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</A> -Cui Bono?-

Proposed Kentucky Legislation
Encourages Christian Bigotry
By Steven Schafersman (1/30/00)

For the first two years of its existence, 1996 and 1997, Camp Quest, the only
secular humanist summer camp in the United States, rented the camp facilities
of the Bullittsburg Baptist Assembly in Boone County, Kentucky. Edwin and
Helen Kagin, the founders and leaders of Camp Quest, also live in Boone
County. From the beginning, Camp Quest and its sponsoring organization, the
Free Inquiry Group (FIG) of Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, presented
themselves as secular humanists to the Bullittsburg Camp and its owners, the
Northern Kentucky Baptist Association (NKBA). The Bullittsburg Camp and NKBA
had Camp Quest sign a contract in which the NKBA acknowledged that they
followed the public accommodations laws. Despite some minor problems, the
arrangement between the secular humanist organizations and the Bullittsburg
Camp proceeded amicably for the nine days each summer that Camp Quest used
the camp facilities. During the second year, however, while relations with
the camp staff remained cordial, it became clear that Camp Quest was not
really welcomed at the Baptist Camp, so Camp Quest moved to a camp near
Lebanon, Ohio, for the summer of 1998, and will hold its fifth session in
2000 at this Ohio site.

Camp Quest supporters and FIG members were surprised to learn from news
reports on 14 January 2000, over 2 1/2 years after the last camp session in
the Baptist facility, that the Northern Kentucky Baptists had experienced a
"great deal of discomfort" at the presence of secular humanists in their
summer camp. The Baptists complained that they were initially not made aware
of the secular humanist nature of Camp Quest (a false claim), and that they
only rented the property to Camp Quest because they were afraid of being sued
(a belief that is entirely imaginary on their part). After two years of
apparent discussion, the Baptists decided they now want the legal right to
deny the use of their camp grounds to any organization that has a fundamental
conflict with their religious beliefs. They therefore asked Kentucky
Representative Thomas Kerr to sponsor legislation (House Bill 70) that
exempts churches from the common anti-discrimination requirements of public
accommodation laws. These statutes broadly state that if an organization
rents its facilities to outside groups, it may not discriminate against them
for the usual reasons of gender, race, ethnicity, national origin, religious
belief, medical disability, sexual orientation, and so forth. (Since many
organizations, including churches, are private organizations, they may of
course legally deny others the use of their private facilities if they use
them exclusively for their own purposes and never rent them to outside
groups. In the present case, the Bullittsburg Camp owned by the NKBA has
frequently been leased to outside organizations, so the public accommodation
anti-discrimination laws apply.)

Kerr's HB 70 passed a Kentucky House committee and has been sent to the
floor. The legislation is controversial, to say the least (in fact, it is
unconstitutional), and it inspired newspaper articles and newspaper
editorials. One of these editorials, in the Cincinnati Enquirer, spawned a
host of responses from outraged readers in the form of letters to the editor.
Since the Cincinnati Enquirer may not print all of the replies to its
editorial, the writers have sent them to this website by email for posting on
the web. The writers believe this latest episode in Christian bigotry should
receive as much publicity as possible. Edwin Kagin has given permission to
reprint all of the letters on his website. To reply yourself to the
Cincinnati Enquirer editorial, go to http://enquirer.com/editor/letters.html.

Kentucky Reprsentative Kathy Stein has reported that Thomas Kerr and other
Kentucky House Republicans filed HB 485 on 27 January. According to her, the
new bill is a further retreat on Kentucky civil rights enforcement, since it
dismantles legal protections against discrimination of persons based on
sexual orientation (just as HB 70 did of persons based on religious belief).
She believes Kentucky is being made a test case with this bill, which is
stealthily crafted to steer clear of the Supreme Court's ruling in Romer v.
Evans.

Check this webpage for updates on this fast-breaking story. I will soon
provide the text or links to the text of the two Kentucky bills, and will
post further news reports, editorials, and letters as they come in. To
interview Edwin Kagin for this story, reporters may call him at 606-384-7000
or email him at edwinkagin@ fuse.net.

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