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Gay rights protesters fill Idaho Capitol

They want Idaho Human Rights Act to have inclusive language

The Columbian
Published: February 17, 2014, 4:00pm
6 Photos
Senate President Pro Tem Brent Hill, R-Rexburg, is blocked by demonstrators from entering the Senate chambers at the Idaho Statehouse on Monday morning.
Senate President Pro Tem Brent Hill, R-Rexburg, is blocked by demonstrators from entering the Senate chambers at the Idaho Statehouse on Monday morning. Photo Gallery

BOISE — Hundreds of protesters filled all four floors of Idaho’s state Capitol on Monday to urge lawmakers to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation.

Many held small, hand-lettered signs saying, “Add the Words.” The protesters want the words “sexual orientation” and “gender identity” added to the Idaho Human Rights Act, which now forbids discrimination based on race, religion, disability and other factors, but not on those two.

“This is the eighth year we’ve been working on this, the eighth consecutive session that they told us they won’t even give us a public hearing,” said Mistie Tolman, co-chair and spokeswoman for Add the Words, the group pushing for the change. “If we need to, there will be a 9th year and there will be a 10th year. We’ll keep coming back. We’re not going away until we right this wrong.”

Some of the protesters also held signs opposing HB 427, the religious freedom expansion bill from Rep. Lynn Luker, R-Boise, that’s pending in the Idaho House. It would protect those who deny service to those to whom they object on religious grounds. No action was taken on that bill on Monday

“The bill is not ready to advance at this point,” said House Speaker Scott Bedke, R-Oakley.

After more than 500 people attended a public hearing last week to oppose that measure, it was sent to the House’s amending order, where any member may offer amendments. A stack of amendments a quarter-inch thick was proposed, but Bedke called for a “thoughtful pause,” and the bill was put on hold.

Tolman said, “The fact that … it could be called up at any time makes us uneasy, and we wanted to send a big message to House members to let them know that a large number of us don’t believe that you should be able to use religion as a reason to discriminate.”

People testifying against HB 427 said it could undermine local anti-discrimination ordinances passed in seven Idaho cities in the past two years, including Sandpoint, Coeur d’Alene and Boise.

Monday’s giant protest was the third “Add the Words” protest at Idaho’s Capitol since legislative leaders again refused to give the anti-discrimination bill a hearing this year. In the first protest, on Feb. 3, 44 people were arrested after blocking all entrances to the Idaho Senate chamber, including clergy members, senior citizens, high school students and more. Last Thursday, more than 60 silent protesters marched around the Statehouse and then filed through the rotunda, wearing matching “Add the 4 Words, Idaho” T-shirts.

Tolman said polling shows Idahoans strongly oppose allowing people to be fired from their jobs or evicted from their homes for being gay. A statewide poll by Moore Information commissioned by the American Civil Liberties Union in December of 2011 found that 81 percent of Idahoans believe it should be illegal to fire someone because they’re gay. A 2008 Boise State University public policy survey found 63 percent thought that should be illegal.

Twenty-one states have laws banning discrimination against gays.

Idaho appears to be in the early stages of a process that’s already happened in neighboring states. In Oregon, a dozen cities and counties had passed local nondiscrimination ordinances regarding sexual orientation before a statewide nondiscrimination law was enacted in 2007. In Washington, local laws also were passed in a dozen cities and counties before a statewide law passed in 2006. Spokane’s local ordinance passed in 1999; Seattle’s passed in the 1970s.

As lawmakers exited their chambers after their morning session, the protesters placed their hands over their mouths, to symbolize that they’re not being heard.

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