HRC Releases Latest Corporate Equality Index

HRC Releases Latest Corporate Equality Index

The Human Rights Campaign just released the 2016 edition of its annual Corporate Equality Index, which showcases some of the nation’s most LGBT-inclusive companies, and a record 407 major businesses managed to receive a perfect score of 100 and the title of Best Places to Work for LGBT Equality. 

This year’s CEI is also notable in that it raised the requirements for companies to nail a perfect score by requiring that they have international policies in place that prevent their overseas workers from being discriminated against on the basis of their sexual orientation and gender identity. 

“These employers uphold the tenets of nondiscrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity throughout the many arms of their U.S. and international business practices,” said HRC president Chad Griffin in a statement. 

A total of 851 businesses were ranked in the index, which seeks to quantify the commitment to providing good working environments. The CEI rates companies on policies that help protect LGBT people from discrimination but also ones that offer them partner benefits, resources, and public support.

Among the many big names that earned a perfect score from HRC are Bank of America, Google, Target, IKEA, and Apple, whose gay CEO, Tim Cook, is known for his passionate advocacy in regard to diversity and inclusion.

Some well-known retailers, including Bed Bath & Beyond, Big Lots, Dollar Tree, and Foot Locker, scored poorly on the CEI, failing to provide employees protections from like gender- and sexuality-based discrimination while also failing to offer trans-inclusive health insurance options and resource groups.

Still, this year’s index shows incredible improvement among U.S. corporations, as only 13 businesses earned top marks in 2002, when the first CEI was first compiled, and only 189 businesses as recently 2012.

“We have so much more work left to do,” said Griffin. “But thanks to private sector successes, we have a roadmap to achieve even greater equality across the U.S. and throughout the world.”

View the entire 2016 Corporate Equality Index at the Human Rights Campaign’s website here.

Raffy Ermac

www.advocate.com/business/2015/11/18/hrc-releases-latest-corporate-equality-index

Transgender Employee Sues Wal-Mart

Transgender Employee Sues Wal-Mart
Wal-Mart has a larger collection of lawsuits than men’s suits.

They’ve got wage and hour lawsuits, gender discrimination lawsuits, disability discrimination lawsuits, racial discrimination lawsuits, and age discrimination lawsuits. The giant retailer has a small army of in-house lawyers and hired attorneys who defend the corporation from its own employees.

One of the “risk factors and uncertainties” that Wal-Mart lists in its 2015 annual report is the threat from “the outcome of legal and regulatory proceedings to which we are a party…”

One employee issue that has rankled Wal-Mart for years is its treatment of LGBT workers. In 2011, when Wal-Mart was trying to push its way into Manhattan, the Stonewall Democratic Club of New York City slammed the company for its homophobia:

Wal-Mart represents a culture of intolerance and insensitivity towards LGBT employees and issues that is unwelcome in New York. Just last year more than 100 Wal-Mart stores were found to be promoting a children’s book that suggested that gay people can overcome ‘sin’ and convert to heterosexuality with the help of counseling. Wal-Mart CEO Mike Duke signed a petition in his home state of Arkansas that was aimed at preventing adoption by Gay and Lesbian parents.

A Wal-Mart PR official responded that:

Diversity and inclusion are enduring values that are fundamental to our culture… As part of our internal commitment to inclusion, we have Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Associate Resource Groups aimed at building a sense of community among associates sharing similar backgrounds and interests.

But the group Making Change At Wal-Mart noted in 2011 that Wal-Mart scored 40 out of 100 points on the Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equality Index, “reflecting that Wal-Mart does not prohibit discrimination based upon gender identity, does not provide diversity training covering gender identity or have supportive gender transition guidelines, does not offer at least one transgender-inclusive benefit and does not offer domestic partner health insurance, COBRA, dental, vision, and legal dependent coverage.” Wal-Mart also lost points for opposing a shareholder resolution at its annual meeting in Fayetteville, Arkansas to amend their non-discrimination policies to include gender identity.

In September of 2011, an article in the Windy City Times revealed that Wal-Mart had added transgender protections to its employee non-discrimination policy. The protections include gender identity and gender expression.

A Wal-Mart spokesman was quoted as saying, “We’ve had a strong anti-discrimination policy for a long time,” but the transgender policy had been added “several weeks ago.”

But having a document in a corporate file does not translate into store-level reality. A recent lawsuit in Camden County, New Jersey Superior Court, filed by a transgender Wal-Mart worker, charges that Wal-Mart has engaged in “transgender discrimination” in violation of that state’s Law Against Discrimination (LAD). The plaintiff, Samantha Azzarano, who filed the suit under the name Robert “Samantha” Azzarano, alleges “that she was harassed in the workplace and terminated from employment because of her status as a transgender person.”

Samantha Azzarano is a male to female transgender person who lives in Gloucester City, New Jersey, and worked at a Wal-Mart store in Deptford, New Jersey. The complaint was lodged against Wal-Mart and a member of upper management at the Deptford store. Azzarano, “although born biologically and anatomically male, identifies as a woman, and lives as a woman.”

Azzarano was employed at Wal-Mart from September of 2012 until she was fired right after Christmas of 2014. Wal-Mart knew Azzarano was transgender for a year and a half before she was terminated. About 4 months after she came out to her immediate supervisor, Samantha began “dressing as a female and her name badge changed to ‘Samantha.'” Her Member Services Manager, one of the defendants named in the lawsuit, referred to the plaintiff as “Samantha, Robert… he/she… whatever,” to another employee.

Azzarano asserts that the Services Manager subjected her to verbal abuse, and “on a continuing and regular basis, would raise her voice to and/or yell at the plaintiff.” By the spring of 2014, the Services Manager “began a campaign of write-ups and verbal coachings,” that eventually led to termination. At one meeting, the Services Manager met with Azzarano and another worker and told the plaintiff, “We are always walking on eggshells for you. Now you know how it feels to walk on eggshells for everyone else.”

In another incident a couple of months later, the Services Manager, as she was ending a meeting with Azzarano, said “in a low, but audible volume, ‘That fucking tranny.'” Four months later, Azzarano was fired by the Services Manager directly — even though Azzarano had been transferred to another department and had a different supervisor.

The lawsuit charges that the Services Manager fired Azzarano for her “transgender status,” and subjected her to harassment under New Jersey’s LAD statute. The Manager’s “bias was a determinative and/or motivating factor” in the firing. The harassment was based on “gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, perception of sexual orientation, gender stereotype, and/or plaintiff’s status as a transgender person.” The lawsuit alleges that this harassment “was sufficiently severe or pervasive to render the working environment hostile, intimidating or abusive,” and that Azzarano’s termination was “willful, malicious, egregious and/or undertaken with reckless disregard” for Azzarano’s rights.

Azzarono is asking for a trial by jury, and for reinstatement to her job at Wal-Mart, along with “equitable back pay and front pay… all lost wages, benefits, fringe benefits and other remuneration…” Azzarano’s lawyer, Kevin M. Costello of Mount Laurel, New Jersey, told ThinkProgress that the Manager’s use of the word “tranny… kind of put the nail in the coffin. The word ‘tranny’ is not a word that’s acceptable to use to describe a trans person. It’s as unacceptable as a racial epithet to describe a black person.”

New Jersey is one of 19 states and Washington D.C. with anti-discrimination laws that explicitly cover transgender employees. In 2012, the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) ruled that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 protects transgender workers from on-the-job discrimination. In part, the order states that “intentional discrimination against a transgender individual because that person is transgender is, by definition, ‘based on … sex’ and such discrimination … violates” the law.

In 2011, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court’s ruling that a transgender woman who had been fired from her job as a Legislative Editor in the Georgia General Assembly, had been discriminated against. The court ruled: “We conclude that a government agent violates the Equal Protection Clause’s prohibition on sex-based discrimination when he or she fires a transgender or transsexual employee because of his or her gender non-conformity.”

Advocates point out that Congress has still not passed the Employee Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA). According to the U.S. Senate’s Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, “Millions of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (“LGBT”) and heterosexual Americans today face the possibility of being fired from their jobs, refused work, paid less, or otherwise being subjected to employment discrimination because of their actual or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity… The Employment Non-Discrimination Act is intended to address this discrimination and explicitly protect all Americans who are or may be perceived to be lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.” But after 20 years or longer, there is no ENDA in sight.

It could take months, if not years, for Samantha Azzarano to get her day in court against Wal-Mart. Her litigation goes into the pile of pending lawsuits brought by Wal-Mart’s own workers.

But this is how civil rights are won — one brave person at a time.

Al Norman founded Sprawl-Busters in 1993 to help communities fighting big box sprawl. His latest book is Occupy Walmart.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677065/s/4b9c77d3/sc/7/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0Cal0Enorman0Ctransgender0Eemployee0Esues0Ib0I8592840A0Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fgay0Evoices0Gir0FGay0KVoices/story01.htm

Greg Louganis, living with HIV since 1988, offers Charlie Sheen advice and support

Greg Louganis, living with HIV since 1988, offers Charlie Sheen advice and support

Greg Louganis won two gold medals at the 1988 Olympics shortly after being diagnosed HIV positive

This week, actor Charlie Sheen became one of the most famous persons in America living with HIV.

Olympic diving legend Greg Louganis has been doing it for 27 years.

The winner of four Olympic gold medals in diving went public with his HIV status in 1995 upon the release of his autobiography Breaking the Surface. He watched this week as Sheen went public with his status during an interview on The Today Show Tuesday (17 November).

‘This is such a wonderful, teachable moment because we have gotten complacent about HIV-AIDS,’ the 55-year-old Louganis tells Entertainment Tonight.

The HIV-AIDS activist and actor is still involved in US diving as a mentor and says he would love to sit down with Sheen soon.

‘I’m most concerned for him because I suffered from depression and was treated for it,’ he says. ‘Those are issues that can really inhibit your health and well-being. You realize, “Ypu know what? This is just a part of my life and as long as I take care of myself then I can be here for a long time.’

At the time Louganis was diagnosed in 1988, the disease was an almost certain death sentence and it would be eight more years before life-saving drugs became available to the public. Louganis kept his diagnosis secret and went on to compete in his third Olympics coming away with his third and fourth gold medals.

Louganis, who had suffered from depression even before his diagnosis, now uses yoga and meditation to stave off the darkness and has been off of psychiatric medications for 15 years now.

If he does meet with Sheen, Louganis says the first thing he would do is give him a hug and say that ‘I’m here.’

The post Greg Louganis, living with HIV since 1988, offers Charlie Sheen advice and support appeared first on Gay Star News.

Greg Hernandez

www.gaystarnews.com/article/greg-louganis-living-with-hiv-since-1988-offers-charlie-sheen-advice-and-support/

Ellen’s Blond Gardener Billy Reilich Is Now A Dark Brown Bodybuilding Hulk

Ellen’s Blond Gardener Billy Reilich Is Now A Dark Brown Bodybuilding Hulk

We’ve had our eyes on Billy Reilich for some time now. He first came to our attention as Ellen DeGeneres’ frequently-shirtless gardener on her daytime show. She helped him land a blink-and-you-miss-it cameo in the Magic Mike sequel. Of course, as a rite of passage these days, there were also leaked nude selfies. But lately we’ve noticed something very unusual about the mild-mannered young man. He’s slowly evolved into an incredible self-tanned, body-building hulk. Please don’t make him angry!

Scroll down to see Billy’s evolution.

You guys should watch Ellen every day, but today and tomorrow you might see a familiar face if you time in at 4 ? #IcookIclean #ITrimTheHedges

A photo posted by Billy Reilich (@billreilich) on

 

Love is in the air!!! Who is going to be my Valentine today?? A photo posted by Billy Reilich (@billreilich) on

On my Bruce Banner flow, “you wouldn’t like me when I’m HUNGRY” #hulk #smash #ifbb #npc #crab

A photo posted by Billy Reilich (@billreilich) on

Smiling on the inside, I promise. Training at Gold’s in SoCal makes me happy A photo posted by Billy Reilich (@billreilich) on  

So I got a spray tan today…. ??

A photo posted by Billy Reilich (@billreilich) on

Here’s a shot from the competition I did over the weekend! Such a fun time being out on stage!

A photo posted by Billy Reilich (@billreilich) on

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/8Jk7EYgB2u4/ellens-blond-gardener-billy-reilich-is-now-a-dark-brown-bodybuilding-hulk-20151118

Adele Delivers Stirring Tribute to Paris with Performance of ‘Hometown Glory’ – WATCH

Adele Delivers Stirring Tribute to Paris with Performance of ‘Hometown Glory’ – WATCH

adele paris

Performing at New York City’s Radio City Musical Hall last night, Adele delivered a special performance of her song “Hometown Glory” dedicated to the city of Paris and those who lost their lives in Friday night’s terrorist attacks.

As Adele began her performance of the song from her debut album 19, images were projected behind her showing a view outside an airplane window of clouds covering the earth below. Clouds soon gave way to an aerial view of the Eiffel Tower and the beautiful sights of Paris.

The crowd cheered when the Eiffel Tower came into focus and again when Adele sang the lyrics “Shows that we ain’t gonna take it. Shows that we ain’t gonna stand sh[*]t. Shows that we are united.”

The projections were lit up with the French tricolor.

Adele’s famous video for her song “Someone Like You” was shot on the streets of Paris.

Watch Adele’s moving tribute to the city of light, below:

 

The post Adele Delivers Stirring Tribute to Paris with Performance of ‘Hometown Glory’ – WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Sean Mandell

Adele Delivers Stirring Tribute to Paris with Performance of ‘Hometown Glory’ – WATCH

Words Of Wisdom From Mr. Rogers For All Of Us After The Paris Tragedy

Words Of Wisdom From Mr. Rogers For All Of Us After The Paris Tragedy

It’s in times of great catastrophe and heartbreak that we need our friends the most. So in the wake of the attacks on Paris and violence in many other parts of the world, we’re turning to our favorite neighbor, Mr. Fred Rogers, for a bit of advice. 

“My mother used to say, a long time ago, whenever there would be any… catastrophe that was in the movies or on the air, she would say, ‘Always look for the helpers. There will always be helpers. Even just on the sidelines,'” Rogers said in an interview with the Archive of American Television. “Because if you look for the helpers, you’ll know that there’s hope.”

Rogers’ timeless words were meant to help parents who are struggling to explain tragic events to their children. But they’ve also been a source of comfort for adults, often resurfacing on social media during atrocities, such as the Boston Marathon bombing, as a reminder that there will always be good people in the world who are willing to risk their own lives to help.  

The “helpers” weren’t hard to find in Paris — from the man who pulled a pregnant woman to safety, to the concertgoers and restaurant workers who dragged injured victims away from the scene. Daniel Psenny, the LeMonde journalist who captured the dramatic footage of people fleeing the Bataclan, eventually turned off his camera and rushed outside to help. He was shot in the arm, but managed to pull a victim inside his building. 

Another journalist, Sylvain Lapoix, created a hashtag that told stranded Parisians where they could find safe lodging. 

And in the days after the attack, we saw Parisians waiting in long lines to donate blood. Others rallied to express their support for French Muslims, who still fear an uptick in misguided, anti-Muslim acts.

According to Yale psychologist David Rand, the altruistic instinct that emerges in times of tragedy may actually be built into human nature. In lab experiments, he found that the less time people had to think, the more they were willing to be kind and generous.

“When forced to make rapid, intuitive decisions, we tend to act the most selflessly,” he told the BBC. “Our default is to cooperate.”

Check out the video for Mr. Rogers’ words of wisdom on how to find hope in the middle of tragedy.

Also on HuffPost:

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.



feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677065/s/4b9c1e6f/sc/38/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0C20A150C110C180Cwords0Eof0Ewisdom0Efrom0Emr0Erogers0Efor0Eall0Eof0Eus0Eafter0Ethe0Eparis0Etragedy0In0I85924360Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fgay0Evoices0Gir0FGay0KVoices/story01.htm

The Hidden History of Gay Purges at Colleges

The Hidden History of Gay Purges at Colleges

Screen Shot 2015-11-18 at 10.44.57 AMFor many people, graduating high school and going away to college presents a first opportunity to come out in a nurturing environment, but there is a largely unknown history of being gay on college campuses that mirrors America’s mistreatment of LGBTQ people over the decades.

Related: College Guy Realizes His Best Friend Might Be His Boyfriend In The Most Adorable Way Possible

A new research paper sheds light on a particularly bad time to be queer on campus — in the 1940s, when schools purged students and faculty they believed to be gay.

The paper, titled An Indelible Mark”: Gay Purges in Higher Education in the 1940s, details incidents at the University of Texas, the University of Wisconsin and the University of Missouri, where students and teachers’ personal lives were turned upside-down for suspected “homosexual activity.”

At two of the schools — Wisconsin and Missouri — special committees were formed to track expelled people’s future endeavors to ensure they didn’t find success elsewhere.

Related: You’ve Heard Of Stonewall, But How About These Four Other LGBT National Landmarks?

“In LGBT history, very little attention is paid to anything before the Stonewall riots in 1969,” said Margaret Nash, an associate professor at UC Riverside’s Graduate School of Education and a co-author of the paper. “When people do take note they say, ‘Oh, that’s part of McCarthyism.’ But, in these cases, it wasn’t. These cases preceded McCarthyism. Who knew?”

Below are some details about the three cases the paper focuses on. (The authors used pseudonyms for some people named in the paper to protect their privacy and the privacy of their families.)

In 1944, the Texas Regents dismissed University of Texas President Homer Rainey. Rainey had previously been the subject of controversy for opposing to fire faculty for their political views and opposing to censor literature. To further bolster the case against him, the Regents contended he had not taken swift or severe enough action against gays on campus.

In 1948, four University of Wisconsin students pleaded guilty to engaging in homosexual activities and were given one year’s probation and a warning from the judge that they had caused an “indelible mark” to be placed against them. Two years later, one of those students, “Keith Pritchett,” who was about to graduate at the time he was given probation, asked the university to grant his degree. The World War II veteran expected to be called back to active duty because of the Korean conflict and wanted the degree so he could be promoted. Despite positive recommendations from military officials, the university denied his request.

Also in 1948, a tenured journalism professor who had worked at the University of Missouri for 24 years was dismissed for being the principal leader of a purported ring that was said to include homosexual students, faculty and community members. “Richard Jackson,” a student at the university, was one of the students administrators said was part of the homosexual ring. A group called the Committee on Discipline expelled Jackson in 1949 despite clearly saying they did not have any solid evidence that Jackson was homosexual or had engaged in homosexual acts. Instead, they said Jackson’s unacceptable actions were that “he associated frequently if not exclusively with homosexuals and persons believed to be homosexuals, and attended their ‘gay’ parties.”

Nash plans to take the research further by examining purges in more recent years, and how the universities’ antigay policies informed one another.

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/W1cVGGnLTwM/the-hidden-history-of-gay-purges-at-colleges-20151118