Posted: Friday, October 23, 2009
Election Day is a week and a half away and the campaign over
Washington’s Referendum 71 is passionate. Lawsuits are flying and
ads are hitting the airwaves. Opponents of the gay domestic
partnership law warn that if R-71 is approved, it will lead to gay
studies in public schools. Olympia Correspondent Austin Jenkins
explores that claim.
Here’s what the Reject 71 campaign is saying about Washington’s
everything but marriage law.
Reject 71 Ad: “This new law has far reaching consequences like
allowing public schools to teach that gay marriage is normal and
healthy whether parents approve or not.”
The argument from Protect Marriage Washington is this: if the state
gives gay domestic partners all of the same rights as married
couples – then public school lessons will have to reflect that. State
Representative Jamie Pedersen sponsored the domestic partnership
bill in the House. He’s also openly gay and has four children with his
partner. Pedersen says there’s nothing in the law about schools. He
says what gets taught in the classroom is up to local school boards.
Pedersen: “If there are enough families that are like mine and there
are quite a few in Seattle then I don’t know why it might not be
inappropriate for a teacher to introduce that concept at some
point.”
Earlier this year in the legislature, backers of the domestic
partnership law rejected an amendment that would have prohibited
public schools from describing marriage as anything other than
between a man and a woman.
Copyright 2009 KUOW