Commissioner Dave Kerner, Vice Mayor Mack Bernard, Commissioner Hal Valeche, Mayor Melissa McKinlay, and Commissioners Mary Lou Berger, Paulette Burdick and Steven Abrams.
(West Palm Beach, Florida) Following this morning's 5-2 vote
by county commissioners, Palm Beach County became the first county in
Florida -- and the largest county in the United States -- to prohibit
conversion therapy for minors. Commissioners Steven Abrams and Hal Valeche cast the sole vote against the ban.
Conversion therapy, also known as reparative therapy or
sexual orientation change efforts, encompasses a range of discredited
counseling practices by which health care providers or counselors
seek to change a person's sexual orientation, gender identity, or
gender expression through aversion treatment.
The ban covers Palm Beach County's 39 municipalities as well
as the county's unincorporated areas. It applies to doctors, osteopaths,
psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, marriage or family
therapists and counselors licensed by the State of Florida as well as
people who perform counseling as part of the person's professional
training.
The ban does not apply to members of the clergy unless
they are also licensed -- or in training to become licensed -- mental
health professionals.
PBCHRC Board Member Trent Steele headed up the campaign to ban conversion therapy throughout Palm Beach County.
"Kudos to Palm Beach County Commissioners for recognizing that
instilling self-hatred in LGBTQ children through psychological torture
is not therapy," said Steele.
"Palm Beach County has repeatedly taken the lead in protecting the rights of LGBTQ people," said PBCHRC President and Founder Rand Hoch.
"As a result, Palm Beach County is now one of the safest places in the
world for LGBTQ people to live, study, work, create families, raise
children and retire.
Dr. Rachel Needle, a local psychologist, told county commissioners that
the practice of conversion therapy is based on two false premises.
"First,
it is based on the falsehood that being gay, lesbian or transgender is a
mental disorder or defect that needs to be cured," said Needle. "And
second, it is based on the presumption that being LGBTQ is something
that can actually be changed through therapy."
Needle,
who is also an adjunct professor at Nova Southeastern University,
stated that the potential risks of conversion therapy on children
include shame, guilt, depression, decreased self-esteem, increased
self-hatred, feelings of anger and betrayal, loss of friends, social
withdrawal, problems in sexual and emotional intimacy, hostility and
blame towards parents, high risk behaviors, confusion, self-harm,
substance abuse and suicidal ideation.
Dr. Julie Harren Hamilton, a local psychologist who treats patients for
what she refers to as "unwanted same-sex attraction, led the
opposition to the countywide ban.
Hamilton
also opposed the eight municipal conversion therapy bans that have
already been enacted throughout Palm Beach County over the past 18
months. However each of her campaigns
failed in those municipalities which considered -- and enacted -- bans
on conversion therapy for minors.
At
today's public hearing, as well as at the December 5 first reading of
the ordinance, Hamilton and her minions tried to persuade county
commissioners that LGBTQ people needed to be corrected through "talk
therapy". They implored the commissioners to reject -- or at least
water down -- the ordinance.
But to no avail.
"For the past eighteen months I have had to endure these people suggesting to elected officials that gay people are God's mistakes and then go on to say that they are the ones who can fix God's mistakes through therapy," said Hoch. "How arrogant!"
Hoch
told county commissioners that the choice before them was clear: "You
can vote to protect children from harm, or you can vote to protect these
people who want to continue to cause children harm. Basically, the
choice is between kids and quacks."
"As a county commissioner, it is my duty to work to ensure the safety of our residents -- especially our children," said Mary Lou Berger, who brought the ordinance before the county commission last year at the request of PBCHRC. "Conversion therapy has been rejected by virtually every mainstream
medical and mental health organization for decades. No child in
Palm Beach County should be subjected to this so-called treatment."
Nearly
every major medical and psychological association in the country has
come out in opposition to conversion therapy. These include the American
Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry, the American Academy of
Pediatrics, the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy,
the American College of Physicians, the American Counseling Association,
the American Medical Association, the American Psychiatric Association,
the American Psychoanalytic Association, the American Psychoanalytic
Association, the American School Health Association, the National
Association of School Psychologists, the Pan American Health
Organization, the Regional Office of the World Health Organization and
the World Psychiatric Association.
Conversion
therapy has also been rejected by the American Association of School
Administrators, the American Federation of Teachers, the American
School Counselor Association, the National Association of Social
Workers, the National Association of Secondary School Principals, the
National Education Association and the School Social Work Association
of America.
PBCHRC partnered with the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR) and the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).
Both organizations have been successful in their efforts to protect
minors from being subjected to the harms caused by conversion therapy.
In addition, PBCHRC worked closely with SAVE, a South
Florida
LGBTQ rights organization which was the driving force behind six of
the conversion therapy bans enacted in Broward and Miami-Dade.
"Palm Beach County made history today, becoming the first county in
Florida to ban conversion therapy for minors," said Scott McCoy, senior
policy counsel for the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).
"We
applaud the county commissioners for supporting the well-being of
LGBTQ youth, and for taking a stand against this extremely dangerous
and fraudulent practice that claims to change an individual's sexual
orientation or gender identity."
Last May, SPLC published a comprehensive report entitled " Quacks: 'Conversion Therapists,' the Anti-LGBT Right, and the Demonization of Homosexuality."
"Conversion therapy is harmful to our youth and must be stopped," said McCoy.
"We urge the rest of Florida to follow the example set by Palm Beach
County, and pledge to protect our youth from this heinous practice."
"Numerous studies have linked conversion therapy to depression,
substance abuse and even suicide, and these risks are particularly
acute for youth," said Carolyn Reyes, Youth Policy Counsel and
Coordinator of NCLR's BornPerfect Campaign to end conversion therapy
"We
applaud the efforts by the county commissioners to ensure that the
children of Palm Beach County are protected from these harms, and that
their families aren't duped by trusted professionals to whom they turn
for support during a vulnerable time," said Reyes.
Across
the nation, California, Connecticut, Illinois, Nevada, New Jersey, New
Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, the District of Columbia, Pima
County (AZ), Cincinnati (OH), Seattle (WA), Pittsburgh (PA), Toledo
(OH), Columbus (OH), Allentown (PA), Dayton (OH), Athens (OH) and New
York City have enacted laws preventing licensed mental health providers
from offering conversion therapy to minors.
Sixteen
Florida municipalities -- Miami Beach, Wilton Manors, Miami, North Bay
Village, West Palm Beach, Bay Harbor Islands, Lake Worth, Boynton Beach,
El Portal, Key West, Tampa, Delray Beach, Riviera Beach, Wellington,
Greenacres, Boca Raton and Oakland Park -- have enacted conversion
therapy bans for minors.
Broward
County, which gave initial approval to an ordinance banning conversion
therapy ban earlier this month, is expected to enact a ban in January.
Gainesville City Commissioners are also expected to enact a ban within
the next few months.
In early December, The Liberty Counsel,
an anti-LGBTQ hate group, filed suit against the City of Tampa in the
U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida to overturn that
city's conversion therapy ban.
Hoch does not expect that lawsuit to be successful.
"Every
court challenge to the constitutionality of banning conversion therapy
ever filed in the United States has failed," said Hoch, who served as
Florida's first openly gay judge in the 1990s. "And as recently as last
May, the U.S. Supreme Court -- with Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch
participating -- declined to consider an appeal filed in an attempt to
overturn a statewide conversion therapy ban."
That
was fourth time the Supreme Court rejected an attempt by an anti-LGBTQ
group to overturn a conversion therapy ban, according to Hoch.