
Backed by the
Utah Eagle Forum, state senator Chris Buttars plans
legislation to ban high school gay-straight clubs. "I'm
concerned about gay clubs," the West Jordan Republican
said Wednesday, a day after opening a bill file for
the legislation he said would ban the gay student
associations from meeting on public school property. "In my
mind, if you are in the chess club, what do you talk about?
Chess," Buttars said. "If you are in the dance club,
what do you talk about? Dance. If you are in a gay
club, what do you talk about? I just don't believe
members of sexual-orientation clubs should be sanctioned by
the public schools—what they are talking about
even a part of the public schools. They should not be
allowed to have that on school property at all. It's
just wrong."
Utah Eagle Forum president Gayle Ruzicka said
Buttars's bill would simply clarify existing law,
which curtails what may be said in schools about
sexuality. "We're looking at the law saying, what do we need
to do to help the districts? Most of the districts
don't want the clubs," she said. "Provo certainly
wouldn't have a club if it didn't have this fear [of
lawsuits] hanging over its head...[or] if it were up to parents."
A Gay-Straight Alliance club started at Provo
High School this fall.
The federal Equal Access Act, which was
cosponsored by U.S. senator Orrin Hatch of Utah,
requires any public secondary school accepting federal
funds to allow all school clubs equal access to its
facilities. It was aimed at protecting student
religious activities.
The first Gay-Straight Alliance club in Utah was
started in 1995 at East High School. In order to ban
the club and still comply with the federal law, the
Salt Lake City Board of Education eliminated all
noncurriculum clubs. That action drew protest, and the
school board in 2000 allowed all clubs, including the
Gay-Straight Alliance.
There are now 14 gay-straight clubs in Utah
public schools, said Stan Burnett, director of youth
programs for the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender
Community Center of Utah.
Opponents of Buttars's proposed legislation
contend it will encounter the same legal obstacles
that previous attempts to ban the clubs did. "Oh, that
silly Senator Buttars," said Dani Eyer, executive
director of the Utah chapter of the American Civil Liberties
Union. "What would we do without him? He just doesn't
have a nuanced concept of constitutionally mandated
fairness and freedoms."
Ruzicka disputes the notion that the proposed
legislation would conflict with the equal-access law:
"Equal access does not allow for illegal or immoral
activities, [nor] does our Utah law. Would they allow a
marijuana club...? Because we have an equal access law
doesn't mean they have to allow every club in there.
Districts [allowing gay-straight clubs] either don't
understand the law, they're ignoring the law, or
they're under pressure."
Buttars said he is not afraid of a lawsuit. "I
know the school districts and some others are scared
of the ACLU. Not me," he said. (AP)
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