In a story we posted yesterday, Second US City May Ban Conversion Therapy Tomorrow, hopes were high that the Seattle City Council would vote to ban gay conversion therapy within its borders. And so they did!
The Seattle City Council unanimously voted Monday to ban conversion therapy for queer youth, becoming the third American city to independently outlaw the practice.
Under the new ordinance, mental health providers will be barred from offering or advertising conversion therapy to minors. The practice, which claims to help gay people overcome same-sex attraction, has been widely discredited by mental health professionals and called potentially harmful by the World Psychiatric Association.
Councilmember Lorena Gonzalez introduced the bill in July, calling conversion therapy a “harmful practice that needs to end.”
“Being gay, lesbian, bisexual, queer or transgender is not an illness, nor is it something that needs a cure,” she said at the time.
Anyone found to be practicing such therapy on people younger than 18 will now be subject to a civil violation carrying penalties of $500 for a first offense and $1,000 for subsequent ones. The city will also spend around $50,000 advertising primarily to LGBT youth to raise awareness that the therapy is now banned, according to KUOW.
In one of the moving moments of the day, Seattle City Councilmember Debora Juarez and also a member of the Blackfeet Nation, gave an emotional testimony upon the ordinance’s passage. She compared the therapy to the plight faced by Native Americans in the early days of the country.
Conversion therapy is the 20th century or 21st century version of what happened to my people all in the name in assimilation. We were forcibly taken from our families, from our children. I am literally one generation removed from that practice. It breaks my heart that we have to pass a law to recognize your humanity.
Thank you Seattle for doing the right thing. Cincinnati and Miami Beach did so in December 2015 and June 2016 respectively. Who's next?
h/t: huffingtonpost.com