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Conservatives help stall bullying bill

Conservatives target legislators

- Staff Writer

Published: Wed, Jul. 16, 2008 12:30AM

Modified Wed, Jul. 16, 2008 05:11AM

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A flood of calls and mail from social conservatives who don't want gay students on a list of potential bullying targets helped stall votes on a proposed school safety law.

Legislators have been working on a bullying bill for more than a year, and until Tuesday morning thought they had a compromise that would pass both House and Senate. It turned out that including "sexual orientation" in a list of more than a dozen reasons a student might be bullied or harassed was a sticking point. Both the House and Senate plan to vote on a bullying bill before they finish work this week, though it is not certain what it will say.

Opponents want the whole list removed. Those who want the law to list potential targets said the descriptions are necessary because some bullying is ignored or tolerated as "kids being kids."

HOUSE BILL 1366

The controversial paragraph says:

"Bullying or harassing behavior includes, but is not limited to, acts reasonably perceived as being motivated by any actual or perceived characteristic, such as race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, gender, socio-economic status, academic status, masculinity, femininity, physical appearance, sexual orientation, or mental, physical, developmental or sensory disability, or by association with a person who has or is perceived to have one or more of these characteristics."

"When people are being ignored, you have to be specific sometimes," said Brian Lewis, lobbyist for the N.C. Association of Educators.

The Christian Action League is asking people on its mailing list to tell legislators to oppose it, and the N.C. Family Policy Council has written extensively on its view that homosexual rights groups are using the issue of school safety to promote a social agenda.

"This is a watershed issue, and if 'sexual orientation' is enacted into North Carolina law through HB 1366, it will serve as the basis for affirming deviant sexual behaviors throughout our state statutes," read a brief that Bill Brooks, Family Policy Council executive director, gave to legislators.

Brooks said schools should prohibit bullying for any reason and the law would be stronger without the descriptions.

One senator said he received more than 175 cards, e-mails, letters and telephone calls telling him not to support it.

Sen. Stan Bingham, a Republican from Denton, said many of his constituents don't know whether he represents them in Raleigh or in Washington, but a whole lot of people seem to know the details of the bullying bill.

"They must have notified every church in my area," Bingham said. The messages were enough to convince Bingham not to support the compromise bill, even though he was one of the negotiators.

"It kind of hurt," he said.

Dozens of states have passed anti-bullying laws. Some were spurred, in part, by a connection between harassment and shootings. A 2002 report by the U.S. Secret Service on 37 school shootings said that most shooters were motivated by revenge.

Gay students speak

Gay North Carolina high school students have been speaking out about bullying at school. Leslie Thompson of Alamance County said her 18-year-old sister, Erica Collora, has endured years of taunts for being a lesbian.

"It's important to include the descriptions," said Thompson, 34, who is raising her sister because both parents have died. "I think the school systems as a whole don't know how to deal with it."

Thompson said she was used to seeing her sister "teary or in a rage" over being taunted.

"The counselors have always been very nice to Erica," Thompson said. She added that they had done nothing about the taunting.

lynn.bonner@newsobserver.com or (919) 829-4821

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