its prospects.
In addition, lawmakers in Georgia want to adopt a state version of the federal “First Amendment Defense Act” (FADA). Georgia’s FADA is a copy of a federal bill that would explicitly allow private businesses, federal contractors and grantees, and even government employees to discriminate against same-sex couples, unmarried couples, married couples in which one person had been married before, single mothers, individuals who have had sex outside of marriage, and others. Senator Greg Kirk, who plans to introduce the bill, claims that FADA is more “palatable” than the state RFRA bill, but in reality, it is far more extreme.
2. Indiana RFRA Redux
Last year, Indiana ignited a national firestorm when it adopted its state RFRA. Inexplicably, Indiana legislators are eager to relive that experience this year. Senator R. Michael Young wants to rewrite the state RFRA, but not in a good way. His bill (SB 66) would ensure that the state treat “the right to worship” and “the right to freedom of religion” (among other things) “with the greatest deference." What does that mean and how would this RFRA differ from the controversial one passed last session? That language is so broad and vague, it is unlikely anyone knows what it means. But it is clear that, at a minimum, the bill would serve to strip out language in the current RFRA law that prevents it from being used to trump some state nondiscrimination protections.
3. Florida RFRA on Steroids
Florida already has a RFRA. But, lawmakers in Florida want to add language to that RFRA to provide blanket religious exemptions to businesses, health care providers, and child placement agencies. If passed, HB 401 would allow adoption agencies to refuse to place children with loving parents; businesses could refuse service; and health care providers could deny medically necessary procedures, information, products, and referrals. The only way the state government could deny a religious exemption? Prove it will cause death or serious bodily injury.
4. Kentucky Marriage Bills
In what appears to be a reaction to Kentucky County Clerk Kim Davis’s refusal to allow anyone in her office to provide a marriage certificate to same-sex couples, the Kentucky legislature has already introduced four marriage related bills (HB 14, HB 17, HB 28, and HB 31). These bills would allow government employees and officials to deny marriage licenses or refuse to solemnize marriages if they object to the marriages on the basis of religion. Each bill differs slightly, but all seek to deny LGBT couples the same access to marriage as other couples. The end result? Some couples could be welcomed into the local courthouse to get married, while others would be turned away.
5. New Mexico RFRA Expansion
New Mexico also already has a RFRA. HB 55 would make it worse by (1) allowing for-profit companies to use the RFRA to obtain religious exemptions and (2) permitting people and corporations to use RFRA against private parties rather than just the government. Both of these changes would broaden the scope of the state RFRA and increase the ways in which RFRA will likely be used to discriminate against or otherwise harm the people of New Mexico.
Why would New Mexico lawmakers want to do that? The New Mexico Human Rights Act (NMHRA) provides LGBT nondiscrimination protections. When Elane Photography, a local business, refused to photograph a wedding for a same sex couple in violation of the NMHRA, that business argued that the New Mexico RFRA trumped those protections. But the New Mexico Supreme Court ruled that Elane Photography couldn’t use RFRA as a defense to violating provisions in the NMHRA, in part, because the government was not a party to the lawsuit. Passage of this bill would overturn that decision, allowing Elane Photography and other for-profit businesses in New Mexico to use RFRA as a defense against nondiscrimination laws.
It was hard to limit our list of terrible ideas to just five. There are so many other bills that we are already tracking and we expect many more as the state sessions proceed. We promise to continue to fight these and other bills in the state legislature. We hope you will stay tuned to PTN and check in regularly to our tracker for up to date information and news.