Bill Offers Zero Protections For Transgender Hoosiers,Â Repeals Last Year’s Disastrous RFRA But Also Hard-Fought LGBT ProtectionsÂ

After nearly five hours, Indiana Senate Republicans voted for legislation claiming to advance civil rights protections for lesbian, gay, and bisexual Hoosiers that is opposed by both the religious right and LGBT organizations. In a 7-5 vote, lawmakers on the Senate Rules and Procedures Committee decided to pass onto the full senate a bill that repeals the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the hard-fount protections for LGBT people, and replace it with a bill that has zero protectionsÂ for transgender people, plus increased carve-outs that enable religious discrimination.

“Lawmakers still aren’t listening,” Freedom Indiana campaign manager Chris Paulsen said in a statement sent to NCRM after Wednesday night’s vote.Â “Tonight, they took a bad bill and made it worse for LGBT people in our state who have to live each day in fear that they could be fired, denied housing or turned away from a public place for who they are.”

Tonight, legislators took a bad bill and made it even worse for the hardworking #LGBT Hoosiers who live in fear of discrimination. #INLegis â€” Freedom Indiana (@freedom_indiana) January 28, 2016

Ahead of the bill’s hearing today, Lambda Legal labeled the bill, SB 344, a “super” RFRA “that would facilitate religious discrimination.” ItsÂ religious exemptions “are broader thanÂ the religious refusal law passed last springÂ that has marked Indiana as a state of intolerance, tarnished the stateâ€™s reputation, and deprived it of convention revenue,”Â Camilla Taylor, Counsel at Lambda Legal had warned.

Calling SB 344 “big step backwards for all LGBT Hoosiers, but particularly transgender people, Lambda Legal adds the bill “would erode local authority to protect people from discrimination through municipal and county ordinances,” “permit publicly funded discrimination by social service agencies,” and “permit businesses to refuse to serve same-sex couples celebrating a wedding or anniversary.”

During the extensive hearing, the religious right brought significant out-of-state support. Speakers included infamous icons of the anti-gay establishment. Among them, Melissa Klein, owner of Sweetcakes by Melissa, who was ordered to pay damages to a same-sex couple, and floristÂ Barronelle Stutzman, who also refused to service a same-sex couple.

The legislation was authored by Senate RepublicansÂ Travis Holdman and Brandt Hershman.

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