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Tennessee Governor May Fund
Charity if Choose Life Plate Voided
Nashville, TN (May 27, 2004)—As an ACLU lawsuit threatens to cut
off $20 million in funding to non-profit organizations in Tennessee,
Governor Phil Bredesen proposed Tuesday that tax dollars be used to
temporarily fund those charities if the state specialty plate system is
declared unconstitutional.
That means New Life Resources, a pregnancy center, could receive the funds
it would have generated from sales of the Choose Life plates.
In an attempt to halt the sales of Choose Life license plates, the ACLU
filed a lawsuit that claims the current specialty plate system in Tennessee
is unconstitutional, saying it allows the legislature to take sides on
issues.
Bredesen announced a proposed law at a subcommittee meeting where the panel
shot down legislation that sought to avoid the lawsuit by removing the
legislature from the process.
The legislation had been proposed by Rep. Jamie Hagood (R-Knoxville) and
Sen. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) would have granted a plate to any organization
that could meet minimum requirements and gather signatures of 1,000 people
who pledge to purchase the new plates at $35 each.
The bill was modeled after similar laws in Maryland and Virginia, which have
been upheld by the courts as constitutional. It could be an alternative to
allow Choose Life plates to get on the roads in Tennessee.
The ACLU lawsuit has upset numerous nonprofit groups in the state whose
plates, and the donations they generate, are possibly in jeopardy.
One of those organizations, the Tennessee Arts Commission, receives about
$3.3 million annually from specialty plates, which accounts for
three-quarters of its grant budget – money used to fund arts programs
statewide.
"It would be devastating to the non-profit arts community in Tennessee,"
Rich Boyd, executive director of the Arts Commission told LifeNews.com. Boyd
added that his organization appreciates the funding from the plates, as "no
one makes anyone buy a plate," unlike state sales, income, or property
taxes.
Other groups don't appreciate the pro-abortion lawsuit either.
"It is a shame they chose to include the entire system when they have an
issue with one plate," added Jim Hart, executive director of Friends of
Great Smokey Mountains National Park, an organization that could lose as
much as $600,000 in annual funding. "[The lawsuit] punishes several
organizations that benefit from the program."
In Arizona, the Arizona Life Coalition filed a lawsuit stating that their
free-speech rights had been violated by the state's refusal to grant them a
"Choose Life" plate, the Arizona Attorney General recommended dismissal of
the suit as there is no guarantee of a right to freedom of speech on a
license plate.
Nevertheless, the ACLU is confident that they will prevail in their suit
over the Tennessee Choose Life plates, which also alleges that the First
Amendment rights on license plates were violated.
A lawsuit similar to that of the ACLU in Tennessee was considered by
pro-abortion advocates in Louisiana, after the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals said the Louisiana "Choose Life" plates did not discriminate against
pro-abortion groups.
Simon Heller, a lawyer with the pro-abortion Center for Reproductive Rights
based in New York, said the plates shouldn't be issued or the whole plate
system should be changed. "Either broaden the forum or close the forum
down,'' Heller said.
Russ Amerling, who led the fight to pass the first Choose Life plate issued
in Florida told LifeNews.com that if the entire plate system was to be
eliminated, abortion advocates will have alienated a large percentage of
state residents who also have other plates on their vehicles.
Ten states currently have plates on residents’ cars: Florida, Alabama,
Mississippi, Oklahoma, Hawaii, Arkansas, Connecticut, Maryland, and
Louisiana, and Montana.
Tennessee and South Carolina have approved "Choose Life" plates, but have
not yet made them available to motorists.
According to Amerling, the plates have generated approximately 2.3 million
dollars nationwide to abortion alternatives, such as adoption and crisis
pregnancy centers. Florida's "Choose Life" plates have generated 2 million
of that revenue, and according to the FL DMV, the "Choose Life" plates were
the #9 top selling specialty plates among 89 in that state in the past 12
months.
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