State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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92_HB1039gms

 
                            STATE OF ILLINOIS
                         OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
                           SPRINGFIELD, 62706

      GEORGE H. RYAN
      GOVERNOR
                             August 10, 2001

      To the Honorable Members of the
          Illinois House of Representatives
          92nd General Assembly
          Pursuant to the  authority  vested  in  the  Governor  by
      Article  IV,  Section  9(e)  of  the Illinois Constitution of
      1970, and re-affirmed by the People of the State of  Illinois
      by popular referendum in 1974, and conforming to the standard
      articulated  by  the Illinois Supreme Court in People ex Rel.
      Klinger v.  Howlett,  50  Ill.  2d  242  (1972),  Continental
      Illinois National Bank and Trust Co. v. Zagel, 78 Ill. 2d 387
      (1979),  People  ex Rel. City of Canton v. Crouch, 79 Ill. 2d
      356 (1980), and County of Kane v. Carlson, 116  Ill.  2d  186
      (1987),  that  gubernatorial  action  be  consistent with the
      fundamental purposes and the intent of  the  bill,  I  hereby
      return  House  Bill  1039  entitled "AN ACT concerning public
      accommodations" with my specific recommendations for change.
          House Bill 1039  would  create  the  Motorcyclist  Public
      Accommodation Act prohibiting any person from restricting and
      individual's  access  or  admission to, or use of, a place of
      public accommodation solely because the individual operates a
      motorcycle. The bill provides that a violation of the act  is
      a  criminal  (petty)  offense  and  also  provides  for civil
      penalties. House Bill 1039 further provides that the Act does
      not prohibit a person from restricting an individual's access
      or admission to, or use of, a place of  public  accommodation
      because  the individual's conduct poses a risk to the health,
      safety, or property of another.
          This legislation  is  designed  to  prohibit  a  form  of
      discrimination  that  is  not  currently covered by law and I
      fully support the fundamental  purpose  and  intent  of  this
      legislation.  I  understand  that  the  intent of the General
      Assembly was not to add protections for motorcyclists to  the
      Illinois Human Rights Act, but rather to insure that Illinois
      law  covers a form of discrimination that exists in our state
      that is not specifically prohibited under current law.  House
      Bill 1039 protects an individual's right to travel freely and
      use   places  of  public  accommodation  without  fearing  or
      suffering arbitrary discrimination by  providing  a  separate
      statutory  scheme to prohibit such discrimination. I believe,
      however,  that  this  bill   requires   further   change   to
      specifically  include and protect a group of individuals whom
      we all recognize to be the subject of similar and  oftentimes
      more sever forms of discrimination.
          As  I  have said before, I favor equal and fair treatment
      for everyone, regardless of who  they  are  as  a  person  --
      whether  they be a motorcyclist, an ethnic minority, a gay or
      lesbian or even a gay or lesbian motorcyclist. I  have  never
      been  in  favor  of special treatment for anybody, but I have
      always been in favor of fairness for everybody.
          The General Assembly is to be commended  for  recognizing
      its  responsibility  and  obligation  to protect our citizens
      from inequity, unfairness  and  arbitrary  discrimination  by
      passing this legislation. This bill is significant because it
      demonstrates  that the 92nd General Assembly has found common
      ground and reached an overwhelming consensus on  a  mechanism
      for   protecting   certain   classes   of   individuals  from
      discrimination by law, without  creating  special  rights  or
      special  privileges.  It  passed  the  House  and  Senate  by
      overwhelming  majorities.  Some  may  recall that my previous
      proposal (House Bill 101) to extend human rights  protections
 
      to  our  gay  and  lesbian citizens, family members, friends,
      colleagues and acquaintances by  amending  the  Human  Rights
      Act,  was  rejected  by  the  Senate  based  primarily on the
      erroneous rhetoric and  mistaken  perception  that  it  would
      provide  "special  rights  or  privileges"  to  this class of
      citizens, even  though  they  have  suffered  historical  and
      unconscionable  discrimination.  I  still believe the General
      Assembly should pass House Bill 101 in its  entirety,  but  I
      cannot constitutionally affect the additional protections and
      guarantees  in  that  bill through an amendatory veto of this
      one.
          The legislative history of House Bill 1039 shows that the
      General Assembly clearly intended to  establish  a  separate,
      stand-alone   mechanism  that  provides  criminal  and  civil
      protections against discrimination for classes of individuals
      outside what has previously been recognized under  our  Human
      Rights  Act.  In  providing  these  protections, however, the
      General Assembly has omitted a sizable and valuable community
      of people who are not only refused equal access to  areas  of
      public accommodation but are often times harassed, beaten and
      sometimes  even  killed "solely" on the basis of their sexual
      orientation. I'm proud to say that in Illinois we  have  some
      of  the nation's best hate crimes laws on the books. However,
      when it comes to providing equal access to places  of  public
      accommodation   to   all   our  citizens  and  ensuring  each
      individual's right to live, work and enjoy life without  fear
      of  discrimination,  I  am ashamed to say that Illinois falls
      far short of providing for this basic level of civility  that
      so many of us can, and often do, take for granted.
          This  bill  passed  the  House  and  Senate  with  little
      testimony.  A representative of the motorcyclists' interests,
      testified in support  of  this  bill  and  presented  limited
      information  concerning  instances  where  motorcyclists were
      purportedly denied access to public  accommodations.  Without
      intending  to  minimize the impact of such discrimination, in
      good conscience we cannot at the same time simply ignore  the
      documented   evidence   of  discrimination  and  hate  crimes
      committed against  individuals  because  of  their  perceived
      sexual  orientation.  This  month, the city of Chicago issued
      its most recent hate crime statistics which again sadly  show
      that  the  overwhelming  number  of hate crimes are committed
      either because of the victim's race or sexual orientation.
          My  amendments  are  also  consistent  with  the  General
      Assembly's actions  in  passing  legislation  that  prohibits
      bullying  in  schools.  Earlier  this  week,  I  signed  this
      anti-bullying  legislation,  House  Bill 646, into law. It is
      well known and established that bullying frequently  involves
      forms   of   sexual   harassment.  I  signed  this  important
      legislation  knowing  that  because  of  discrimination   and
      harassment in schools, our gay and lesbian youth are at least
      three times more likely to attempt suicide. This is simply an
      intolerable  state  of affairs and we must do more to protect
      them both in and outside our schools.
          There is another  reason  why  I  am  compelled  to  urge
      amendment   of   this   legislation.  Communities  throughout
      Illinois   have   already   appropriately   recognized   that
      discrimination based on an individual's sexual orientation is
      wrong and entirely inconsistent with our fundamental  concept
      of  democracy  and the protections that should be afforded to
      each and every citizen of this state and this nation. Indeed,
      our public and private universities have  enacted  provisions
      to  prohibit  discrimination based on sexual orientation. The
      County of Cook, the cities  of  Chicago,  Champaign,  DeKalb,
      Evanston,  LaGrange, Oak Park, and Urbana, among others, have
      also long since passed ordinances and legislation to prohibit
      discrimination based on sexual orientation.  In  fact,  three
      quarters   of  Illinoisans  are  already  protected  by  such
      non-discrimination legislation.
          Because the  state  has  previously  failed  to  prohibit
      discrimination  against  individuals  because of their sexual
      orientation, this has created an irrational  situation  where
      an individual can be protected from such discrimination where
      they reside, but must risk losing those protections when they
 
      travel  to  other  locales  in  the  state. The Motorcyclists
      Public Accommodation Act was clearly designed to ensure  that
      individuals  could  freely  travel  throughout this state and
      avail themselves to public  accommodations  without  fear  of
      prejudice or discrimination. Accordingly, this legislation is
      an  excellent  vehicle  to  end  this  irrational and unequal
      application  of  laws  by  prohibiting   places   of   public
      accommodations  throughout Illinois from discriminating based
      on an individual's perceived sexual orientation.
          It is, and always has been, the duty  of  any  democratic
      governmental  body  to equally protect and serve the citizens
      that fall under its jurisdiction. House Bill 1039  moves  the
      State of Illinois one step closer to that goal by recognizing
      and  prohibiting  existing discriminatory practices. However,
      House Bill 1039, as is, fails to protect a  large  number  of
      human beings who are in need of this form f protection. And a
      set  of  laws  that  does  not offer equal protection against
      discrimination regardless of race, color, religion,  national
      origin, ancestry, age, gender, marital status, handicap, mode
      of  transportation,  or  sexual  orientation  does  not serve
      anyone  except  those  who   wish   to   be   discriminatory,
      prejudicial, hateful and intolerant.
          I  believe  my  recommended  amendments  are essential to
      ensuring that  the  application  of  this  legislation  gives
      effect to, and is consistent with, the Illinois Constitution,
      including,  among others, Section 1, 2, 12, 18, 20, 23 and 24
      of Article I. My changes will without question  "improve  the
      bill  in  material  ways, yet not alter its essential purpose
      and intent." See People ex rel. City of Canton v. Crouch,  79
      Ill.2d 356 (1980).
          As  drafted,  House  Bill  1039  creates  both a criminal
      penalty  (petty  offense)  and  a  civil  penalty   (monetary
      damages,  injunctive relief, court costs and attorney's fees)
      for discrimination at a place of public accommodation  solely
      because  a  person  is operating a motorcycle. In the case of
      discrimination based upon race, gender or other status  under
      the  Human Rights Act only civil and administrative relief is
      available. A criminal penalty would only apply if a  Criminal
      Code offense is committed against the person because of their
      race, gender or other status set for in the hate crime law. I
      do  not  see a need for the type of discrimination covered by
      this bill to carry both a criminal and a civil penalty.  Such
      a  dispute  is  a civil dispute with the owner or operator of
      the  place  of  public  accommodation,  which  can  be  fully
      resolved in  civil  court  without  the  need  to  resort  to
      criminal court.
          For  these  reasons,  I  return  House Bill 1039 with the
      following recommendations for change:
          on page 1, line 5, by deleting "Motorcyclist"; and
          on page 1, by inserting  between  lines  21  and  22  the
      following:
                    "As  used  in  this  Act,  "sexual orientation"
               means  having  or  being  perceived  as  having   an
               emotional, physical, or sexual attraction to another
               person  without  regard to the sex of that person or
               having or being perceived as having  an  orientation
               for such attraction, or having or being perceived as
               having  a  self-image  or identity not traditionally
               associated  with  one's   biological   maleness   or
               femaleness.  "Sexual orientation" does not include a
               physical or sexual  attraction  to  a  minor  by  an
               adult.
                    Section  7.  Construction.  Nothing in this Act
               shall be construed as requiring any  owner,  manager
               or  employee  of  a place of public accommodation to
               give preferential treatment or special rights  based
               on  mode  of transportation or sexual orientation or
               to implement affirmative action policies or programs
               based  on   mode   of   transportation   or   sexual
               orientation."; and
 
          on  page  1,  line 26, by inserting before the period "or
          because of the sexual orientation of the individual"; and
          on page 2, line 2, by replacing "Penalty" with "Damages";
      and
          on page 2, by replacing lines 3 through  6  with  "(a)  A
          person who access"; and
          on page 2, line 17, by replacing "(c)" with "(b)"; and
          on page 2, line 19, by deleting "penalties or".
          With   these  changes,  House  Bill  1039  will  have  my
      approval. A local politician once said, "Four score and seven
      years ago, our forefathers brought forth on this continent  a
      new  nation,  conceived  in  liberty  and  dedicated  to  the
      proposition  that  all men are created equal." That is what I
      believe also -- no more, no less. I choose to stand with  the
      founder  of  my  party  and  Illinois'  greatest son, Abraham
      Lincoln, and I urge you to do likewise.
                                             Sincerely,
                                             s/GEORGE H. RYAN
                                             Governor

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