Va. students warn against 'don't say gay' policies
VIRGINIA
Va. students warn against dont say gay policies
New law requires parental notification of sexually explicit content in classroom
Published 3 days ago on August 5, 2022
By
Caris White
More than 600 students from across Virginia signed a letter from the Pride Liberation Project that calls for the Virginia Department of Education to clarify that teaching students about LGBTQ people and events is not sexually explicit.
Senate Bill 656, which Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed earlier this year, requires parents be notified when instructional materials contain sexually explicit content without any input from students.
Current Virginia law defines
sexual conduct as masturbation, homosexuality, sexual intercourse, or physical contact in an act of apparent sexual stimulation or gratification. ... Because SB 656 does not itself specify what constitutes sexually explicit content, LGBTQ students and activists are concerned that the bill will rest on Virginias pre-existing definition of sexual conduct.
In their
full letter, signees argued that In effect, SB 656 can potentially be interpreted to define all references to people in same-sex relationships as inherently sexual. ... Consequently, all references to LGBTQIA+ people in K-12 schools, including Supreme Court cases, historical events impacting LGBTQIA+ people, and discussions about queer authors, may be deemed as sexually explicit content under SB 656, effectively erasing LGBTQIA+ representation in our school curriculum, reads the Pride Liberation Projects press release.
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