On Tuesday, the Alabama House approved a dangerous bill that would allow adoption and foster care agencies with “sincerely held religious beliefs” to discriminate against prospective parents.

Same-sex parents
Photo By Kurt Löwenstein Educational Center International Team from Germany (ws'08 (5)) [CC-BY-2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Governor Kay Ivey should veto the bill and send a clear message that Alabama will protect vulnerable children by prioritising their well-being and finding them a loving home.

The bill, HB 24, would set a terrible precedent. Its sweeping language would invite agencies to discriminate based on the religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, and marital status of would-be parents. It would allow agencies to make decisions without considering how their bias could run roughshod over the rights of foster or adoptive parents, or the state’s ability to place children in loving homes. For example, a same-sex couple that approaches an agency offering a safe, loving home for a child could be turned away because the agency opposes same-sex relationships on religious grounds.

By restricting enforcement of existing laws, HB 24 would also severely limit the state’s control and oversight over child placements. Approximately 30 percent of child placement agencies in Alabama are faith-based organisations, and HB 24 would prohibit the state from withholding funding or licenses if those organisations discriminate. It would undermine laws designed to put the best interest of the child at the forefront of placement decisions, and would tie the state’s hands as it tries to place children with families who can care for them.

In March, South Dakota enacted a similar law, prompting a firestorm of criticism from children’s and LGBT advocates. North Dakota, Michigan, and Virginia have similar exemptions in place.

Yet most states that have considered religious exemptions in child placement have decided not to adopt them. Efforts to update Georgia’s adoption laws faltered this spring after legislators inserted religious exemptions into the bill. Governor Nathan Deal threatened to veto the amended legislation and criticised lawmakers for putting discrimination before the best interests of children.

As HB 24 heads to her desk, Ivey has a similar opportunity to put Alabama’s children first. The bill’s exceptions for religiously motivated prejudice are baseless, discriminatory, and dangerous. By vetoing HB 24, Ivey can help ensure that Alabama will not allow prejudice to stand in the way of placing vulnerable children in safe, healthy, and loving homes.

Photo By Kurt Löwenstein Educational Center International Team from Germany (ws’08 (5)) [CC-BY-2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

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