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The Fight for Montego Bay Pride Goes On

The Fight for Montego Bay Pride Goes On

Post submitted by HRC Global Senior Manager Taylor N. T. Brown

More than 3,000 LGBTQ community members and allies planned to gather last week in Montego Bay, Jamaica, to celebrate the city’s fifth annual Pride. The theme of this year’s Pride was “Let Love Live.”

But the event, intended to celebrate the lives of LGBTQ people, build connections, advocate for change and demonstrate the resilience and inclusivity of the local community through film screenings, public forums and faith services, never happened — because of the discriminatory actions of Montego Bay Mayor Homer Davis.

In September, Davis spoke out against the planned Pride events, characterizing a scheduled discussion on same-sex marriage as unconstitutional. He also refused to allow the event to take place at the Montego Bay Cultural Centre, asserting it would “disturb the sacredness and purpose of why that building is there.”

Davis’ words reverberated throughout the community, and Montego Bay Pride organizers found that venues would no longer rent to them. Disturbingly, the local police also informed organizers that they could not guarantee their safety at a planned march, forcing Pride organizers to cancel this year’s events.

When HRC learned of these developments, we reached out to Pride organizers, shared news about the dangerous implications of Davis’ actions and, on Sept. 25, sent a letter to the mayor and other officials voicing support for Montego Bay Pride and Jamaicans’ fundamental rights.

Montego Bay Pride has since filed a complaint with the Supreme Court of Jamaica claiming that Davis’ actions were “discriminatory, unconstitutional and ultra vires,” or beyond his jurisdiction. On Oct. 14, the Supreme Court issued an interim order ensuring Montego Bay Pride the right to rent space from the Montego Bay Cultural Centre for Pride.

Davis appealed the decision, and secured a stay of the court order. In a subsequent appeal by Pride organizers to lift the stay, the Court of Appeal sided with the mayor on a technicality.

Despite these setbacks, Montego Bay Pride organizers continue to fight for Pride and ensure their rights to free speech and assembly. HRC joins them in calling on the mayor to uphold their fundamental rights.

These events demonstrate the continuing challenges LGBTQ people in Jamaica face in seeking to exercise their fundamental rights. But they also show the world the remarkable resilience of the LGBTQ community and its allies in Montego Bay.

HRC encourages other allies of Jamaica’s LGBTQ community and those wishing to support Montego Bay Pride organizers to amplify these stories on social media. We must lend our voices to advocates on the ground to let Mayor Davis know that he cannot block LGBTQ Jamaicans from exercising their fundamental rights.

For more information about HRC’s work around the world, visit hrc.org/Global.

www.hrc.org/blog/the-fight-for-montego-bay-pride-goes-on?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: October 21, 2019

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: October 21, 2019

BREAKING: HOLLY SPRINGS BECOMES FOURTH MISSISSIPPI CITY TO ENACT COMPREHENSIVE LGBTQ-INCLUSIVE NON-DISCRIMINATION PROTECTIONS: “Holly Springs has sent a clear message that all people are welcome, and all people should be protected from discrimination and bias-driven crimes in this city,” said Rob Hill (@RCH74), HRC Mississippi state director. “With four cities in Mississippi now having passed LGBTQ-inclusive non-discrimination ordinances, it is clear that Mississippians value inclusion, fairness and equality.” More from HRC.

Holly Springs just became the 4th city in Mississippi to enact comprehensive LGBTQ non-discrimination protections. We’re grateful to Mayor Kelvin Buck & the Board of Aldermen for enacting these protections & to all the activists who made this win possible. t.co/d3UrinBwxL

— Alphonso David (@AlphonsoDavid) October 19, 2019

MUST WATCH MONDAY — REMEMBERING THE 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE MATTHEW SHEPARD AND JAMES BYRD JR. HATE CRIMES PREVENTION ACT: Cynthia Deitle (@cynthiamdeitle) of the Matthew Shepard Foundation (@MattShepardFDN) read a powerful letter from Dennis & Judy Shepard (@WyoJudyShepard) to Attorney General William Barr. Their son, Matthew, was attacked in an anti-LGBTQ hate crime and died days later. Watch the powerful video here

“Either you believe in equality for all or you don’t.”

Judy and Dennis Shepard, the parents of Matthew Shepard, had strong words for Attorney General William Barr following the Department of Justice’s long string of anti-LGBTQ stances under the Trump-Pence administration. pic.twitter.com/nATd0fsEt0

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) October 19, 2019

TEXAS HOUSE LGBTQ CAUCUS HOLDS FIRST-EVER MEETING: More from KTSM.

MEET RAYCEEN PENDARVIS (@RayceenHRH) — BELOVED DC ACTIVIST AND MOTHER TO DC’S TRANS COMMUNITY: More from The Washingtonian and Tagg Magazine

Each month, @HRC is honored to host @AskRayceen, a live variety program which serves as a safe space for LGBTQ people. Thank you @RayceenHRH for creating a welcoming and unifying space.t.co/wuFZC8XYId

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) October 18, 2019

MORNING MUST READ — “CELEBRATE YOUR KID’S TRANSITION. DON’T GRIEVE IT”: Meredith Talusan (@1demerith) writes beautifully for The New York Times about her own transition, pushing back against the concept of “mourning” when a trans person bravely comes out to live their truth. More from NYT.

ATLANTA MAYOR’S OFFICE LAUNCHES LGBTQ RESOURCE HUB: More from Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

GLOBAL EQUALITY NEWS

HONG KONG COURT UPHOLDS BAN ON MARRIAGE EQUALITY AND CIVIL UNIONS: More from Reuters.

HRC ATTENDS PRIDE CONNECTION MX SUMMIT IN MEXICO CITY: More from HRC

.@HRC is proud to attend the @P_ConnectionMX Summit in Mexico to learn from business leaders working for LGBTQ diversity & inclusion.

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HRC se enorgullece de asistir a la #PCMsummit 2019 en México para escuchar a líderes trabajando por la diversidad e inclusión LGBT. pic.twitter.com/PwIQqrYRTM

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) October 19, 2019

HRC IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE 2020 GLOBAL INNOVATIVE ADVOCACY SUMMIT: Advocates can apply until Nov. 15 to participate in the April 2020 summit. More from HRC.

READING RAINBOW – Bookmark now to read on your lunch break!

Glassdoor offers resources for employees who come out as transgender; Out Magazine reflects on the historic same-sex kiss on Dawson’s Creek

Have news? Send us your news and tips at [email protected]. Click here to subscribe to #AM_Equality and follow @HRC for all the latest news. Thanks for reading!

www.hrc.org/blog/am-equality-tipsheet-october-21-2019?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

BREAKING: Fourth Mississippi City Enacts LGBTQ-Inclusive Non-Discrimination Protections

BREAKING: Fourth Mississippi City Enacts LGBTQ-Inclusive Non-Discrimination Protections

HRC hailed Holly Springs Mayor Kelvin Buck and the Board of Aldermen for enacting city-wide non-discrimination protections that include sexual orientation and gender identity in housing, public accommodations and employment. These protections will extend to nearly 8,000 residents in the city, nearly 80 percent of whom are Black. Holly Springs is the fourth city in Mississippi to pass a fully inclusive comprehensive non-discrimination ordinance, joining Jackson, Magnolia and Clarksdale.

“Holly Springs has sent a clear message that all people are welcome, and all people should be protected from discrimination and bias-driven crimes in this city,” said Rob Hill, HRC Mississippi state director. “With four cities in Mississippi now having passed LGBTQ-inclusive non-discrimination ordinances, it is clear that Mississippians value inclusion, fairness and equality. We’re grateful to Mayor Kelvin Buck for his leadership on this issue and to the Board of Aldermen for voting in favor of this ordinance.” 

The fully inclusive non-discrimination ordinance (NDO) passed on September 17 and was enacted into law this week. It protects people from discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodations, based on real or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, age, disability, marital status, familial status and veteran status. The new, inclusive provision equips Holly Springs to better address bias-motivated attacks within the city by requiring training for identifying, investigating, and documenting hate crimes. The provision, which includes the same classifications protected under the NDO, also mandates that the city report hate crime statistics to the FBI. 

In 2014, HRC launched Project One America, an initiative geared towards advancing social, institutional and legal equality in Mississippi, Alabama and Arkansas. In 2019, Texas became a Project One America state, in recognition of HRC’s long-term commitment to the state. HRC Mississippi continues to work to advance equality for LGBTQ Mississippians who have no state level protections in housing, workplace, or public accommodations. Through HRC Mississippi, we are working toward a future of fairness every day—changing hearts, minds and laws toward achieving full equality.

www.hrc.org/blog/breaking-fourth-mississippi-city-enacts-lgbtq-inclusive-non-discrimination?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: October 18, 2019

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: October 18, 2019

HRC JOINS ACTIVISTS TESTIFYING IN FAVOR OF D.C.’S COMMUNITY SAFETY AND HEALTH ACT OF 2019: The testimony, offered during a D.C. City Council hearing, was in support of the act, which would eliminate criminal prohibitions and penalties for consensual sex work and establish a task force to recommend further improvements to public safety, health and human rights. The legislation, which maintains the prohibitions on coercion and trafficking, is sponsored by Councilmember David Grosso. More from HRC.

HRC’s Carmarion D. Anderson & Laya Monarez testified today in favor of D.C. legislation that would eliminate criminal prohibitions & penalties for consensual sex work & create a task force to recommend improvements to public safety, health & human rights. t.co/pYm4aKykOm pic.twitter.com/bdnbsqAAM1

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) October 17, 2019

REMEMBERING THE LEGACY OF CIVIL RIGHTS ICON AND CHAMPION FOR EQUALITY REP. ELIJAH CUMMINGS (D-MD): Elijah Cummings was a tireless champion of racial justice and LGBTQ equality in Congress and beyond. It is a profound loss for the city of Baltimore and the entire nation. We honor his enduring legacy to fiercely fight for the most marginalized among us. More from Out Magazine.

TOMORROW — PRODUCER AND ACTOR EUGENE LEE YANG TO RECEIVE VISIBILITY AWARD AT 2019 SAN FRANCISCO GALA: “As an all-star talent and artist, Yang (@EugeneLeeYang) bravely uses his Try Guys channel platform to lift up the LGBTQ community, celebrate Asian American visibility and open hearts and minds across the United States,” said HRC Foundation Senior Vice President Jay Brown. More from HRC.

  • HRC will also honor Levi Strauss & Co. with the Corporate Award and John Lake, Vice President, Multicultural Strategy and LGBTQ Segment leader for Wells Fargo, with the Charles M. Holmes Community Service Award. More from San Francisco Bay Times.

FLASHBACK FRIDAY — CELEBRATING POET WALT WHITMAN FOR LGBTQ HISTORY MONTH: To commemorate his 200th birthday, the Library of Congress, which has the most extensive array of Whitman and Whitman-related collections in the world, held a series of exhibits and public programs to showcase the trove. The Library’s exhibits also touched on Whitman’s relationship with Peter Doyle, an Irish immigrant and streetcar driver, who is believed by many to have been the love of Whitman’s life. More from HRC.

ICYMI — HRC WAS ON CAPITOL HILL TO TALK ABOUT DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION EFFORTS ON HBCU CAMPUSES: More from HRC.

In partnership with the bipartisan @HBCUCaucus and the @LGBTEqCaucus this #HBCUOutLoud Day, @HRC hosted a discussion on the ways Congress can partner with HBCUs to support LGBTQ diversity and inclusion efforts on campuses. t.co/zWzh6yKHEZ pic.twitter.com/ulXcgqHn3N

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) October 16, 2019

TOO OFTEN, TRANSGENDER TRAVELERS FACE NEGATIVE TREATMENT BY TSA: Allison Hope (@bubballie) writes for CNN about the experiences of trans travelers, who report being targeted for pat-downs, bag searches and questions regarding their legal ID due to their gender identity. “For many transgender, nonbinary and gender nonconforming people, going through airport security is a grueling and often humiliating and traumatizing ordeal,” says Shannon Minter (@shannonminter5), legal director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR). More from CNN.

HOW NORTH CAROLINA HOSPITALS ARE AFFIRMING LGBTQ PATIENTS AND EMPLOYEES: They are some of the highest-scoring health care facilities on HRC’s Healthcare Equality Index. More from North Carolina Health News.

GLOBAL EQUALITY NEWS

AUSTRALIAN ANGLICAN CHURCH MEMBERS RALLY FOR ACCEPTANCE OF MARRIAGE EQUALITY AFTER BEING TOLD BY ARCHBISHOP THEY SHOULD LEAVE THE CHURCH: More from The Guardian.

SAME-SEX COUPLE UNABLE TO SECURE IRISH CITIZENSHIP FOR CHILD BORN ABROAD THROUGH IVF: Sinéad Deevy and Kashka Sankowska, had their child in Spain, are facing barriers to registering their child’s citizenship in Spain, as well as their own countries of citizenship. More from Irish Times.

READING RAINBOW – Bookmark now to read on your lunch break!

Hello Beautiful lists 20 iconic looks from non-binary actor and Pose star Indya Moore (@IndyaMoore); HAPPY 50TH ANNIVERSARY to the Washington Blade; OutSports shares Bayard Rustin’s sports legacy for LGBTQ History Month

Have news? Send us your news and tips at [email protected]. Click here to subscribe to #AM_Equality and follow @HRC for all the latest news. Thanks for reading!

www.hrc.org/blog/am-equality-tipsheet-october-18-2019?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

HRC Mourns Brianna “BB” Hill, Black Transgender Woman Killed in Kansas City

HRC Mourns Brianna “BB” Hill, Black Transgender Woman Killed in Kansas City

HRC is deeply saddened to learn of the death of Brianna “BB” Hill, who also spelled her name as Breonna Be’Be Hill, a Black transgender woman who was killed in Kansas City on Monday.

Hill, 30, shot by a man who is currently in custody, was pronounced dead when officers arrived on the scene. Kansas City Police Capt. Tim Hernandez told local press that the alleged shooter remained at the scene until they arrived.

She was a beloved member of her community, a fan of the Kansas City football team and loved spreading joy by sharing funny videos on her Facebook page.

Hill is at least the 21st known transgender or gender non-conforming person killed this year, the majority of whom were Black transgender women. She is at least the 3rd known transgender or gender non-conforming person to be killed in Kansas City this year. Additionally, other transgender and gender non-conforming individuals have died in the last year under suspicious circumstances, including Bubba Walker, Johana ‘Joa’ Medina and Layleen Polanco.

Of the known transgender people killed this year, 14 have died from gun violence. Of the more than 150 known victims of anti-transgender violence from 2013 to present, approximately two-thirds of those killed were victims of gun violence.

In November 2018, ahead of Transgender Day of Remembrance, HRC Foundation released “A National Epidemic: Fatal Anti-Transgender Violence in America in 2018,” a heartbreaking report honoring the trans people killed and detailing the contributing and motivating factors that lead to this tragic violence. 

These victims are not numbers — they were people with hopes and plans, dreams for the future, loved ones and communities who will miss them every day. 

There are currently very few explicit legal protections for transgender or gender-expansive people. While transgender people in Kansas City are explicitly protected across many aspects of daily life, including housing and employment, they are not covered under the state’s hate crimes legislation.  

Despite marginal gains in state and local policies that support and affirm transgender people, recent years have been marked by anti-LGBTQ attacks at all levels of government. We must demand better from our elected officials and reject harmful anti-transgender legislation appearing at the local, state and federal levels because it is clear that fatal violence disproportionately affects transgender women of color. The intersections of racism, transphobia, sexism, biphobia and homophobia conspire to deprive them of necessities to live and thrive.

HRC will continue to hold the Trump administration and all elected officials who fuel the flames of hate accountable at the ballot box.

This epidemic of violence that disproportionately targets transgender people of color — particularly Black transgender women — must cease.

For more information about HRC’s transgender justice work, visit hrc.org/Transgender.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-mourns-brianna-bb-hill-black-transgender-woman-killed-in-kansas-city?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

HRC Joins Activists to Testify in Favor of D.C.’s Community Safety and Health Act

HRC Joins Activists to Testify in Favor of D.C.’s Community Safety and Health Act

Today, HRC staff attended joined local advocates for a D.C. City Council hearing and offered testimony in support of the Community Safety and Health Amendment Act of 2019, legislation that would eliminate criminal prohibitions and penalties for consensual sex work and establish a task force to recommend further improvements to public safety, health and human rights. The legislation, which maintains the prohibitions on coercion and trafficking, is sponsored by Councilmember David Grosso.

Testifying on behalf of HRC was Carmarion D. Anderson, HRC Alabama State Director. Her full testimony as prepared:

Thank you Chairperson Charles Allen and members of the Committee.  My name is Carmarion D. Anderson, and I am a senior staffer with expertise in public health at the Human Rights Campaign currently serving as the Alabama State Director. I am also a Black woman of trans experience. HRC is America’s largest civil rights organization working towards full equality for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer community. On behalf of our more than 3 million members and supporters nationwide, I am honored to provide this testimony in support of the Community Safety and Health Amendment Act of 2019.

The criminalization of consensual sex work poses a serious threat to public health and increases violence in LGBTQ communities. These laws are not motivated by sound public policy goals but by institutionalized shame, a desire to shame people for daring to survive. It is no coincidence that the criminalization of sex work disproportionately punishes the poor, black and brown women, transgender women — particularly those living at the intersection of multiple marginalized identities. The U.S. Trans Survey of 2015 (USTS) found that 12% of transgender respondents engaged in sex work in exchange for income with 9% doing so in the past year, with higher rates among trans women of color. This year alone, at least 20 transgender people have been killed across the United States, all but one black transgender women, with indicators that many were likely engaged in sex work. These alarming statistics underscore the urgent need to decriminalize sex work to bringing these workers out of the shadows and closer to critical services and protections.

Arresting individuals with the expectation that this will eradicate or reduce sex work demonstrates a profound misunderstanding of why people engage in sex work in the first place. People must eat, have shelter, and provide for their basic needs. This is the human condition we all share. Sex work offers a means of survival for those who are cut off from other labor markets. Black and brown transgender women, who frequently face discrimination in multiple areas of life, may turn to transactional sex work as a means of survival. Without creating viable alternatives to sex work and offering services and support, the threat of arrest does not deter sex workers from pursuing underground economies. Arresting sex workers and branding them with shame and the stigma of a criminal record has the effect of making other labor markets even more inaccessible, reinforcing poverty.

Shame exacerbates public health challenges, deterring people from showing up to be tested and learn about prevention of STIs. Criminalization disempowers people from taking control over their health by accessing and adhering to regiments of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) or utilizing Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP).  It also discourages sex workers from carrying condoms since condoms are often considered evidence of sex work. Changing the relationship of sex workers with the law will allow them to secure both their health and the health of their clients while advancing the goal of achieving an AIDS-free generation.

Criminalization, by its nature, creates a target population vulnerable to violence and exploitation by forcing those trading sex to weigh the fear of their own arrest against the need to report victimization. Decriminalization has the potential to foster better relationships with law enforcement across the board and allow sex workers to self advocate when they experience violence while engaged in sex work such as sexual assault or battery. In addition, decriminalization allows people experiencing intimate partner violence to seek safety without fear that their abuser will land them in jail for sex work. Current law encourages clients and intimate partners of sex workers to see the sex workers as criminals which when combined with feelings of self-shame lowers inhibitions to violence.  For those who are trafficked, criminalization contributes to victim distrust of law enforcement, so that victims do not seek out help for fear of arrest or deportation. Eliminating criminal statutes that target consensual sex work allows law enforcement to focus on helping people who are forced into sex work.

Our Nation’s Capital should instead focus on providing tools that will actually change lives. By partnering with organizations that provide sex workers with necessities like stable housing, intimate partner violence survivor services, substance abuse treatment, health care, and job training, DC government has an opportunity to meaningfully reduce survival sex work.

On behalf of the Human Rights Campaign, I urge you to pass the Community Safety and Health Amendment Act of 2019. The decriminalization of sex work allieviates a myriad of problems by helping to reduce the high rate of HIV in the LGBTQ community, increasing the physical and emotional well-being of sex workers, fostering better relations with law enforcement, and decreasing violence and harassment against sex workers who are often afraid to seek police assistance. Thank you for your time and consideration.

Community activist and HRC Operations Coordinator Laya Monarez also submitted testimony. An excerpt is included below:

Incarcerating sex workers makes it difficult for them to find other employment especially with several charges. Oftentimes multiple charges result in sex workers returning to the streets. It also makes it easier for pimps and traffickers to make sex workers afraid of going to authorities for aid. Decriminalizing sex work builds trust between the police and sex workers, which allows them to report violence or instances of trafficking. We need to stop spending police hours and resources on criminalizing and harassing sex workers and focus on the real problem, which is trafficking and violence against sex workers.

More information on the legislation and why it’s important:

The Community Safety and Health Amendment Act of 2019 was drafted in consultation with Sex Worker Advocates Coalition (SWAC), a coalition of public health and civil and human rights organizations, including HIPS, ACLU DC, GLAA, Collective Action for Safe Spaces, National Center for Trans Equality, Whitman Walker Health, Casa Ruby, Best Practices Policy Project, SWOP-USA, Black Youth Project (BYP) 100, Black Lives Matter DMV, No Justice No Pride, D.C. Center for the LGBT Community, Bread for the City, Network for Victims Recovery DC, National Center for Lesbian Rights, Ultraviolet, Center for Health and Gender Equity, and URGE.

Eighty percent of street-based sex workers reported violence, according to one report. Nearly nine in ten transgender people engaging in sex work or suspected of engaging in sex work reported being harassed, attacked, sexually assaulted or mistreated in some other way by police, according to the 2015 U.S. Trans Survey. Out of those who were working in the underground economy at the time they took the survey, nearly 41% were physically attacked in the previous year and over one-third were sexually assaulted in that same time.

In many instances, the criminalization of sex work can exacerbate the epidemic of violence targeting the transgender community, particularly transgender women of color.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-joins-activists-to-testify-in-favor-of-dcs-community-safety-health?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

HRC Announces Producer and Actor Eugene Lee Yang to Receive Visibility Award

HRC Announces Producer and Actor Eugene Lee Yang to Receive Visibility Award

Today, HRC announced that producer, actor and “Try Guys” member Eugene Lee Yang will be the recipient of the HRC Visibility Award at the 35th annual HRC San Francisco Bay Area Gala on Saturday. Yang came out earlier this year in a powerful video, “I’m Gay – Eugene Lee Yang,” which he wrote, directed and choreographed.

“As an all-star talent and artist, Eugene Lee Yang bravely uses his Try Guys channel platform to lift up the LGBTQ community, celebrate Asian American visibility and open hearts and minds across the United States,” said HRC Foundation Senior Vice President Jay Brown. “The bravery and power of his beautiful coming out video not only broke the internet, it also raised more than $100,000 for LGBTQ youth. We are excited to honor Yang with the HRC Visibility Award at the 2019 HRC San Francisco Bay Area Gala.”

Yang is a producer, actor, director, writer and one of today’s most recognizable queer Asian-American performers. His digital work over the past six years as a viral video producer has been viewed billions of times, and he is recognized as one of the world’s most culturally influential YouTube creators. In early 2018, he and the comedy quartet The Try Guys launched their own independent production company, 2nd Try, amassing millions of followers with projects including his official coming out video, which raised over $100,000 for The Trevor Project, the national organization providing crisis intervention and suicide prevention services to LGBTQ youth.

This summer, The Try Guys headlined their 26-city, international Legends of the Internet Tour, in which Yang highlighted LGBTQ+ pride, and published their first book, The Hidden Power of F*cking Up, a #1 New York Times Best Seller. Additionally, Yang created and executive produced BuzzFeed’s inaugural Queer Prom, was included in Logo30 and Gold House’s A100 list in 2018 and is currently in development on various television and film projects. Yang took over HRC’s Twitter last year to speak about the importance of LGBTQ representation in storytelling and the power of the LGBTQ vote.

Alongside Yang, HRC will honor Levi Strauss & Co. with the Corporate Award and John Lake, Vice President, Multicultural Strategy and LGBTQ Segment leader for Wells Fargo, with the Charles M. Holmes Community Service Award. In addition to the honorees, this will be HRC President Alphonso David’s first appearance at the San Francisco Bay Area Gala. American Idol finalist Effie Passero will perform at the event.

Set to take place at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco, the annual event brings together hundreds of HRC’s most active members and supporters in the San Francisco Bay Area to raise crucial funds in the fight for LGBTQ equality. Tickets and further information are available at www.sfhrcgala.org/.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-announces-producer-actor-eugene-lee-yang-to-receive-visibility-award?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

HRC Foundation Launches the First-Ever #HBCUOutLoud Day

HRC Foundation Launches the First-Ever #HBCUOutLoud Day

Today, HRC Foundation announced the first-ever National #HBCUOutLoud Day, providing an important opportunity for everyone who cares about supporting the LGBTQ community and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) to speak up and speak out. As part of #HBCUOutLoud Day, and in cooperation with the bipartisan HBCU Caucus and the Congressional LGBT Equality Caucus, HRC is today hosting a discussion on Capitol Hill exploring the ways Congress can partner with HBCUs to support LGBTQ diversity and inclusion efforts on campuses.

“For decades, HBCUs have been driving forces of social justice movements and equality around the country — however, the stories, experiences and contributions of Black LGBTQ folks can often go unnoticed or under-recognized,” said HRC Foundation HBCU Program Director Leslie Hall. “HRC’s #HBCUOutLoud Day seeks to elevate the visibility, awareness and stories of LGBTQ students, staff and alumni of HBCUs who are challenging norms and stereotypes and pushing to create a more equitable and inclusive society.” 

The HRC Foundation is also on the ground today at Prairie View A&M University (PVAMU) in Texas for the grand opening of the school’s LGBTQ+ Resource Office. The event will include a “Building an Inclusive Campus” workshop at 10 a.m., conducted by HRC Foundation HBCU Program Manager Rishard Butts, and a ribbon-cutting ceremony at noon. The office at PVAMU will be the fifth designated LGBTQ office or center at an HBCU in the U.S. 

Research demonstrates that the landscape for equity and inclusion for LGBTQ students on HBCU campuses is improving, yet many still lack the policies and practices that seek to end discrimination, stigma and bias still experienced by too many. In creating the national #HBCUOutLoud Day, the HRC Foundation is not only raising public awareness about the HBCU LGBTQ community, but also providing easy ways for people to make a make a difference on their campuses and in their wider communities.

The HRC Foundation’s HBCU Program mobilizes and supports HBCUs in enhancing policies and services that promote excellence in LGBTQ inclusion, equity and engagement. The program focuses on promoting individual competencies and collective action, empowering leaders and stakeholders and building a network of committed leaders in pursuit of eliminating stigma and enriching the college experience for LGBTQ students and the entire student body.

HRC’s HBCU Program was founded to support LGBTQ students at HBCUs by providing resources and trainings to advance affirming and supportive college campuses. The program is supported by the Coca-Cola Foundation.

For more information about HRC’s HBCU Project, visit www.hrc.org/hbcu.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-foundation-launches-the-first-ever-hbcuoutloud-day?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: October 18, 2018

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: October 18, 2018

 #TurnOUT — JUST 19 DAYS UNTIL ELECTION DAY:

  • Today: HRC President Chad Griffin (@ChadHGriffin) will join HRC-endorsed and openly bisexual congressional candidate Katie Hill (D) and LGBTQ and Equality Voters in Los Angeles County, CA. Griffin will discuss the critical importance of the race before kicking off a phone bank to turn out the vote to elect Hill to represent California’s 25th congressional district. If you are interested in covering the event, contact [email protected].
  • Mike Pence is on a voter suppression tour this week. He’s stumping alongside Brian Kemp in Georgia, who’s being sued for purging 700K voters from the rolls. Tomorrow, he campaigns in Kansas for Kris Kobach, with whom he led Trump’s discriminatory “Voter Fraud” commission.
  • HRC’s plan to #TurnOUT Equality Voters: HRC’s Equality Votes PAC launched an initial digital and direct mail buy of more than $2 million across three U.S. Senate and five U.S. House races crucial to securing a pro-equality majority in Congress. More from The Associated Press.
  • HRC endorses Minnesota State Rep. Ilhan Omar for U.S. House in Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District: “State Rep. Ilhan Omar is a proven leader who will stand up for Minnesota’s working families in Congress,” said HRC Senior Vice President for Policy and Political Affairs JoDee Winterhof. “In the Minnesota State Legislature, she has worked to advance fairness and equality, and she is the clear choice for Minnesotans.” More from HRC.
  • EXPOSED — Ohio’s slate of anti-equality candidates: With the midterm elections just three weeks away, and early voting already started in Ohio, HRC is exposing six of Ohio’s anti-equality candidates and highlighting their dangerous records undermining LGBTQ equality. More from HRC.

8/8 These abysmal records of supporting discrimination show that these candidates have no business representing Ohioans. Join @HRC & #TurnOUT for:

@SherrodBrown #OHSen
@RichCordray #OHGov
@AftabPureval #OH01
@DannyOConnor1 #OH12
@BetsyRaderOH #OH14
@Rick_Neal #OH15 pic.twitter.com/Vl8svHYKZM

— HRC in Ohio (@HRC_OH) October 17, 2018

PELOSI SAYS EQUALITY ACT WILL BE ‘HIGH PRIORITY’ IF MAJORITY SHIFTS IN THE HOUSE: “Discrimination is a real and persistent problem for far too many LGBTQ Americans, and more than 50 percent of LGBTQ Americans live in states that lack LGBTQ-inclusive statewide protections,” HRC Senior National Press Secretary Stephen Peters (@stephenpeters2) told Washington Blade’s Chris Johnson (@chrisjohnson82). “It’s imperative that Congress end this patchwork of protections by passing the Equality Act.” More from Washington Blade.

THANKFUL THURSDAY — HRC NOMINATED FOR FOUR SHORTY SOCIAL GOOD AWARDS: Check out the nominees, including HRC’s finalist entries for Integrated Marketing, Youth and Family, Immigration and Refugees and Government and Politics here. More from AdWeek.

Get to know our Shorty Social Good Award finalists this year in this @Adweek exclusive: @byAmyCorr t.co/bQghQUf2MV

— Shorty Awards (@shortyawards) October 17, 2018

INSIDE THE FIGHT TO PROTECT TRANS RIGHTS IN MASSACHUSETTS: On Nov. 6, Massachusetts voters will decide the fate of a non-discrimination law that protects transgender people in public spaces. Republican Gov. Charlie Baker signed the non-discrimination bill into law in July 2016, and it went into effect in October 2016. Opponents of equality used anti-transgender tactics and messages to get Question 3, which would repeal these non-discrimination protections, on the ballot this election. Media Matters breaks down how the local media has covered this vote in a new report.

  • Mimi and Joe Lemay are on the frontlines in Massachusetts fighting for their transgender son, Jacob. Read their story from HRC.
  • Tracy McKay is also fighting to protect her two transgender daughters this November. More from Wicked Local Needham.

TODAY IS SPIRIT DAY : Spirit Day highlights the need to speak out against bullying and harassment, which overwhelming impacts LGBTQ youth. HRC and researchers at the University of Connecticut found that:

  • Seventy-seven percent of LGBTQ teenagers surveyed report feeling depressed or down over the past week;
  • Ninety-five percent of LGBTQ youth report trouble sleeping at night;
  • LGBTQ youth of color and transgender teenagers experience unique challenges and elevated stress — only 11 percent of youth of color surveyed believe their racial or ethnic group is regarded positively in the U.S., and over 50 percent of trans and gender expansive youth said they can never use school restrooms that align with their gender identity;
  • More than 70 percent report feelings of worthlessness and hopelessness in the past week;
  • Only 26 percent say they always feel safe in their school classrooms — and just five percent say all of their teachers and school staff are supportive of LGBTQ people;
  • Sixty-seven percent report that they’ve heard family members make negative comments about LGBTQ people

WESTERN DAKOTA TECH IN RAPID CITY, SOUTH DAKOTA, ADDS GENDER IDENTITY TO NON-DISCRIMINATION POLICY: More from Rapid City Journal.

AWFUL — SAN DIEGO CHURCH VANDALIZED WITH ANTI-LGBTQ GRAFFITI: More from NBC San Diego.

GLOBAL EQUALITY NEWS

AFTER STRUGGLING TO ACCEPT GAY SON, UKRAINIAN MOTHER IS NOW ADVOCATE FOR COMMUNITY: More from Reuters.

READING RAINBOW – Bookmark now to read on your lunch break!

Self interviews trans trailblazer Laverne Cox; The Washington Post memorializes an interracial, same-sex couple whose home shows a rich history of DC and the LGBTQ movement; CNN profiles the National Gay Flag Football League; Sonoma State Star reports on a recent talk by Heather Matarazzo at Sonoma State University

Paid for by Human Rights Campaign PAC (www.hrc.org) and not authorized by any candidate or committee.

Have news? Send us your news and tips at [email protected]. Click here to subscribe to #AM_Equality and follow @HRC for all the latest news. Thanks for reading!

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HRC & Pediatrician Groups Release Guide to Supporting Transgender Children

HRC & Pediatrician Groups Release Guide to Supporting Transgender Children

Human Rights Campaign has partnered with the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American College of Osteopathic Pediatricians to release Supporting and Caring for Transgender Children. The new publication explains what it means for a child to be transgender, what experts know about helping transgender kids grow up healthy, and how community members can show support.

Doctors and mental health professionals who work with transgender children shared their expertise for the guide. As the publication explains, these clinicians play a crucial role in the lives of young transgender children: they help families and schools figure out the best ways to support and affirm a child’s evolving gender identity. For older transgender kids, they may also recommend medications that put puberty on hold, temporarily halting changes that can be distressing for the child.

The guide also explains the difference between gender-expansive and transgender children. Many kids stretch our expectations about how boys and girls act—HRC describes these children as “gender-expansive.” For a smaller group of children, the gender that everyone expects them to be feels completely wrong, and living as that gender can be agonizing; these children could be described as transgender.

A recent HRC-commissioned poll found that 35 percent of U.S. likely voters know someone who is transgender. Just 12 percent of that group knew a transgender child or teen, but that number is growing as more families decide to affirm their child’s gender identity. That crucial decision is backed by emerging research: one recent study found that transgender children whose families support them are as psychologically healthy as their non-transgender peers.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), founded in 1830, represents 64,000 pediatricians across the U.S. The American College of Osteopathic Pediatricians (ACOP) represents osteopathic physicians regarding policies and social issues focusing on the health and well-being of all children. Many osteopathic pediatricians work in rural areas, serving families who may live far from a hospital-based gender identity program.

Pediatricians and other healthcare providers are crucial advocates for transgender children. Earlier this year, AAP president Benard Dreyer penned a letter urging his colleagues to support their transgender patients, and a group of pediatric gender experts spoke out against stigmatizing laws and policies in a moving HRC video.

To learn more about HRC’s work to support transgender children and youth, visit www.hrc.org/trans-youth.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-pediatrician-groups-release-guide-to-supporting-transgender-children?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed