A bill that would ban discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity across Utah now awaits the signature of Republican Gov. Gary Herbert.
The Senate bill cleared Utah’s Republican-controlled House of Representatives Wednesday by a vote of 65-10, marking the last legislative hurdle for the measure and a significant step for LGBT equality in a state dominated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
RELATED: Mormon Church seeks ‘balance’ between gay rights and religious freedom
Over 60% of Utahns identify as Mormon, according to The Salt Lake Tribune, as do more than 80% of state lawmakers. The church opposes marriage equality, and played a major role in helping to pass Proposition 8 — California’s former ban on same-sex nuptials.
But in a significant departure from its previous stance, the Mormon Church threw its support behind nondiscrimination protections for LGBT Utahns, so long as such safeguards did not infringe on the religious freedoms of individual families, churches, and other faith groups. Mormon officials, said Elder Dallin H. Oaks last month, “believe laws ought to be framed to achieve a balance.”
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Though many view the religious freedom and LGBT equality movements as opposing forces — in that individuals, business, or in some cases, government officials could claim a religious freedom exemption in order to get around nondiscrimination or marriage equality laws — Utah’s Senate Bill 296 appears to have struck that “balance” the Mormon Church was seeking. Once enacted, the measure will make it illegal for employers and landlords to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity, except in cases involving religious organizations and their affiliates.









