http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/national/article61968617.html
After Charlotte’s City Council voted to expand its protection of gay and
transgender people Monday night, N.C. House Speaker Tim Moore of Kings
Mountain said Tuesday that lawmakers will take steps “to correct this
radical course.”
Starting in April, the expanded nondiscrimination ordinance will extend
legal protections to gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender individuals
– the first such ordinance in the state.
The most controversial part of the ordinance would allow transgender
people to use either a men’s or women’s bathroom, depending on the gender
with which they identify.
The state’s leading Republicans have not discussed the issue in detail
publicly, though there are indications that legislators and Gov. Pat
McCrory might allow much of the ordinance to stand and only target the
bathroom provision.
The House majority leader, Republican Mike Hager of Rutherford County,
said in a news release that the General Assembly would act, but only to
“eliminate this provision in the ordinance.”
“Restrooms and locker rooms,” he said, “should remain distinctly private.”
Moore spokesperson Mollie Young said the House speaker’s “focus is on the
bathroom piece.”
“That’s the part that’s been alarming to people in Raleigh,” she said.
In an email to Republican City Council members Sunday, McCrory singled out
the bathroom provision as the most problematic part of the ordinance.
North Carolina is not a “home rule” state, which means cities and towns
are creations of the legislature. The General Assembly has the power to
nullify all or parts of the ordinance if it chooses.
The city’s existing nondiscrimination ordinance covers race, age, gender
and religion, among other characteristics. It covers places of public
accommodation, such as stores, restaurants and hotels, as well as taxi
cabs and limousines.
When the ordinance goes into effect, a baker would no longer be able to
refuse to bake a cake for a gay wedding. Other vendors would have to cater
LGBT events, even if it was against their religious beliefs.
The city couldn’t revoke a business license if someone violated the
ordinance. But the city could seek an injunction that would force a
business to comply.
If only the bathroom provision were removed, the other protections would
stay, including those for transgender individuals.
But there is a strong belief in the LGBT community that it’s important for
transgender individuals to be able to use the bathroom of the gender with
which they identify.
A year ago, council members voted to remove the bathroom provision from
the ordinance. But two council members, John Autry and LaWana Mayfield,
voted against the ordinance out of principle. They said they wouldn’t
leave some members of the LGBT community behind.
An effort to repeal all of the LGBT protections could provoke a backlash,
similar to the controversy last year from Indiana’s proposed Religious
Freedom Restoration Act. Business leaders criticized that measure as a way
to allow discrimination against gays. The Indiana legislature later
modified the bill.The Indiana legislature later modified the bill.
A similar religious freedom bill died in the N.C. legislature last year.
House member Dan Bishop, a Charlotte Republican, co-sponsored the N.C.
religious freedom bill last year. He said the council’s vote Monday was
“intentionally provocative.”
He said it’s too early to know how the General Assembly will proceed.
Scott Bishop of MeckPAC, an LGBT lobbying organization, said he wants to
meet with local legislators to persuade them not to nullify any part of
the ordinance.
“We want to make sure we have conversations at least with the local
delegation so that they are up to speed on the issue,” Scott Bishop said.
“It’s a matter of making sure they are as educated as the City Council.”
The General Assembly could also pass legislation to put the issue on a
citywide ballot. That happened in Houston, after its elected officials
passed LGBT protections. The entire ordinance was defeated, with 61
percent of the city voting no.
Charlotte City Council members approved the full ordinance in a 7-4 vote.
Republican council member Ed Driggs, who voted against the expanded
ordinance, said Tuesday a referendum might not be the best solution. He
said people have long-standing cultural norms that men and women should
use different bathrooms, and those beliefs need to be protected.
A citywide vote might not protect those beliefs, he said.
At Monday’s meeting, Driggs said he believes the LGBT community shouldn’t
face discrimination, but that he couldn’t vote for the ordinance because
of the bathroom flexibility.
A year ago, however, Driggs voted against a version of the ordinance that
had the bathroom provision removed.
Driggs said Tuesday he thought the ordinance still needed more input from
the community, and needed to ensure that people’s religious beliefs
wouldn’t be violated.
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Obama increased total debt from $10 trillion to $19 trillion in the six
years he has been in office, and sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
queer liberal democrat donors.
Barack Obama, reelected by the dumbest voters in the history of the United
States of America. The only American president to deliberately import a
lethal infectious disease from Africa, Ebola.
Loretta Fuddy, killed after she "verified" Obama's phony birth
certificate.
Nancy Pelosi, Democrat criminal, accessory before and after the fact to
improper vetting of Barry Soetoro aka Barack Hussein Obama, a confirmed
felon using SSAN 042-68-4425, belonging to a dead man.
Obama ignored the brutal killing of an American diplomat in Benghazi, then
relieved American military officers who attempted to prevent said murder
in order to cover up his own ineptitude.
Obama continues his muslim goal of disarming America while ObamaCare
increases insurance premiums 300% and leaves millions without health care.
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