From Deseret News archives:
Governor calls gay clubs local not state issue
Huntsman says parents and schools should make decisions
The governor's comments came the day after Sen. Chris Buttars, R-West Jordan, said he intends to run a bill in the 2006 Legislature that would ban such clubs from public schools throughout Utah.
Huntsman, also a Republican, said during the taping of his monthly press conference televised on KUED Channel 7 that the question of whether the state needs to step in and take the clubs out of public schools has already been answered by the courts.
"It was deliberated and finalized," the governor said of the legal wrangling over the first attempt at forming a gay-straight alliance in Utah at East High in 1995. The legal battle ended when the Salt Lake City Board of Education decided to allow all types of clubs to meet.
"I do believe that these are issues that should be taken care of at the localest of levels parents dealing with kids, and parents dealing with school boards, if they have a concern," Huntsman said. "I am not sure whether this necessarily should be handled at the state level."
After the taping, the governor told reporters he preferred to talk with his own children about gay-related issues. But Huntsman, who has two children attending East High, said he had no problem with the school's having a gay-straight alliance.
"This is something I would discuss with my kids individually, within our home. That would be my preference. But other parents might be different," he said. Some might feel their children need such a club, the governor said.
"Maybe some people do. I can't speak for all kids. I wouldn't want to dictate an outcome to all parents. I think it's a sensitive enough issue for parents to try to deal with in ways they are most comfortable with," he said.
Martin Bates, assistant to the superintendent on legal issues and policy in Granite School District, agrees the issue remains in the hands of school districts.
"I think it's really powerful when local board members make a decision and go home at the end of the board meeting and answer to their neighbors about it," Bates said.
Utah Eagle Forum President Gayle Ruzicka is working with Buttars on the bill, which she says picked up steam after a gay-straight alliance set up shop at Provo High School.
Ruzicka says local boards are too afraid of lawsuits to not allow gay-straight clubs. She notes parents were furious at the idea of a gay-straight alliance at Provo High this past fall, yet the Provo Board of Education allowed it.










