[Vision2020] Will Idaho Legislators Reign in The REAL Culture of Death This Session??

Saundra Lund v2020 at ssl1.fastmail.fm
Sun Jan 17 23:40:30 PST 2016


Visionaries:

 

Now that the legislature is back in session, it's time to watch what they do
. . . and what they don't do.  Y'all may recall that I've posted a few <g>
times previously about the lip service the legislature pays to caring about
Idaho's children that seems to stop once a child is born.

 

I'll be watching closely to see if this is finally the year the legislature
does something to protect already born children from parental abuse in the
form of "religious freedom," and I expect my elected representatives to
actively advocate for reforming the existing exemption that's a threat to
Idaho's children.

 

For those not aware, the Governor's Task force on Children at Risk (CARTF)
<http://www.idcartf.org/>  released its Child Deaths in Idaho 2012 report
<http://idcartf.org/ckfinder/userfiles/files/Annual%20Report%20Child%20Death
s%2012CFRT_final.pdf> , and the recommendation is clear:  reform is needed.

 

Panel members from the Idaho Child Fatality Review Team encourage
re-evaluation of Idaho law.  Because members are supportive of religious
freedom, they recommend that the standard for state intervention (when
contrary to parental religious beliefs) be limited in scope.  It should
include, and only include, pediatric cases in which the child's death or
severe disability is imminent and would, within a reasonable degree of
medical certainly, be prevented by the administration of appropriate medical
care.  The law would not be used to mandate routine medical care (i.e. well
child visits, immunizations, etc.) or coerce parents to give consent for the
same.  Apart from strengthening laws to protect children from preventable
deaths, current law is confusing for medical providers and, to a lesser
extent, investigative agencies.

 

For those not up to speed on this matter, below my sig I'll repost something
I shared here not quite a year ago.  Here are a couple of other links those
interested in learning more might find helpful:

http://childfriendlyfaith.org/projectidaho/

http://idahochildren.org/

 

Idaho's stupidity in refusing to reform the law is allowing parents to
neglect their children to death, and it's past time to stop the insanity.
As has been widely reported, Idaho has become a safe haven for those
interested in the ability to neglect their children to death under the guise
of "religious freedom" as other states have recognized that children deserve
protection and have reformed their laws to stop parents from killing their
kids with impunity.

 

Idaho, it's long past time to protect our already born children from being
legally neglected to death!

 

 

Saundra Lund

Moscow, ID

 

I distrust those who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice
it always coincides with their own desires.

~ Susan B. Anthony

 

  _____  

 

From: vision2020-bounces at moscow.com [mailto:vision2020-bounces at moscow.com]
On Behalf Of Saundra Lund
Sent: Monday, February 23, 2015 1:08 PM
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: [Vision2020] Idaho's Culture of Death

 

Visionaries:

 

While there are several potential "winners," perhaps there is no better
example of how dangerous it is when the Idaho legislature is in session than
the ridiculous "parental rights" bill that puts on steroids the Rand Paul
notion of children as property to be owned rather than human beings.

 

Following the preventable deaths of too many Idaho children who were denied
basic health care on "religious" grounds, Rep. Gannon tried to introduce a
bill last year to at least narrow the faith-healing exemption in cases when
a child's or death was caused by a treatable illness or injury.
<http://magicvalley.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/faith-healing-law-faces
-uncertain-future/article_e2736573-b30e-5e05-8fdb-fdc741901ff2.html> "The
bill died February 2014 when [House Speaker] Bedke told House Judiciary
Committee Chairman Rich Wills that there wasn't room in the Legislature for
debate on the measure that year, the Associated Press reported at the time."

 

Last month, CNN did some in-depth reporting on the tragic and preventable
deaths of Idaho children in "Followers of Christ" families.  For those
interested, you can watch the two segments here:

http://www.cnn.com/videos/us/2015/01/19/ac-dnt-tuchman-faith-healing-idaho.c
nn

http://www.cnn.com/videos/tv/2015/01/19/ac-tuchman-faith-healer-sect-deaths.
cnn

 

I was hopeful that the Idaho legislature would at least allow an open debate
of the proposed bill this year.

 

Instead, this state's legislators have decided to go in an opposite
direction to
<http://magicvalley.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/education-and-faith-hea
ling-at-center-of-parental-rights-debate/article_799fd251-6d9c-5899-9747-567
931022ef5.html> "ensure that parents' rights, which courts have already
affirmed, are protected in Idaho in case future rulings go another way."
This proposed bill that is dangerous to Idaho's children on several fronts
had noooo problem making it out of committee - go figure!  The bill's
supporters don't seem the least bit troubled by the rank hypocrisy of on the
one hand again trying to use the Idaho legislative process to insert the
State into the relationship of women and their health care providers to
intrude and limit reproductive health care decisions while on the other hand
giving a green light to those who would allow their already born children to
die preventable -- and agonizing deaths -- in the name of all in the name of
religion.

 

For those interested in even more background, "How to Craft a Religious
Exemption Regime Guaranteed to Be Dangerous for Children: The Case of Idaho"
does a decent job:

https://verdict.justia.com/2015/02/19/craft-religious-exemption-regime-guara
nteed-dangerous-children

 

Here's a snip:

 

While Oregon finally made strides in protecting its children, the number of
deaths in Idaho escalated.  Why?  Because Idaho has created a legal paradise
for believers in faith alone.  Idaho has defanged civil and criminal laws
that deter such deaths.  Indeed, Idaho seems to be encouraging parents to
make religious martyrs of their children, something the First Amendment has
never required.

 

Idaho holds a special place among religious exemption states in that it even
immunizes parents from criminal charges for manslaughter, and negligent
homicide.  That's right, Thus, prosecutors cannot step in to protect the
interests of children and deter their deaths.  According to Children's
Healthcare Is a Legal Duty, a nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting
children from harmful religious and cultural practices, Idaho has now become
the worst state in the country for the preventable deaths of children from
medical neglect.

 

Is it any wonder why so many of Idaho's best and brightest are fleeing a
state with an absolutely reprehensible record of caring for and protecting
already born children when it comes time to start families of their own?

 

And while some may object to the source, I think this timely article does a
great job of covering the current situation with the so-called "parental
rights" bill:

Idaho
<http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/2/22/idahos-faith-healing-debate
-pits-child-welfare-against-parental-rights.html> 's faith-healing debate
pits child welfare against parental rights

 

Idaho's faith-healing debate pits child welfare against parental rights

 

Followers of Christ prohibits members, including sick children, from seeking
medical attention

 

February 22, 2015 5:00AM ET

by Leah Sottile   @Leah_Sottile



 

Linda Martin, a former member of the Followers of Christ Church, has worked
to lift exemptions for faith healing in Idaho's child injury laws.AP2014

 

CALDWELL, Idaho - In the heart of the Northwest, there is Idaho. And in the
heart of Idaho, there is God. And God, residents believe, blesses some and
takes others away early.

 

Like Neil Jacob Randolph, a 3-year-old buried in Peaceful Valley Cemetery in
Caldwell in 1982. "Sleep on sweet Neil - and take thy rest," his headstone
reads. "God called thee home. He thought it best."

 

In another row are the graves of four infants marked with identical
headstones on which "Infant Bailey" is hand-scrawled in capital letters -
pressed into wet cement decades ago.

 

Many of the nearly 600 people buried here were Followers of Christ - a
Christian sect that believes in faith healing and does not allow members -
including sick children - to see doctors or use modern medicine. The
Pentecostal religion, founded in the 1930s, has long had a presence in
Western states. Former members say the church has become increasingly
secretive about its beliefs and population after years of negative attention
for deaths related to spiritual healing.

 

Several of the children buried here at Peaceful Valley Cemetery died from
preventable ailments like pneumonia and food poisoning. And 70 percent of
these children died after 1972, when religious exemptions protecting faith
healers from charges of neglect, abuse and murder were enacted in Idaho and
around the country. If a child dies or is abused in Idaho, law states that a
parent can't be found guilty if they believe in spiritual healing.

 

"The practice of a parent or guardian who chooses for his child treatment by
prayer or spiritual means alone shall not for that reason alone be construed
to have violated the duty of care to such child," the law reads.

 

But today, some people wonder how many of the dead children here could have
been saved. Idaho is one of only six U.S. states that allow religious
exemption for negligent homicide, manslaughter or capital murder. While some
have called for the Gem State's law to be revised, efforts have gained
little traction. A bill introduced last year was swiftly nixed by Idaho's
House speaker, and lawmakers say they haven't heard of any bills coming
forward in this year's session. And this week, the House State Affairs
Committee passed a bill - despite emotional testimony - that recognizes that
Idaho parents and guardians "have a fundamental right to make decisions
concerning the care, custody, education and control of their children." Many
expressed concern that this was just another covert protection for faith
healers

 

Efforts to discuss Idaho's laws by Children's Healthcare Is a Legal Duty
(CHILD), a national organization working to protect children, have been met
coolly by the Idaho Governor's Task Force on Children at Risk. "The governor
has indicated that he will not take a position on this legislation, and
therefore the task force will not be taking a position," its chairman wrote
in an email last fall to CHILD. "Individuals may act independently as they
desire."

 

Idaho is bucking the legal trend around the country, particularly in
Northwestern states, where religious shield laws are quickly falling away.
Oregon removed its laws in 2011 and has seen convictions of faith healers in
recent months. Earlier this month, Washington took steps to revamp its law
by passing a bill unanimously through committee that would remove references
to faith-based exemptions regarding criminal mistreatment of children and
vulnerable adults. Supporters of reform testified that Washington's current
law creates "confusion that results in harm to children."

 

But in deeply religious Idaho, debate over faith-based protections raises
questions about how far religious freedom extends, what rights children are
born with and whether government can tell people how to parent.

 

Many believe religious exemption laws legalize child abuse.

 

"You can't beat a child," said Linda Martin, a former Follower of Christ
working to see Idaho's laws repealed. She said she could no longer sit back
and watch Idaho children die in the name of God. "To sit there and do
absolutely nothing for a child except pray for them and watch them suffer?
That's just inhumane."

 

"You're dealing with an 1800s mentality in the 2000s. And there's just no
reasoning with it," she added.

 

But Rep. Christy Perry (R-Nampa) said the law, as it stands, represents the
constituents of her district, Canyon County, where Peaceful Valley Cemetery
sits. "They have a clear understanding of what the role of government should
be," she said. "[It] isn't how to tell me how to live my life."

 

And perhaps, she said, Followers of Christ are more comfortable confronting
death. "Children do die," Perry said. "And I'm not trying to sound callous,
but [people calling for reform] want to act as if death is an anomaly. But
it's not. It's a way of life."

 

With Perry's help, Al Jazeera America reached out to two groups associated
with faith healing as well as one family, but all declined to speak
publicly.

 

For the past two years, Martin, 60, who left the Boise Followers of Christ
when she was 16, has chased down Idaho legislators in the Capitol hallways.
She has told them stories of the stillborn babies she saw as a child, the
funerals she attended, the birth defects that caused her to recently go on
disability.

 

She tells them about her nephew Steven, born with spina bifida and paralyzed
from the waist down. He was never allowed a wheelchair. "He had to drag
himself on the floor with his fingers," she said. "He was given nothing for
pain. This child suffered every day of his life until he died when he was
almost 3."

 

Debate over faith-healing believers like the Followers of Christ is part of
one of the longest-running conversations in America, said Charles Haynes,
director of the Religious Freedom Center of the Newseum Institute and a
senior scholar at the First Amendment Center.

 

"We've made a commitment as a country to protect the rights of people to
follow their God as far as possible," he said. "The question has always been
in the United States, How far is that? How far is the line? The struggle is
to determine [where] the government has the right to draw the line."

 

Haynes points to the 1878 Supreme Court case Reynolds v. United States, in
which the court struck down polygamy. "That was sort of one of the great
moments of line drawing. Yes, everyone has the right to believe what they
want to believe, and that right is absolute. But the right to act on one's
religious beliefs is not absolute."

 

"I don't think that there's any room under the law for endangering the life
of a child. Or under the First Amendment," he added. "These laws are not
supposed to extend that far."

 

Martin said she's not attacking religious freedom, but lawmakers can't seem
to get past that. One senator, she said, told her, "'You've said parental
rights and religious freedom - none of us are going to jump in front that
bus.'"

 

University of Idaho law professor Shaakirrah Sanders raises an eyebrow at
Idaho's faith-healer protections.

 

"A lot of the language is a little broad and a little vague," Sanders said.
"That's exacerbated by the fact that Idaho has declined to really prosecute
anyone."

 

Perry said her inbox has been flooded with emails from people who want to
see Idaho's faith-healing laws repealed. But most of them are from out of
state, she said.

 

"As you move out West, we tend to be much more independent people, and Idaho
is a lot like that," she said, adding that the independent streak is
probably stronger in certain parts of the state, like Canyon County.

 

"They do not look to the government to help them at all," said Perry,
speaking about Followers of Christ. "They're very self-sufficient and know
how to take care of themselves. In Canyon County, people hunt to feed their
families. They fish. They grow their own food."

 

Faith healers, she said, are not uncaring parents. They simply trust God
above doctors and have faith that God will do what's right.

 

"They are comforted by the fact that they know their child is in heaven,"
Perry said. "If I want to let my child be with God, why is that wrong?"

 

Furthermore, she said, she's unsure of the motives of those who want to see
faith-healing protections removed.

 

"Is it really because these children are dying more so than other children?
Or is this really about an attack on a religion you don't agree with?"

 

For Martin, it is simply an issue of child welfare.

 

"What Idaho is doing is they're opening their doors and they're welcoming
these people in as the other states strengthen their laws," she said.

 

 

 

Saundra Lund

Moscow, ID

 

It's a matter of taking the side of the weak against the strong, something
the best people have always done.

~ Harriet Beecher Stowe

 

 

 

 

 

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