Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania regulatory health boards condemn conversion therapy
All five relevant state regulatory boards in Pennsylvania have approved a policy opposing conversion therapy for minors and warning the professionals they license that they may be disciplined for violating it.
The state Board of Nursing Thursday joined the boards of Medicine, Psychology, Osteopathic Medicine, and Social Workers, Marriage and Family Therapists, and Professional Counselors, which all voted recently to adopt new statements of policy saying minors should not be subjected to the discredited and harmful practice. Conversion therapy seeks to turn LGBTQ+ people straight and/or cisgender.
“This decisive action makes clear that there is no place for the harmful, dangerous practice of conversion therapy here in our Commonwealth,” Gov. Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, said in a press release. “We value real freedom here in Pennsylvania — and no matter what you look like, where you come from, who you pray to, or who you love, you should be able to express who you are and be free from harassment and discrimination. My Administration will continue working to make sure that everyone is protected, feels welcome, and can thrive in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.”
The new policies notify licensees that all five boards consider the use of conversion therapy to be unprofessional, harmful conduct and that any licensee engaging in it may be subject to administrative discipline.
“Since hateful rhetoric and pseudoscience still dominate the clinical experiences of many LGBTQ+ Pennsylvanians, knowing that our state oversight boards saw fit to pass these protections is a small weight off of our shoulders,” Ashleigh Strange, executive director of the Governor’s Advisory Commission on LGBTQ+ Affairs, said in the release. “This is a solid step toward letting folks know that identifying as LGBTQ+ is not a disease or a crime in Pennsylvania. You have a safe place here.”
The Trevor Project, which assists LGBTQ+ young people in crisis, including those considering suicide, told state boards this year that conversion therapy remains an issue in Pennsylvania despite an August 2022 executive order from then-Gov. Tom Wolf aimed at discouraging the practice. Legislators have attempted to pass bills outlawing use of conversion therapy on minors, but those bills have all stalled.
Troy Stevenson, director of state advocacy campaigns at the Trevor Project, issued a statement praising Pennsylvania’s action. “The Trevor Project’s research found that young people who reported undergoing conversion therapy were more than twice as likely to report having attempted suicide in the past year,” he said. “Knowing that an estimated 44 percent of LGBTQ+ youth, including 54 percent of transgender and nonbinary youth, in Pennsylvania seriously considered suicide in the past year, these actions are especially critical for ensuring the health and safety of young people across the state. We are grateful to the Shapiro administration, the Pennsylvania Commission on LGBTQ Affairs, the National Association of Social Workers Pennsylvania Chapter, the Pennsylvania Psychological Association, PFLAG, National Center for Lesbian Rights, the Human Rights Campaign, and mental health professionals and advocates across the commonwealth, for their work over the last several years to protect the mental health and well-being of young people across the commonwealth.”
Twenty-two states and the District of Columbia have banned the use of conversion therapy on minors, according to the Movement Advancement Project. Five other states and Puerto Rico have taken actions that amount to a partial ban. Numerous cities and counties have enacted bans as well.
The American Medical Association, American Psychiatric Association, American Psychological Association, and many other professional groups have repudiated the practice due to lack of scientific evidence supporting it and the risk of harm it poses to minors.
Pennsylvania
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Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania woman charged with torching Surf City home
Asbury Park Press is your source for breaking news at the Jersey Shore
The Asbury Park Press is your source for breaking news around the Jersey Shore. Visit APP.com for all the latest news on Monmouth and Ocean County.
TOMS RIVER – An Ocean County grand jury has charged a Pennsylvania woman with aggravated arson, accusing her of deliberately setting a fire in Surf City that injured a firefighter, Ocean County Prosecutor Bradley D. Billhimer said.
In addition to aggravated arson, the indictment the grand jury handed up on Jan. 28 also charges the defendant, Juliette Tournier, 30, of Horsham, Pennsylvania, with eluding Ship Bottom police, Billhimer said.
The incidents contained in the indictment both took place on Feb. 19, 2025, according to a news release issued by Billhimer.
About 8:40 p.m. that day, Surf City police and firefighters were dispatched to a fire at a house on North Central Avenue, the release said.
During efforts to extinguish the blaze, a firefighter suffered injuries for which he was transported to Southern Ocean Medical Center in Stafford Township, the news release said.
The firefighter was treated for his injuries at the medical center and subsequently released.
An investigation of the fire by the arson squad of the prosecutor’s major crimes unit, the Ocean County Sheriff’s crime scene investigation unit, Surf City police and the Ocean County Fire Marshal’s Office revealed two separate areas of origin of the fire – one upstairs and one downstairs. Detectives determined the fires at both locations were incendiary, started by someone introducing an open flame to ignitable liquids, the news release said.
As the fire was under investigation, detectives learned that Ship Bottom police tried to stop a vehicle about 8:20 p.m. the same day on westbound Route 72. The driver of that vehicle, a Honda HRV, initially pulled over in an unsafe location and was asked to drive over the bridge and pull over in a safe area, according to the news release. When the officer attempted to safely stop the vehicle up the road, the vehicle sped off, the release said. The police officer ended the pursuit of the vehicle for safety reasons.
Subsequent investigation revealed the license plate on the fleeing vehicle had been stolen from a similar Honda in Cherry Hill, according to the news release.
Tournier was identified as the person who allegedly stole that license plate, the release said. She was charged on Feb. 20, 2025, with eluding police and receiving stolen property, and a warrant was issued for her arrest.
The continuing investigation revealed she set the fires at the Surf City residence, the prosecutor alleged. Police charged her with aggravated arson on Feb. 25, 2025, and she surrendered herself to Surf City police the following day.
Tournier was taken to the Ocean County Jail in Toms River, but subsequently released under bail reform to await trial.
Senior Assistant Ocean County Prosecutor Kate Burke presented the case to the grand jury.
Kathleen Hopkins, a reporter in New Jersey since 1985, covers crime, court cases, legal issues and just about every major murder trial to hit Monmouth and Ocean counties. Contact her at khopkins@app.com.
Pennsylvania
Explosion at metal fabricating plant leaves at least 4 people injured in Pennsylvania
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An explosion was reported at a metal fabricating plant on Thursday night in Pennsylvania, according to officials.
At least four people were transported to the hospital with injuries in connection with the incident at the Langeloth Metallurgical Company facility on Langeloth Road in Smith Township in Washington County, WTAE reported.
A hazardous materials team was called to the facility following the explosion.
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An explosion was reported at a metal fabricating plant in Pennsylvania. (KDKA)
The incident was reported at about 6:15 p.m., according to the outlet.
“Apparently, they were transferring some kind of chemical from a tanker to a stationary tank, and something went wrong and something exploded,” Smith Township Fire Chief Brandon Kriznik said, according to WTAE.
At least four people were transported to the hospital with injuries in connection with the incident at the Langeloth Metallurgical Company facility. (KDKA)
Washington County officials issued a shelter-in-place notice for the Langeloth neighborhood over concerns about a potential release of hydrogen peroxide into the air, although the notice has since been lifted.
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The incident was reported at about 6:15 p.m. (Larry Thomas via Storyful)
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The county has notified the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, which local emergency management officials said is standard procedure in a chemical incident.
“Everything’s good. There was nothing released that can harm anybody, and everybody can rest tonight knowing that everything’s good here,” Kriznik said.
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