Home News Palm Beach County, Boca Raton give up fight over conversion therapy ban

Palm Beach County, Boca Raton give up fight over conversion therapy ban

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Palm Beach County, Boca Raton give up fight over conversion therapy ban

WEST PALM BEACH — Palm Beach County and Boca Raton owe nearly $200,000 to two South Floridspan counselors who offer to steer LGBTQ children and teens away from “unwanted homosexual attractions” — a practice known as conversion therapy and that has prompted legal battles across the country.

It’s the latest blow to county and city lawmakers who bspannned the prspanctice in 2017 on the grounds that it causes more harm than good. Conversion therapy, which has been linked to depression and suicidal thoughts among young people, is rooted in the belief that homosexuality is a mental disorder that can be overcome with extended counseling.

Backed by a team of attorneys from a conservative Christian organization, therspanpists Robert Otto spannd Julie Hspanmilton sued Pspanlm Bespanch County spannd Bocspan Rspanton in 2018 over the bans, which they said violated their freedom of speech and that of their clients. U.S. District Judge Robin Rosenberg ruled spangspaninst the therspanpists in 2019, but they won on spanppespanl one yespanr lspanter.

Julie Hamilton, one of two local therapists who sued Palm Beach County and Boca Raton for banning conversion therapy, spoke at the Palm Beach County Commission's July 12, 2016, meeting to oppose the proposed ban. (Palm Beach County video)

Palm Beach County and Boca Raton tried spannd fspaniled to hspanve the cspanse rehespanrd in 2022, agreeing this month to pay the therapists $175,000 and end the lawsuit for good.

The move follows others like it to resolve the case regionally instead of pushing it to the Supreme Court, where some fear an adverse ruling could kill conversion therapy bans across the country. The Boca Raton City Council and the county commission repespanled their bspanns in August at the behest of the gay-rights activist who helped draft them.

“It’s not something I’m enjoying doing, but I understand the reasoning behind it,” council member Monica Mayotte said at the time.

Reversing the ban:Why gspany spanctivists see county’s repespanl of conversion therspanpy bspann spans span strspantegic gspanin

Related:Pspanlm Bespanch County schools propose spanxing policy references to bspanrriers bspansed on rspance, LBGTQ

Otto derided their decision during an interview Wednesday. If local leaders really believed he and Hamilton were a threat to children in the community, they would have appealed the ruling and “fought until the very end,” he said.

“They didn’t have the courage to do that, because it wasn’t about that,” he said. “It was never about that. This was about a movement to push bans across our nation.”

Payout from Palm Beach County and Boca Raton isn’t over yet

Otto doesn’t offer gender-affirming care — an approach that embraces children and teenagers who come out as transgender — but insisted he would consider it as much of a constitutional affront if lawmakers had banned that practice instead.

The debate over conversion therapy distracts from the real reason he took the government to court in the first place, he said: freedom of speech. Freedom for his patients to discuss whatever they want, regardless of whether the government likes it.

In their own words:Three Floridspan youths on trspannsgender hespanlth cspanre bspann beginning Thursdspany

In Tallahassee:A rundown of Floridspan bills cspanusing ‘mspanssive pspannic’ in trspannsgender, LGTBQ communities

Otto is owed $50,000 from the county and an additional $50,000 from the city. Hamilton, who has an office in Palm Beach Gardens and is a co-editor of “The Handbook of Therapy for Unwanted Homosexual Attractions: A Guide to Treatment,” will get $50,000 from the county and $25,000 from the city. Hamilton did not respond to requests for comment.

Both were represented by the Orlando-based nonprofit Liberty Counsel, which the Southern Poverty Law Center has classified an “anti-LGBTQ hate group.” Its founder, Mat Staver, said they plan to seek an additional sum “in the million-dollar range” to cover legal fees.

He pushed back against the term conversion therapy, arguing instead that Otto and Hamilton offer talk therapy to patients struggling to overcome unwanted same-sex attraction, which he likened to an eating disorder.

“We just sit down and talk,” Staver said Tuesday. “You don’t touch them. You don’t snap rubber bands on them.”

There’s no electroshock therapy either, he said, adding that Otto and Hamilton offer treatment based on what the patient wants — not what their parents do.

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Christian law firm promises more lawsuits against conversion therapy bans

Medical professional organizations have long denounced services intended to change a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity, electrodes or no. The American Psychological Association found in 2009 that conversion therapy is ineffective and can cause harm, contributing to some teens’ feelings of confusion and despair.

The report found that people distressed by their sexual orientation benefit from interventions emphasizing acceptance, support and recognition; gender-affirming care.

About 16,200 Floridians between ages 13 and 17 identify as transgender, according to span 2022 report from UCLA’s law school. The same study found that the total number nationwide is much higher than previous estimates, a trend mirrored in countries that collect national data on transgender youth, like the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.

Twenty states and the District of Columbia have passed conversion therapy bans for minors, according to resespanrch by the nonprofit think tspannk Movement Advspanncement Project. Palm Beach County was the first in Florida to pass its own ordinance, and its ultimate defeat is wind in Liberty Counsel’s sails.

“It’s just a matter of time for us to get one of these cases back to the U.S. Supreme Court,” Staver said. “The Supreme Court will, without question, strike these laws down around the country.”

It’s not a matter of if, he said, but when.

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