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Dozens of CA events this weekend honor Latino Conservation Week; Kamala Harris joins Oprah Winfrey in emotional campaign event; Report finds poor working conditions in Texas clean energy industry; AI puts on a lab coat, heads to technical schools.

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Rising threats of political violence, a Federal Reserve rate cut, crypto industry campaign contributions and reproductive rights are shaping today's political landscape.

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A USDA report shows a widening gap in rural versus urban health, a North Carolina county remains divided over a LGBTQ library display, and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz' policies are spotlighted after his elevation to the Democratic presidential ticket.

ACLU: Indiana Could Lose More Money Over LGBT Issue

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Monday, March 14, 2016   

INDIANAPOLIS – In some areas of Indiana, it's legal for LGBT residents to be married over the weekend and fired from a job for it on Monday.

Attempts by legislators to protect people from such firings have so far failed.

Last year the state passed a religious freedom bill that would have allowed an individual or business to deny service to individuals on religious grounds.

It touched off worldwide criticism, so the governor sent it back to the legislature. Currently, similar legislation is close to winning approval in Missouri.

Sarah Rossi, director of advocacy and policy at the American Civil Liberties Union of Missouri, says Missouri lawmakers learned nothing from Indiana.

"They had all that information and they didn't pay attention and now they're moving Missouri down the same road that Indiana went down, and it will cost everybody a lot of money," she points out.

Rossi says those costs hit the state in a number of ways.

"The 60 million (dollars) in revenue lost in Indiana, the $500,000 that the state of Indiana had to spend on a PR firm to get them out of that mess, the 12 different conventions that Indiana lost," she states.

The Missouri legislation has been approved in the Senate and is likely to win in the House.

Meanwhile, a California lawmaker has introduced a measure that would prohibit state-paid travel to Indiana and Missouri if lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender advocates feel those states allow discrimination.







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