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Legislation on Gay Adoption. A few states ban gay foster parentsMany states assert or imply that LGBT adults cannot be prevented from adoptingThree states make it impossible for LGBT adults to adoptMississippi UtahFlorida. Anita Bryant. Former Miss America runner-upSingerFlorida native1977 campaign to repeal Miami ordinanceSave Our Children organization.
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1. Case Study: Homosexuals in Florida Banned from AdoptingLofton v. Secretary of the Department of Children and Family Services Lindsay Weinberg
Margaret Kuklewicz
Rachel O’Konis LINDSAYLINDSAY
2. Legislation on Gay Adoption A few states ban gay foster parents
Many states assert or imply that LGBT adults cannot be prevented from adopting
Three states make it impossible for LGBT adults to adopt
Mississippi
Utah
Florida
LINDSAYLINDSAY
3. Anita Bryant Former Miss America runner-up
Singer
Florida native
1977 campaign to repeal Miami ordinance
Save Our Children organization
LINDSAY
“Freshen their ranks”
In 1977 she got the pie in her face during a press conference regarding the legislation
If we want to watch “pie in the face” movie: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dS91gT3XT_A&feature=relatedLINDSAY
“Freshen their ranks”
In 1977 she got the pie in her face during a press conference regarding the legislation
If we want to watch “pie in the face” movie: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dS91gT3XT_A&feature=related
4. Florida’s Statute Statute § 63.042
Prohibits those who engage in homosexual activities from adopting
Does not categorically prohibit other “groups” of people
Substance abusers are not prohibited
Child abusers are not prohibited
LINDSAY
AFTER THIS SLIDE, SHOW CLIP 1 AND CLIP 2LINDSAY
AFTER THIS SLIDE, SHOW CLIP 1 AND CLIP 2
5. Steven Lofton and Roger Croteau Pediatric AIDs nurses
Lofton was licensed foster parent
1991, Lofton picked up “John Doe” from hospital
John “reversed” to become HIV-negative
1994, agency asked if they wanted to adopt him
1998, given “Outstanding Foster Parent of the Year” award LINDSAY
AFTER THIS SLIDE, SHOW CLIP 3LINDSAY
AFTER THIS SLIDE, SHOW CLIP 3
6. Steven Lofton and Roger Croteau Eventually adopted five other children
Five have HIV
One passed away
“John Doe,” or Bert, is still HIV-free
Moved to Oregon
Florida threatened to take away health coverage
Oregon asked family to take HIV-positive twins LINDSAY/RACHEL
LINDSAY/RACHEL
7. Steven Lofton and Roger Croteau Rosie O’Donnell comes out
She campaigns for Lofton
Sends family on LGBT parent cruise
Media coverage
Extensive in Florida
Ended after case was decided LINDSAY/RACHELLINDSAY/RACHEL
8. Bill Duncan for Florida Legislature Worked with the Marriage Law Project
Wanted to defend this as a legislative decision
Felt that a law similar to Utah’s would be better
Believed in strongly distinguishing between foster care and adoption
LINDSAY
LINDSAY
9. Florida Foster Care/Adoption Stats 25% of adoptions out of foster care are to single adults
3,400 children waiting to be adopted
79% of children in foster care for more than 2 years
54% for more than 3 years
36% for more than 4 years
LINDSAY
LINDSAY
10. Lofton Case in District Court Lofton and five other plaintiffs
Represented by the ACLU
Sued Secretary of Department of Children and Family Services
Court denied request for class certification
Then granted summary judgment for the state
RACHELRACHEL
11. Lofton Case in Court of Appeals The nature of adoption
Adoption is not a right, it is a statutory privilege
Adoption comes from state law and contracts
The nature of the application process
By applying to adopt, one is asking to have his/her life scrutinized
Adoption is a public act
RACHEL
Opinion published January 28, 2004
Three arguments why Statute § 63.042 is unconstitutional
Due Process Clause of Fourteenth Amendment
Lawrence v. Texas
Equal Protection Clause of Fourteenth Amendment
RACHEL
Opinion published January 28, 2004
Three arguments why Statute § 63.042 is unconstitutional
Due Process Clause of Fourteenth Amendment
Lawrence v. Texas
Equal Protection Clause of Fourteenth Amendment
12. Lofton Case in Court of Appeals Plaintiffs’ Due Process argument
Constitutionally protected relationship that Florida refuses to recognize
Foster parents entitled to a “constitutional liberty interest” because of the loving bond that exists
Foster parents should be protected if state created an “expectation of family permanency”
Court’s response
Foster parent rights cannot be compared to biological parent rights
Failed to state a claim
RACHEL
Opinion published January 28, 2004
Three arguments why Statute § 63.042 is unconstitutional
Due Process Clause of Fourteenth Amendment
Lawrence v. Texas
Equal Protection Clause of Fourteenth Amendment
RACHEL
Opinion published January 28, 2004
Three arguments why Statute § 63.042 is unconstitutional
Due Process Clause of Fourteenth Amendment
Lawrence v. Texas
Equal Protection Clause of Fourteenth Amendment
13. Lofton Case in Court of Appeals Plaintiffs’ Lawrence argument
Lawrence identified a right to “private sexual intimacy”
Florida statute burdens that right
Court’s response
Lawrence says that state cannot criminally prohibit private consensual homosexual conduct
But these rights are not a fundamental liberty interest
Lawrence explicitly says that it does not have to do with minors
RACHEL
RACHEL
14. Lofton Case in Court of Appeals Plaintiffs’ equal protection argument
Statute denies equal protection of laws because it categorically denies homosexuals ability to adopt
Court’s response
Equal protection does not forbid legislative classification related to a “legitimate state interest”
Legitimate state interest is furthering the best interests of adopted children
RACHEL
RACHEL
15. Lofton Case in Court of Appeals According to Court, what is in the best interest of children
Homes that resemble the nuclear family
Provide stability
Provide male/female authority figures
Proper development and socialization
Provide “heterosexual role-modeling”
RACHEL
RACHEL
16. Lofton Case in Court of Appeals Court said legislature could “…rationally act on the theory that heterosexual singles, even if they never marry, are better positioned than homosexual individuals to provide adopted children with education and guidance relative to their sexual development...”
Court called theory an “unprovable assumption”
But legislature can legitimately use it as basis for the statute
RACHEL
RACHEL
17. Lawrence v. Texas About Texas statute that made it a crime for “two persons of the same sex to engage in certain intimate sexual conduct”
Lawrence Court in favor of “liberty for all”
History of homosexual “category”
Rejects idea that court maintains traditional morals and values
Lofton Court distinguishes Lawrence
Lawrence deals with criminal prohibition and adults
RACHEL
Does this freedom of “intimate conduct” make it unconstitutional for a state to forbid a homosexual person from adopting a child?
Lofton, which was decided six months after the Supreme Court handed down the decision in Lawrence, begs that very question.
In fact, the Lofton court pulled a sentence from Lawrence in order to bolster its claim. That sentence reads that “The present case does not involve minors.” However, the Lofton court does not discuss the next sentence in Lawrence, which says that “It does not involve persons who might be injured or coerced or who are situated in relationships where consent might not easily be refused.” Id. From reading both sentences, it seems that the Supreme Court is saying that Lawrence has nothing to do with sexual relations with minors – as, obviously, Lofton has nothing to do with either – but, instead, has to do with the private sexual lives of consenting adults.
In Lawrence, the Supreme Court builds an argument in favor of the legal tradition of liberty for all. See id. The Court said that the concept of a homosexual “as a distinct category of person” did not arise in our culture until the late 19th century. Id. at 568. The discrimination and prohibition of homosexual behavior followed around 1970. Id. at 570. Similarly, the Supreme Court rejects the notion that a court must maintain traditional morals and values. The Lawrence court said that its job is to “define the liberty of all, not to mandate our own moral code.”
RACHEL
Does this freedom of “intimate conduct” make it unconstitutional for a state to forbid a homosexual person from adopting a child?
Lofton, which was decided six months after the Supreme Court handed down the decision in Lawrence, begs that very question.
In fact, the Lofton court pulled a sentence from Lawrence in order to bolster its claim. That sentence reads that “The present case does not involve minors.” However, the Lofton court does not discuss the next sentence in Lawrence, which says that “It does not involve persons who might be injured or coerced or who are situated in relationships where consent might not easily be refused.” Id. From reading both sentences, it seems that the Supreme Court is saying that Lawrence has nothing to do with sexual relations with minors – as, obviously, Lofton has nothing to do with either – but, instead, has to do with the private sexual lives of consenting adults.
In Lawrence, the Supreme Court builds an argument in favor of the legal tradition of liberty for all. See id. The Court said that the concept of a homosexual “as a distinct category of person” did not arise in our culture until the late 19th century. Id. at 568. The discrimination and prohibition of homosexual behavior followed around 1970. Id. at 570. Similarly, the Supreme Court rejects the notion that a court must maintain traditional morals and values. The Lawrence court said that its job is to “define the liberty of all, not to mandate our own moral code.”
18. Romer v. Evans About Colorado amendment that repealed anti-discrimination laws regarding sexual orientation
Romer Court in favor of “liberty for all”
Amendment “imposes a special disability upon those persons alone”
Was classification legitimate or “born of animosity”?
Lofton Court distinguishes Romer
Romer policy did not have a legitimate state interest
RACHEL
Justice Kennedy, author of the Lawrence opinion, also wrote the Supreme Court opinion for Romer v. Evans.
Justice Kennedy used the same type of sentiment in Romer – one of “liberty for all” – as he did in Lawrence.
The Romer Court said that the Colorado amendment is a “status-based enactment divorced from any factual context from which we could discern a relationship to legitimate state interests; it is a classification of persons undertaken for its own sake.”
This distinction in the two opinions may be where the subjective quality of the Court comes in. Are the two supposed “state interests” similar enough that the Supreme Court would rule Florida’s interest irrational? This issue could be the turning point in later litigation efforts.RACHEL
Justice Kennedy, author of the Lawrence opinion, also wrote the Supreme Court opinion for Romer v. Evans.
Justice Kennedy used the same type of sentiment in Romer – one of “liberty for all” – as he did in Lawrence.
The Romer Court said that the Colorado amendment is a “status-based enactment divorced from any factual context from which we could discern a relationship to legitimate state interests; it is a classification of persons undertaken for its own sake.”
This distinction in the two opinions may be where the subjective quality of the Court comes in. Are the two supposed “state interests” similar enough that the Supreme Court would rule Florida’s interest irrational? This issue could be the turning point in later litigation efforts.
19. Barkett’s Dissent Violation of equal protection and due process
Every other “questionable” group can adopt
Other laws targeting politically unpopular groups had been struck down by Supreme Court
MARGARETMARGARET
20. Rehearing Denied by Eleventh Circuit MARGARET
Rehearing denied by Eleventh Circuit
By a 6-6 vote
Needed a majority
Why didn’t they get one?
Prior not the only one appointed by a conservative!
Votes against Lofton:
Chief Judge J.L. Edmonson – appointed by Reagan
Stanley F. Birch – appointed by George Bush
Susan H. Black – appointed by George Bush
Edward E. Carnes – appointed by George Bush
Frank M. Hull – appointed by Clinton
Votes for Lofton, to rehear the case:
Gerald B. Tjoflat – appointed by Ford
R. Lanier Anderson III – appointed by Carter
Joel F. Dubina – appointed by Bush
Rosemary Barkett – appointed by Clinton
Stanley Marcus – appointed by Clinton
Charles R. Wilson – appointed by Clinton
MARGARET
Rehearing denied by Eleventh Circuit
By a 6-6 vote
Needed a majority
Why didn’t they get one?
Prior not the only one appointed by a conservative!
Votes against Lofton:
Chief Judge J.L. Edmonson – appointed by Reagan
Stanley F. Birch – appointed by George Bush
Susan H. Black – appointed by George Bush
Edward E. Carnes – appointed by George Bush
Frank M. Hull – appointed by Clinton
Votes for Lofton, to rehear the case:
Gerald B. Tjoflat – appointed by Ford
R. Lanier Anderson III – appointed by Carter
Joel F. Dubina – appointed by Bush
Rosemary Barkett – appointed by Clinton
Stanley Marcus – appointed by Clinton
Charles R. Wilson – appointed by Clinton
21. William H. Pryor, Jr. Appointed just 5 months earlier
By George W. Bush
Recess appointment
Former Alabama attorney general
His track record
Defended statutes criminalizing homosexual sodomy
Spoke out against decisions legalizing abortion
Won cases trimming congressional power over the states
He provided key vote
MARGARET
MARGARET
22. Supreme Court Refuses to Hear Case Court usually grants review when there is a split among federal circuits
Possible explanations
Lawrence was only 18 months old
Did lower courts need more time?
Court’s membership was unsure
Passions still high from Massachusetts’ same-sex marriage vote
Court didn’t want to get involved
Court could have used Lofton to elaborate on Lawrence
MARGARET
MARGARET
23. Florida Court Decides Similar Case September 8, 2008
Monroe Circuit Court Judge David J. Audlin, Jr.
Holds ban unconstitutional
Similar circumstances to Lofton
Opinion states that
Ban is irrational and scientifically inexplicable
Ban punishes gay Floridians
But attorney general can now appeal order
MARGARET
The case presented to Audlin involved similar circumstances to those in Lofton; the Department of Children and Families placed a five-year-old boy with learning disabilities and special needs with a foster father in 2001, and they have been together ever since. Id. The foster father became the boy’s guardian in 2006, but wanted to adopt the boy with his partner of 15 years. Id. Florida law banned him from this decision. Id. In his opinion, Audlin wrote, “contrary to every child welfare principle, the gay adoption ban operates as a conclusive or irrebuttable presumption that… it is never in the best interest of any adoptee to be adopted by a homosexual.” Id.
The rest of Audlin’s opinion tore into the Eleventh Circuit’s decision in Lofton. An adoption expert testified that the ban was “irrational and scientifically inexplicable,” and presented research on adoption by gay and lesbian parents — research that directly refuted the information relied upon by the Eleventh Circuit in the Lofton decision. MARGARET
The case presented to Audlin involved similar circumstances to those in Lofton; the Department of Children and Families placed a five-year-old boy with learning disabilities and special needs with a foster father in 2001, and they have been together ever since. Id. The foster father became the boy’s guardian in 2006, but wanted to adopt the boy with his partner of 15 years. Id. Florida law banned him from this decision. Id. In his opinion, Audlin wrote, “contrary to every child welfare principle, the gay adoption ban operates as a conclusive or irrebuttable presumption that… it is never in the best interest of any adoptee to be adopted by a homosexual.” Id.
The rest of Audlin’s opinion tore into the Eleventh Circuit’s decision in Lofton. An adoption expert testified that the ban was “irrational and scientifically inexplicable,” and presented research on adoption by gay and lesbian parents — research that directly refuted the information relied upon by the Eleventh Circuit in the Lofton decision.
24. Now – Adoption/Foster Care by LGBT 65,000 adopted children are with LGBT parents
14,000 foster children live with LGBT parents
Does it have negative effects?
LGBT parents
Are older
Are more educated
Have more economic resources
Are not deficient in parenting knowledge, skills, or behavior
Children do not experience adjustment problems
Children are not at risk for problems with gender identity
MARGARET
65,000 adopted children are with LGBT parents
Over 4% of all adopted children
14,000 foster children live with LGBT parents
Over 3% of all foster care children
MARGARET
65,000 adopted children are with LGBT parents
Over 4% of all adopted children
14,000 foster children live with LGBT parents
Over 3% of all foster care children
25. Same-Sex Marriage DOMA – Defense of Marriage Act
State Law
Three states recognize same-sex marriage
26 explicitly ban same-sex marriage
Around the World
Recognized in several countries
Others will recognize same-sex marriage conduct abroad (including NM, NY and RI)
Margaret
DOMA – Defense of Marriage Act
Passed in 1996
Marriage is explicitly defined a union of one man and one woman for the purposes of federal law
No act or agency of the federal government currently recognizes same-sex marriage
According to the Government Accountability Office, more that 1,138 rights and protections are conferred to US citizens upon marriage
Social Security benefits
Veterans’ benefits
Health insurance
Medicaid
Hospital visitation
Estate taxes
Retirement savings
Pensions
Family leave
State Law
States Recognizing Same-Sex Marriage:
Massachusetts since May 17, 2004
California since May 15, 2008
Connecticut since October 10, 2008
4 states provide nearly all the state-recognized rights either through civil unions or domestic partnerships
26 states have constitutional amendments explicitly barring the recognition of same-sex marriage
43 states have statutes restricting marriage to two persons of the opposite sex
Around the World
Recognized in the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Canada, South Africa, and Norway
Same-sex marriage conducted abroad is recognized in Israel, France, Aruba, Netherlands Antilles and in New Mexico, NY and Rhode Island
Margaret
DOMA – Defense of Marriage Act
Passed in 1996
Marriage is explicitly defined a union of one man and one woman for the purposes of federal law
No act or agency of the federal government currently recognizes same-sex marriage
According to the Government Accountability Office, more that 1,138 rights and protections are conferred to US citizens upon marriage
Social Security benefits
Veterans’ benefits
Health insurance
Medicaid
Hospital visitation
Estate taxes
Retirement savings
Pensions
Family leave
State Law
States Recognizing Same-Sex Marriage:
Massachusetts since May 17, 2004
California since May 15, 2008
Connecticut since October 10, 2008
4 states provide nearly all the state-recognized rights either through civil unions or domestic partnerships
26 states have constitutional amendments explicitly barring the recognition of same-sex marriage
43 states have statutes restricting marriage to two persons of the opposite sex
Around the World
Recognized in the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Canada, South Africa, and Norway
Same-sex marriage conducted abroad is recognized in Israel, France, Aruba, Netherlands Antilles and in New Mexico, NY and Rhode Island
26. The 2008 Ballot Initiatives Florida: Amendment 2
California: Proposition 8
Arizona: Proposition 102
Arkansas: The Unmarried Couple Adoption Ban Amendment 2 in Florida states: “Inasmuch as marriage is the legal union of only one man and one woman as husband and wife, no other legal union that is treated as marriage or the substantial equivalent thereof shall be valid or recognized.”
Proposition 8 in California eliminates the right of same-sex couples to marry
Proposition 102 in Arizona will amend the AZ Constitution to define marriage as between one man and one woman
Arkansas: The Unmarried Couple Adoption Ban is a citizen-initiated state statute that would make it illegal for any individual cohabiting outside of a valid marriage to adopt or provide foster care to minors.[1] While the measure was proposed primarily to prohibit same-sex couples from being adoptive or foster parents, this measure would apply to all otherwise qualified couples who are not legally married.
Amendment 2 in Florida states: “Inasmuch as marriage is the legal union of only one man and one woman as husband and wife, no other legal union that is treated as marriage or the substantial equivalent thereof shall be valid or recognized.”
Proposition 8 in California eliminates the right of same-sex couples to marry
Proposition 102 in Arizona will amend the AZ Constitution to define marriage as between one man and one woman
Arkansas: The Unmarried Couple Adoption Ban is a citizen-initiated state statute that would make it illegal for any individual cohabiting outside of a valid marriage to adopt or provide foster care to minors.[1] While the measure was proposed primarily to prohibit same-sex couples from being adoptive or foster parents, this measure would apply to all otherwise qualified couples who are not legally married.
27. Now – Economic Environment Foster care costs the state
Monitoring of children
Providing health insurance and other care
Constantly recruiting parents
Displaced or children who were never placed have extra challenges
Health, educational, financial, others
States save money by allowing adoption!
MARGARET
If a state limited adoption and foster care by LGBT parents
9,300-14,000 children would be displaced
Children would have to wait longer to be adopted
In Florida, during 2004-05, 4,362 children had been waiting for more than 2 years
Children would “age-out”
MARGARET
If a state limited adoption and foster care by LGBT parents
9,300-14,000 children would be displaced
Children would have to wait longer to be adopted
In Florida, during 2004-05, 4,362 children had been waiting for more than 2 years
Children would “age-out”
28. Now – Political Environment Obama/Biden viewpoint
McCain/Palin viewpoint
Future judge appointees
State referendum
California vote on LGBT marriage
Ellen DeGeneres ads
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