Georgia Senate advances adoption bill called anti-LGBT

The Georgia Senate has passed a bill that would allow adoption agencies receiving taxpayer funding to refuse to work with same-sex couples.

Sponsored by Sen. William Ligon, a Brunswick Republican, the measure was passed Friday by a vote of 35 to 19 after about an hour of contentious debate.

Ligon said the proposal is needed to ensure that faith-based organizations are not kept out of civic life.

“Just because you are a faith-based organization, doesn’t mean you have to check your faith at the door and cannot participate in government programs,” Ligon said.

The core of the bill would give legal protection to faith-based adoption agencies that decline to place a child with people whose lifestyle they do not agree with, including single parents, unwed couples and LGBT couples.

But opponents of the measure say it would effectively allow state-sanctioned discrimination by adoption agencies.

“This proposition that we should … protect agencies that are gonna deny loving families the opportunity to adopt a child from our foster care system is just backward on its face,” said Sen. Nan Orrock, an Atlanta Democrat.

Read the full story at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

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