Despite
fears
from
gay
rights
activists
that
bills
to
ban
gay
adoption
would
be
a
hot
topic
in
state
legislatures
this
year,
only
one
such
ban
has
actually
been
introduced
—
and
it
appears
unlikely
to
win
approval.
Ohio
gay
families
are
the
first
to
face
what
some
gay
groups
claim
may
be
a
potential
onslaught
of
state
bills
to
ban
gay
people
from
adopting
or
becoming
foster
parents,
as
social
conservatives
attempt
to
ride
on
the
coattails
of
successful
anti-gay
marriage
bans.
Ohio
House
Bill
515
was
introduced
Feb.
9
and
states
a
person
may
not
adopt
"if
the
individual
is
a
homosexual,
bisexual
or
transgender
individual;
the
individual
is
a
step-parent
of
the
child
to
be
adopted
and
is
a
homosexual,
bisexual
or
transgender
individual;
the
individual
resides
with
an
individual
who
the
court
determines
is
a
homosexual,
bisexual
or
transgender
individual."
Other
states
that
gay
rights
activists
speculate
might
introduce
similar
bills
include
Alabama,
Arkansas,
Georgia,
Kentucky,
Missouri,
Mississippi,
Tennessee
and
Texas.
With
many
state
legislative
sessions
under
way,
some
activists
are
surprised
no
other
gay
adoption
bans
have
been
introduced.
"It
is
interesting
only
one
state
has
filed
a
bill
to
ban
gay
adoption
and,
frankly,
that’s
not
where
we
expected
to
be,"
said
Jennifer
Chrisler,
director
of
the
Family
Pride
Coalition,
a
national
organization
that
works
for
gay
families.
Chrisler
said
her
group
is
organizing
with
local
and
national
groups,
including
the
Human
Rights
Campaign
and
the
National
Gay
&
Lesbian
Task
Force,
to
defeat
bans
on
gay
adoptions.
"Some
people
know
they
can
very
easy
use
this
as
a
political
wedge
issue.
Texas
will
have
another
foster
ban
in
2007.
But
polling
shows
people
believe
it
should
be
up
to
social
scientists
and
professionals
to
determine
what
is
best
for
the
child
—
perhaps
this
is
why
the
issue
has
lost
its
steam,"
Chrisler
added.
While
Georgia
is
on
the
list
of
potential
states
to
see
legislation
to
ban
gay
adoption
or
foster
care,
no
bill
has
been
introduced,
and
the
General
Assembly
is
set
to
adjourn
in
about
two
weeks.
Georgia
Equality
received
a
$28,000
grant
from
the
Human
Rights
Campaign
to
hire
a
lobbyist
to
specifically
combat
any
proposed
bill
to
ban
gay
adoption
or
foster
care.
"I
think
they
realized
the
timing
was
all
wrong.
This
is
an
election
year
and
they
decided
to
go
after
issues
Georgians
are
interested
in,
such
as
immigration
and
taxes,"
said
Chuck
Bowen,
Georgia
Equality
executive
director.
Carrie
Evans,
HRC
state
legislative
director,
said
the
group
also
granted
money
to
Mississippi
to
fight
any
proposed
gay
adoption
measures.
"We
are
treating
this
issue
with
a
level
of
intensity,"
Evans
said.
"I
think
the
that
fight
state
and
national
gay
groups
are
putting
up
are
forcing
the
social
conservative
groups
to
take
a
step
back."
Ohio
bill
‘divisive’
Ohio
is
the
first
state
this
year
to
go
after
gay
adoption,
but
seven
states
last
year
filed
measures
to
ban
gay
adoption
and,
in
some
cases,
ban
gay
foster
parents
as
well.
The
2005
bills
in
Arkansas,
Alabama,
Indiana,
Oregon,
Tennessee,
Texas
and
Virginia
all
failed,
but
activists
said
that
doesn’t
mean
gay
adoption
is
no
longer
a
hot
topic
for
social
conservatives.
"These
people
cannot
reproduce.
…
Experimenting
on
children
through
gay
adoption
is
a
problem,"
Rev.
Russell
Johnson,
chair
of
the
Ohio
Restoration
Project,
a
conservative
Christian
group,
told
USA
Today
in
a
Feb.
20
article.
The
Ohio
bill
was
introduced
by
a
Republican,
Rep.
Ron
Hood
of
Ashville.
But
it
was
immediately
derided
by
GOP
House
Speaker
Jon
Husted
as
"divisive,"
and
it
is
not
expected
to
pass.
"There’s
growing
concern
within
the
Republican
Party
of
continuing
to
introduce
this
divisive
legislation,"
Scott
Borgemenke,
Husted’s
chief
of
staff,
told
the
Associated
Press.
"We
don’t
think
there’s
some
cottage
industry
of
homosexual
adoptions.
We
do
believe
people
are
losing
their
jobs."
Equality
Ohio
praised
Husted’s
comments.
"The
swift
and
strong
opposition
to
this
bill
from
the
leadership
in
Ohio’s
General
Assembly
is
a
sign
that
Ohio’s
legislators
put
the
needs
and
interests
of
Ohio’s
children
first,"
Lynne
Bowman,
the
group’s
executive
director,
said
in
a
prepared
statement.
Florida
is
currently
the
only
state
to
expressly
ban
adoption
by
all
gay
people,
although
Utah
restricts
adoption
to
married
couples,
effectively
banning
gays,
according
to
the
ACLU
Lesbian
&
Gay
Rights
Project.
Mississippi
bans
adoption
by
gay
couples.
Arkansas
and
Nebraska
do
not
ban
adoption
by
lesbians
and
gay
men,
but
do
prohibit
them
from
...