QSaltLake Magazine - Issue 309 - March 2020

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14  |  QSALTLAKE MAGAZINE  |  NEWS

Qsaltlake.com |  ISSUE 309 | March, 2020

Few LGBTQ-related bills on Utah’s Capitol Hill this legislative season Unlike some other states, the number of LGBTQ bills this year at the Utah Legislative Session, especially bad ones, is small. Here is a writeup of where they are.

Prohibition of Transgender Procedures upon Minors One bill still being drafted (as of press time) is a bill promised by Rep. Brad Daw, R-Orem, which would prohibit doctors from doing gender reassignment surgery on minors. Daw has promised the bill would not preclude hormone blockers, but no draft is currently available to determine if he will be true to his word.

HB 116 — Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women, Girls, and LGBTQ+ Task Force A bill touted as a first step towards addressing what leaders are calling an epidemic of missing and murdered Native American women, girls, and LGBTQ+ people was heard Feb. 11 on Utah’s Capitol Hill. Rep. Angela Romero, D-Salt Lake City, sponsored HB 116, Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women, Girls, and LGBTQ+ Task Force, in an effort to collect data Rep. Angela Romero on the issue. The task force she is hoping to create would be comprised of 17 members, including legislators, Native American tribal and organizational leaders, a Tribal judge, a Native American survivor of violence, A University of Utah researcher, a sheriff and a district attorney. The group is tasked with identifying the “systemic causes behind violence that indigenous women, girls, and LGBTQ+ experience, including patterns and underlying factors that explain why disproportionately high levels of violence occur against indigenous women, girls, and LGBTQ+, including underlying historical, social, economic, institutional, and cultural factors that may contribute to the violence.” They will also identify gaps in law enforcement data collection and study ways

to address those gaps. They will then recommend improvements in the “criminal justice and social service systems for preventing and addressing the murdered and missing indigenous women, girls, and LGBTQ+ crisis in Utah.” They will have until Nov. 20 of this year to report on their finding. Romero is asking for a one-time $40,000 appropriation to fund the task force. The bill passed both the committee and the Utah House and is now sitting in the Utah Senate.

HB 234 — Gestational Agreement Amendments A bill by Rep. Patrice Arent, D-Millcreek, that removes a restriction in Utah law that disallows a gay male couple from becoming surrogate parents unanimously passed through a Utah House of Representatives committee on Friday and is headed to the House floor for debate on Wednesday. HB 234 — Gestational Agreement Amendments removes the restriction that a couple can only enter into a surrogacy agreement if “medical evidence shows that the intended mother is unable to bear a child or is unable to do so without unreasonable risk to her physical or mental health or to the unborn child.” That restriction was used to deny a gay male couple in St.

George from becoming surrogate parents. A St. George judge ruled that he had no choice but to deny the petition of two gay men after a woman and her husband agreed she would carry the child. The judge found that the men had a sound argument, but the law refers only to a mother, meaning a woman, and they both are men. Both couples appealed the decision to the Utah Supreme Court, arguing the law violates the men’s constitutional rights to due process and equal protection. The justices agreed on the constitutional point but not on their argument that a mother should be interpreted to mean a parent. The Utah Attorney General’s Office, which generally defends state laws, agreed with the couple, and submitted court papers in favor of their argument. In August 2019, the Utah Supreme Court ruled that “same-sex couples must be afforded all of the benefits the state has linked to marriage.” At the time, Equality Utah’s executive director, Troy Williams, said that the court “has stricken discriminating language from Utah’s code and affirmed that equality is the law of the land.” Arent testified that the bill is mostly a housekeeping measure to make the Utah law reflect the court ruling. The Utah House Judiciary Committee voted unanimously to send the bill to the full Utah House where it was passed unanimously. It is now waiting in the Utah Senate for consideration.  Q

‘No Sides, Only Love’ banner slashed in Orem In the wake of multiple suicides at their neighboring high school, Orem parents Brenda and Thomas hung two banners on their fence to show support for their LGBTQ+ child, community, and friends. One banner was from Encircle, which read “No Sides, Only Love.” The other is a suicide prevention banner from the Trevor Project, reading “You Are Never Alone.” The banner reading “No Sides, Only Love” was slashed by someone on Thursday, January 23, partially removing it from the fence but making it no longer usable. While the perpetrator was caught on a security camera, it was too far to be of much good to authorities. But what is more important to Brenda is how this person got to the point of doing such a thing, saying she feels sorry for them.

“I wonder how often he has not felt accepted himself to be able to hate other people he doesn’t know,” Brenda told KUTV News. The couple also made headlines last summer when five of their rainbow Pride Flags were stolen from their yard near Timpanogos High School. The parents then decided to do something positive about the most recent incident. They started a campaign to put the message of the destroyed banner on billboards throughout Utah. Their goal is to raise $15,000 so Encircle can put up as many billboards as they can across the state of Utah with the same message — No sides, only Love. The campaign has raised over $11,000 by 180 donors at nosidesbanner.funraise.org.


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Articles inside

The tale of a dizzy queen

4min
page 46

8 things that’re getting on my GD nerves right now

3min
page 44

Vacation: The best cure

2min
page 43

You’re a Bad-Ass

3min
page 42

Gay Like Me: A Father Writes to His Son

2min
page 41

5 retail replacements that should satisfy your urge to splurge

3min
page 34

The Madness of Martha Wash

13min
pages 30-32

Genderbands to hold first Purple Soirée

3min
page 29

Deep Inside Hollywood

3min
page 28

Science proves it: We make great dads

3min
page 27

Steven Hotze

4min
page 26

IF YOU’RE OUT IN PUBLIC AND YOU CAN’T FIGURE OUT A STRANGER’S GENDER, FOLLOW THESE STEPS:

6min
pages 24-25

The Equal Rights Amendment is a queer movement

6min
pages 22-23

My brother is wrong about his transgender bill

3min
page 21

Rachel Slawson is the first out contestant for Miss USA

5min
pages 18-19

Elevation Utah Gay Ski Week Turns 10

1min
page 17

Utah Gay Football League’s 2020 season beginning

1min
page 17

Qmmunity

5min
page 16

Salt Lake County Health Dept. adds HIV PrEP to STD Clinic services

1min
page 15

'No Sides, Only Love' banner slashed in Orem

1min
page 14

Few LGBTQ-related bills on Utah's Capitol Hill this legistlative season

3min
page 14

Local leaders endorse Buttigieg for president

2min
page 13

Buttigieg draws thousands for town hall in Salt Lake City

4min
page 12

Utah ranks in top half of states in HRC State Equality Index

3min
page 11

Top national and world news since last issue

4min
page 9
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