This Unjust Law Hurts Florida's Foster ChildrenOn Saturday, January 9, 2010, Sex and the City star and LGBT rights advocate Cynthia Nixon joined the ACLU of Florida to support their campaign to end the ban on adoptions by gays and lesbians in that state. The following was an op-ed she wrote for the Miami Herald in the days leading up to the event. Florida is the only state in the union to have a law that specifically bars gay men and lesbians from adopting children. This not only discriminates against an entire class As a gay woman and a mother of two school-aged children, I stand firmly with the ACLU to help it end this senseless ban. I wholeheartedly support the ACLU'S work in the courts and the Florida Legislature. I lend my voice as they seek to raise awareness among Floridians about the state's shameful adoption ban, which hurts many children and families and sends a wrong-minded message about who gay people are and what we are like.
In New York, where I live, I have many gay friends who are raising children, both natural and adopted. When I look at my friends' families one thing is abundantly clear: These children are incredibly lucky to have their parents, and these parents are incredibly blessed to have their children. When I imagine a law existing in my state that would have prevented these families from coming into being, it makes me furiously angry and woefully sad, and I know that such a law would be an unjust one. There are thousands of Florida children languishing in foster care — at least 100 of whom age out of the system each year never having had a forever home. Though some of these kids beat the odds, we know that the vast majority of children who age out of foster care face an increased likelihood of homelessness, incarceration and dependence on public benefits.
It's time for Florida to join the 21st century. This hateful law must be repealed for children in need, for parents who want to be and for the dignity of the gay community. Gay or straight, a parent is a parent is a parent. A family is a family is a family. This is true everywhere. And it should be true in Florida.
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