The PennZone

  • Home
  • Business
  • Health
  • Construction
  • Real Estate
  • Technology
  • Non-profit
  • Travel
  • Education

Pennsylvania: LGBTQ Affairs Commission, Stakeholders Denounce Legislation to Bring Discriminatory “Don’t Say Gay” Bill to PA
The PennZone/10188247

Trending...
  • Scoop Social Co. Launches a New Era of Mobile Hospitality — One Truck, Two Experiences
  • Going Solo Life publishes new travel guide for 2026
  • Vietnam Veterans Day Storytelling Event
Today, the Pennsylvania Commission on LGBTQ Affairs and education and youth advocates denounced Senate Bill 1278, a copy-paste version of Florida's discriminatory "Don't Say Gay" bill that would harm students and set back human rights in Pennsylvania.

The LGBTQ Affairs Commission firmly opposes Senate Bill 1278, which was introduced on Friday, June 10, ​was approved yesterday along party lines by the Senate Education Committee and now heads to the full Senate for consideration.

"Pennsylvania was founded on the basis of inclusion, and the Wolf Administration has fought to ensure that Pennsylvania will continue to be a state that welcomes and protects all of its residents," said Rafael Álvarez Febo, executive director of the LGBTQ Affairs Commission. "This bill, which was introduced in the middle of Pride Month, is a cruel attempt to politicize LGBTQ people and deny their humanity in order to score cheap political points.

"We at the Pennsylvania Commission on LGBTQ Affairs know that the guise of calling LGBTQ people and topics 'age inappropriate' is really just fearmongering. Bills like these will cause LGBTQ teachers to have to conceal their identities and strip any resources available for LGBTQ youth out of schools. Even more alarming, these bills have emboldened far right hate groups to mobilize to commit violence against LGBTQ people.

More on The PennZone
  • Targeting the Billion-Dollar U.S. Countermeasure Market With AI-Driven Biodefense Platform: Lunai Bioworks (N A S D A Q: LNAI)
  • National Focus Turns to Global Conflict, Families of Veterans Lost to Suicide Call for Recognition
  • New Global Standard for Transparency Across Critical Resources and Energy Markets: SMX (Security Matters) PLC (N A S D A Q: SMX)
  • Forced Psychiatric Hospitalization Fails Vulnerable People: CCHR Urges Repeal Amid Rising U.S. Policies
  • Surging Into High-Performance AI With $AMD Partnership, Patent Expansion, and Strengthened Balance Sheet: Avalon GloboCare Corp. (N A S D A Q: ALBT)

"While Pennsylvanians are struggling with very real issues such as gun violence, soaring prices and underfunded schools, the General Assembly has chosen to pick on LGBTQ children and teachers to score political points. This is deeply wrong and would have long-reaching consequences for our schools and human rights in Pennsylvania."

Advocates for schools and children in Pennsylvania joined the commission to decry the discriminatory, politically-motivated legislation:

"I have serious concerns about any effort aimed at censoring educators and preventing them from valuing, affirming, and supporting students and their families because of their sexual orientation or gender identity," said ​Pennsylvania State Education Association (PSEA​) President Rich Askey. "Lawmakers should focus on the very real challenges facing our public schools right now, including reducing substitute and teacher shortages, hiring more mental health professionals in our schools, keeping our schools safe, and passing a state budget that properly funds public education. Educators spend their lives teaching and supporting their students. We don't need politicians telling us how to do our jobs."

"When we don't talk about these normal aspects of human diversity, it sends the message that being different is wrong; this puts children who are already aware of their difference at risk and teaches all children to marginalize their classmates," said Katharine Dalke, MD, a psychiatrist who works with adolescents and young adults. "Psychologists and educators have developed age-appropriate tools for talking about different kinds of families, relationships, and identities without talking about sex. If we want to raise the next generation of Pennsylvanians to be happy and healthy, we must teach acceptance — not discrimination."

More on The PennZone
  • ATTAIN Profiles the Invisible Billionaire Who Started With $75 and Died the Richest Man in A
  • Kiko Nation Launches Mobile App to Modernize Livestock Management and Digital Animal Registry
  • NEW MANAGEMENT BOOK: Creating a Joy-Centric Culture
  • QuickTrack by Datalex Transforms Retail Promoter Management with Claude AI and Real-Time Insights
  • Kaltra Introduces Seasonal Discounts on Replacement Coils for Carrier, York, and Trane Chillers

"I was 11 years old when I first came out. I was scared when I realized that I was gay, since my home environment wasn't the most affirming place," said Freddy Pernell, commissioner for the LGBTQ Affairs Commission. "I was lucky that my school had a variety of experts and out teachers who I could go to for advice. These LGBTQ teachers became mentors that were crucial to my development into the person I am today. Efforts to keep conversations about identity out of schools will only hurt kids who are trying to come to discover who they really are."

SHARE Email Facebook Twitter

Filed Under: Government, State

Show All News | Report Violation
0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on The PennZone
  • 21 Days: The Malta Deadline That Could Redraw the Finnish Online Casino Map
  • U.S. Government Contracts in Excess of 38 Million Secured Through Partner, Establishing Multi-Year Defense Revenue Platform Through 2032: $BLIS
  • New Report Reveals Surprising Trends in Ohio Airport Accidents
  • Why Your Berberine Failed: RevGenetics Unveils the Absorption Gap Solution
  • WCC Kitchens and Cabinets Featured on Selling Houses Australia
  • Cat Hunt Simulator : Burrow & Pounce Lands on the App Store
  • Shincheonji Marks 42nd Anniversary: From a Basement to a Denomination Growing by Tens of Thousands Annually
  • Imagen Golf Selected as Exclusive Golf Instruction Partner at The Birds Nest in New Hope, PA
  • Brain Drain Unlimited Foundation Achieves Candid Platinum Seal of Transparency
  • Jackets for Jobs Hosts Smart & Sexy® Day Detroit for Women's History Month
  • Tint Academy Training in Dallas Texas: Learn Window Tint & PPF Installation
  • $IBG accelerates toward transformative merger with BlockFuel as $6 million raise fuels dual-industry growth strategy: N A S D A Q: IBG
  • High-Growth Power Infrastructure Play Targets AI Boom: 1606 Corp. Executes Aggressive Texas Expansion Strategy: 1606 Corp. (Stock Symbol: CBDW) $CBDW
  • Accelerating the Transformation into a U.S. Nuclear Fuel Cycle Leader: Frontier Nuclear and Minerals Inc. (N A S D A Q: FNUC)
  • Ozz Metals Ltd Secures 1-Tonne Gold Offtake Agreement
  • Cultural Heritage Gallery Presents: Two Free Irish History Presentations Open to the Public
  • Jet Set: The Ultimate Coachella Afterparty
  • Heritage at Manalapan Introduces New Single-Family Home Community in One of Monmouth County's Most Desirable Locations
  • Compliant Workspace announces partnership with Blackpoint Cyber
  • Michigan Homeowners Urged to Act on Rising Basement Waterproofing Needs Amid Severe Flood

Popular on PennZone

  • Ice Melts. Infrastructure Fails. What Happens to Clean Water?
  • The Legal AI Showdown: Westlaw, Lexis, ChatGPT… or EvenSteven?
  • François Arnaud, star of Heated Rivalry, is the real-life inspiration behind Christopher Stoddard's novel At Night Only
  • Postmortem Pathology Expands Independent Autopsy Services Across Colorado
  • New Book Warring From the Standpoint of the Throne Room Calls Believers to Pray From Victory
  • Progressive Dental & The Closing Institute Partner with Zest Dental Solutions to Elevate Full-Arch Growth and Patient Outcomes
  • Platinum Car Audio LLC Focuses on Customer-Driven Vehicle Audio and Electronics Solutions
  • Mecpow M1: A Safe & Affordable Laser Engraver Built for Home DIY Beginners
  • Postmortem Pathology Expands Independent Autopsy Services in Kansas City
  • Cummings Graduate Institute for Behavioral Health Studies Honors New Doctor of Behavioral Health Graduates

Similar on PennZone

  • Forced Psychiatric Hospitalization Fails Vulnerable People: CCHR Urges Repeal Amid Rising U.S. Policies
  • NEW MANAGEMENT BOOK: Creating a Joy-Centric Culture
  • Cleveland County Goat Farm NC Kikos Featured in "Feature Farmer Friday" Documentary
  • 21 Days: The Malta Deadline That Could Redraw the Finnish Online Casino Map
  • CCHR Warns: Psychiatric Diagnoses Without Biological Proof Now Used to Justify Euthanasia
  • CCHR: CIA Mind-Control Files Raise Urgent Questions as Millions Take Psychotropic Drugs
  • Bonavita Luxury & Portable Lavatories Announces Rebrand to Bonavita Site Solutions
  • CCHR: While Damaging Antipsychotics Win Approval, Proven Non-Drug Alternatives Remain Ignored
  • Arcuri Group Announces Long‑Term Partnership with WakeMed Health & Hospitals to Deliver Situational Awareness and De‑escalation Training
  • IDpack v4 Launches: A Major Evolution in Cloud-Based ID Card Issuance
Copyright © The PennZone | Theme: OMag by LilyTurf Themes
  • Contribute
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us