Sen. Danny Carroll, R-Benton, presents a floor amendment to House Bill 470, which senators approved in a narrow vote. (Photo for the Kentucky Lantern by McKenna Horsley)
FRANKFORT — The Kentucky Senate narrowly voted to postpone consideration of House Bill 470 — after ?adopting a floor amendment that loosened the controversial bill’s health-care restrictions on trans youth.
The 19-17 vote came at 9:34 p.m. Wednesday after two breaks for closed-door Republican caucuses.??
Sen. Danny Carroll, R-Benton, proposed cutting about 30 pages of the original bill, including harsh penalties against medical professionals, and replacing that language with:?
His amendment passed 19-17, while others were not successful.?
Several floor amendments were withdrawn, including ones that would have defined “health facility” and let parents or guardians sue health care providers within 30 years after the minor in question turns 18.?
Sen. Reginald Thomas, D-Lexington, voted for Carroll’s amendment but said in explaining his vote that it merely made “a bad bill better.”?
Senate President Robert Stivers said that the Senate could vote Thursday to take up House Bill 470 again.
Asked about the bill’s future, Stivers said he didn’t know.
“There was a lot of questions and discussions, multiple caucuses about what various amendments meant and impact to the bill,” he said. “I think there was a lack of knowledge as to what all the amendments of the subject matter meant. This is not the easiest of subject matter topics.”?
Rebecca Blankenship, who runs Ban Conversion Therapy Kentucky, told the Kentucky Lantern that Carroll’s adjustments to the bill were a “small mercy” but that the bill is “still heinous” for Kentucky’s trans youth.?
But “the fact that (Carroll) stepped up for us,” Blankenship added, “means more than he could ever know.”?
The bill also includes provisions restricting what public schools could teach about sexuality. It also says schools may, after public comment, adopt policies related to who can use what bathrooms at school.
In its first iteration, House Bill 470, sponsored by Rep. Jennifer Decker, R-Waddy, was considered one of the worst bills targeting the LGBTQ+ community in the nation.
In addition to proposing a ban on gender affirming care for minors, it included penalties for mental health professionals as well as physicians who provided care to trans minors.?
A committee changed the bill, exempting mental health professionals from the penalties. That version still banned gender affirming care for all minors and allowed lawsuits against medical providers for a 30-year window, though.?
That version passed the House.?
McKenna Horsley contributed.?
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