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Plan to Alter Rules on Sex Education Stirs Furor

Schools: Bill would require medical accuracy of all data taught. Conservatives see it as attack on abstinence.

California and the West

June 02, 1999|AMY PYLE, TIMES STAFF WRITER

SACRAMENTO — It seemed like such a simple approach to sex education: Tell the truth, the whole truth.

But Assemblyman Jim Cunneen (R-San Jose) has learned the hard way that in the emotional debate over what teenagers should be taught about sex and by whom, that was the equivalent of throwing down the gauntlet.


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As the moderate Republican's AB 246 heads for the Assembly floor this week--perhaps as early as today--his office is awash in calls and letters from conservative groups that view the bill as a direct attack on abstinence-only instruction.

In this state, school districts may choose whether to offer sex education--about 87% do--and the state Education Code requires only that abstinence be emphasized. Thanks to legislation passed last year, parents can hold their children out of sex education.

Cunneen's bill would add the requirement that all information presented be medically accurate.

What would be wiped out are tactics in some abstinence-only curricula intended to scare teenagers into abstinence. One such lesson suggests that people may be able to get AIDS from tears, another that condoms fail to prevent nearly a third of HIV infections.

The fact that the bill was the brainchild of Planned Parenthood fuels conservatives' furor.

Under the headline: "NEW BILL ATTACKS ABSTINENCE," the Capitol Resource Institute urged people to act.

"The result would be that abstinence education would be labeled inaccurate and banned from public schools statewide," the Sacramento-based, Christian-oriented group's February newsletter reported.

And the California Right to Life Education Fund further alleged, in a letter to Cunneen, that Planned Parenthood has financial motivations because, they said, teenage contraceptive use is on the decline.

Planned Parenthood officials report that the allegation is wrong, saying teenage pregnancy is down because contraceptive use is up. "If Planned Parenthood has any kind of incentive in doing this it's because our whole mission is about prevention," said Nancy Sasaki, president of the Los Angeles chapter.

Cunneen says he favors abstinence but is pushing for accurate success and failure rates of the full spectrum of contraceptive methods to be covered.

"It's a truthful health statement that abstinence is the only 100% effective method to prevent pregnancy," he said. "Conservatives should consider this [bill] an improvement."

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