Senate Bill 129 would allow individuals and businesses to use their religious beliefs as an excuse to discriminate against others and refuse service.
The studies examine economic fall-out in other states that have implemented similar legislation and two polls (conducted by Meetings & Conventions and Successful Meetings), which found that about 45 percent of polled convention planners would cancel an event in a city where a law was passed that many of their attendees found offensive.
Katie Kirkpatrick, the chief policy officer for the Metro Atlanta Chamber, said:
We want to send the message that Georgia is a welcoming state. It’s good for economic development, which is good for jobs, which is good for Georgia families. This study … allows all of us to go into the upcoming legislative session with eyes wide open as to what the potential economic risks are if Georgia doesn’t get this right.
The potential economic losses cited in the study are staggering. According to Tom Cunningham, the chief economist for the Metro Atlanta Chamber and author of the study:
- The state would suffer at least $600 million in convention and business travel losses,
- Atlanta would lose 2.5 million hotel-room bookings over the next four years,
- And Georgia stockholders could lose an average of 4 percent on investments in companies targeted for consumer boycotts.
All told, the tourism industry is projected to be hardest hit by backlash to discriminatory Senate Bill 129 should it pass. Up to 4,000 jobs are expected to be slashed resulting in $450 million in lost direct spending per year and $400 million in lost business sales.
According to House Speaker David Ralston (R-Blue Ridge) legislators are taking these new studies seriously:
This evidence is important and relevant. This is a serious policy debate that can have far-reaching implications for hardworking Georgians in every corner of this state and will be treated as such.
Both the Metro Atlanta Chamber and the Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau have come out in opposition to the proposed legislation. A similar bill was introduced last year but stalled in committee in the wake of national criticism from business behemoths of a similar bill that passed in Indiana.
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