Virginia House Bill 1414 Explained

Virginia House Bill 1414 was a proposed legislation introduced into the Virginia General Assembly on January 14, 2015, by Bob Marshall. The bill didn't pass.[1] The bill would have enabled refusal of service to persons based on "same-sex "marriage" or homosexual behavior" by any public or private business in some way licensed by the state.[2] Critics suggest that the law, if enacted, could be used by hospitals to turn away patients, restaurants to refuse to serve and to remove students from school and compared it to Jim Crow laws. The Virginia Christian Alliance emphasized their position that the bill is critical to clergy and that they "fear for their job" should the bill fail.[3] [4]

Similar bills have been introduced but not signed into law in other states. In 2014, Arizona, Governor Jan Brewer, a Republican, vetoed Arizona SB 1062 which would have given business owners the right to refuse service to homosexuals on religious grounds. Kansas House Bill 2453 was approved by that state's house of representatives but failed to make it out of the Kansas Senate Judiciary Committee:[5] [6]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: LIS > Bill Tracking > HB1414 > 2015 session.
  2. Web site: Virginia House Bill 1414. Virginia General Assembly.
  3. News: Virginia Christian Alliance: 'Every pastor should fear for his job' if Conscience Bill fails. WAFF. 2015-01-11. https://archive.today/20150117095105/http://www.waff.com/clip/11014851/virginia-christian-alliance-every-pastor-should-fear-for-his-job-if-conscience-bill-fails. 2015-01-17. dead.
  4. News: Stern. Mark Joseph. A New Virginia Bill Would Let Schools, Hotels, Restaurants, and Hospitals Turn Gays Away.
  5. News: Hanna. John. Kansas Senate won't consider gay couples discrimination bill. February 19, 2014. Topeka Capital-Journal. February 18, 2014.
  6. News: Arizona Governor Vetoes Bill on Refusal of Service to Gays. New York Times. 27 February 2014 . Santos . Fernanda .