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Republicans Fight With Beshear Over Adoption LGBTQ Discrimination Clause

WFPL News

Kentucky Republicans are calling on Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear to renew a contract with a Baptist foster care and adoption organization that views homosexuality as sinful.

Sunrise Children’s Services, which has worked with the state since the 1970s, refused to sign a new contract earlier this year because of a clause that bans discrimination based on sexual orientation.

Kentucky’s five Republican constitutional officers sent a letter urging Beshear’s health cabinet to reinstate the contract without such a clause, arguing that the state was coercing the organization to violate its religious beliefs.

In a statement, Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron wrote that Beshear is forcing Sunrise to choose between providing services and abandoning religious beliefs.

“This is not good government, and it does not respect the First Amendment rights of a religious organization. Previous administrations, Republican and Democrat, have found ways to partner with Sunrise, and I hope Governor Beshear will do the same,” Cameron wrote.

The fight over the contract language was first reported by the Courier Journal earlier this month.

The Kentucky Baptist Convention views homosexuality as sinful, doesn’t recognize same-sex marriage, and is against ordaining gay ministers.

Sunrise Children’s Services has been locked in a 21-year-old federal lawsuit over claims that it indoctrinates children in its care, allegedly violating the separation of church and state because the organization receives public funds.

Last week, Beshear said the nondiscrimination clause was included in Sunrise’s new contract as part of a settlement over the lawsuit and in recognition of a recent Supreme Court decision that affirmed LGBTQ protections.

“My understanding is that Sunrise has been offered a contract, but unless a portion of a standard nondiscrimination clause is crossed through, which is my understanding of what they’re asking for, that they won’t sign the contract,” Beshear said. “I hope they’ll continue dialogue.”

During this year’s legislative session, Republicans included language in the budget bill that tries to keep the Beshear administration from enforcing nondiscrimination clauses in child services contracts.

Beshear vetoed the language, but legislators easily overrode him.

Last week, 71 Republican House members sent Beshear a letter urging him to “provide an accommodation that would allow for the exercise of Sunrise’s religious rights.”

Rep. David Meade, a Republican from Stanford and House speaker pro tem, said Beshear is disrupting the state’s foster care and adoption system.

“Sunrise is a proven partner in caring for the children of Kentucky and has been for more than four decades,” Meade wrote in a statement. “We are simply asking that the state continue in this partnership and not risk the care provided to hundreds of Kentucky children. Now is not the time for the administration to make this about politics.”

Dale Suttles, president of Sunrise Children’s Services, and Todd Gray, executive director of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, didn’t respond to requests for comment on Tuesday.

Suttles told Kentucky Today, an online newspaper affiliated with the convention, that the organization doesn’t turn kids away based on their sexual orientation or gender identity, but rather treats their “traumas.”

“We get children, and we’ve currently got children, that classify themselves as gay, that are considering their gender identity, and so on,” Suttles said. “We treat their traumas because these kids have faced traumas you and I could never imagine. And that’s what we’re all about.”

Chris Hartman, executive director of the Kentucky Fairness Campaign, praised Beshear for including the anti-discrimination clause.

“This is exactly what we would hope to see out of an administration that is compassionate and inclusive of all Kentuckians. We don’t want taxpayer dollars going to institutions that are going to discriminate against anyone,” Hartman said.

Ryland Barton is the Managing Editor for Collaboratives. He's covered politics and state government for NPR member stations KWBU in Waco and KUT in Austin. He has a bachelor's degree from the University of Chicago and a master's degree in journalism from the University of Texas. He grew up in Lexington.

Email Ryland at rbarton@lpm.org.
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