Ark. court strikes down law barring 'gay' adoptions
Ark. court strikes down law barring 'gay' adoptions
Jeannie Nuss - Associated Press
LITTLE ROCK, AR - The Arkansas Supreme Court on Thursday rejected a voter-approved initiative that barred same-sex couples and other unmarried people living together from serving as adoptive or foster parents.
Associate Justice Robert L. Brown wrote for the court that the law would encroach on adults' right to privacy in the bedroom. "Act 1 directly and substantially burdens the privacy rights of 'opposite-sex and same-sex individuals' who engage in private, consensual sexual conduct in the bedroom by foreclosing their eligibility to foster or adopt children," Brown wrote.
The law, which was never enforced, would have effectively banned same-gender couples from adopting or fostering children because they can't legally marry in Arkansas. It also would have been extended to unmarried heterosexual couples who live together.
Voters approved the measure in 2008 after the state Supreme Court overturned a Human Services Department policy preventing homosexuals from serving as foster parents in 2006.
The American Civil Liberties Union sued on behalf of a group of families, arguing that the law arbitrarily bans qualified families from consideration when the state has too few foster and adoptive families. It said it knew of 29 people from a dozen families who claimed the law would have an impact on them.
Some of the law's opponents were worried that they would not be able to let a homosexual relative adopt their children if they should die.
A state judge had struck down the law last April because he said it forced unmarried couples to choose between their relationships and becoming adoptive parents. The attorney general later asked the Supreme Court to reverse that decision, arguing that fostering or adopting a child is not a constitutionally protected right.
When the lawsuit was filed in late 2008, Arkansas and Utah were the only states with bans on unmarried couples fostering or adopting children. Mississippi banned homosexual couples, but not single homosexual men, from adopting children. Florida was the only state to completely bar homosexual adoption until a federal judge ruled the ban unconstitutional in December 2008.
Reaction
Bruce Babione, an attorney with the Alliance Defense Fund, tells OneNewsNow: "The needs of children outweigh the wants of adults. The court's decision tragically places more importance on the sexual interests of adults than on protecting children."
The attorney argues that the voters in Arkansas did understand the best interests of children. "The people of Arkansas believe that children deserve the most safe and stable home environments possible. They cast their ballots to ensure that children would not be deprived of the best possible homes and they decisively approved ACT 1 for that purpose only," he says. "But the courts struck down the will of the people anyway."
Voters passed Act 1 in 2008 with a 54-to-43 percent margin.
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