Category Archives: pflag

LGBT Americans Outraged at Delay in Basic Job Rights

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

December 4, 2009
Media Contacts:

Calla Devlin Rongerude
NCLR, Communications Director
415.392.6257 x324, Mobile: 415.205.2420
cdevlin@nclrights.org
Justin Tanis
NCTE, Communications
202.903.0112, Mobile: 505.610.7812
jtanis@nctequality.org
Brad Luna
HRC, Communications Director
202-216-1514, Mobile: 202-812-8140
brad.luna@hrc.org
Inga Sarda-Sorensen
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, Director of Communications
646.358.1463, Mobile: 202.641.5592
isorensen@theTaskForce.org

LGBT Americans Outraged at Delay in Basic Job Rights

In light of continuing delays in the House of Representatives, we must state clearly and unequivocally: Passing basic job protections for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people must happen now. At a time when our government is deeply focused on the critical issue of employment, it is inexcusable to delay action on the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA). Each and every job lost to prejudice based on sexual orientation and gender identity needlessly compounds the unemployment challenges facing our nation. We call on Congress for the immediate passage of ENDA.

For decades now, we have called upon Congress to pass legislation to address the basic right of LGBT people to work free from discrimination at our jobs, and now Congress tells us we must wait another year. In 29 states, it remains legal to fire people based on sexual orientation and in 38 states, discrimination based on gender identity remains legal. In failing to take swift action to pass ENDA, our government allows unfettered bigotry to go unchecked, leading to the loss of jobs, fear in the workplace, economic instability, and personal hardship, while allowing employers to lose competent experienced workers. ENDA is urgently needed by our communities.

The majority of Americans consistently state their support for employment protections and voters have affirmed similar state and local measures. There is absolutely no reason for Congress to continue to delay this non-controversial bill or drop LGBT issues to the bottom of their agenda. We will not be denied basic rights any longer.  Nothing is more important than protecting peoples’ jobs so ENDA must pass now. Further delays are absolutely unacceptable.

Matthew Coles & James Esseks, Co-Directors, American Civil Liberties Union LGBT Project
Terry Stone, Executive Director, CenterLink: The Community of LGBT Centers
Toni Broaddus, Executive Director, Equality Federation
Jennifer Chrisler, Executive Director, Family Equality Council
Lee Swislow, Executive Director, Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders
Jarrett Tomás Barrios, President, Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation
Joe Solmonese, President, Human Rights Campaign
Rachel T. Niven, Executive Director, Immigration Equality
Earl Fowlkes, President/CEO, International Federation of Black Prides, Inc.
Kevin Cathcart, Executive Director, Lambda Legal
Christian Berle, Director of the Log Cabin Republicans National Office
Sharon J. Lettman, Executive Director/CEO, National Black Justice Coalition
Kate Kendell, Executive Director, National Center for Lesbian Rights
Mara Keisling, Executive Director, National Center for Transgender Equality
Rebecca Fox, Executive Director, National Coalition for LGBT Health
Rea Carey, Executive Director, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Action Fund
Michael Mitchell, Executive Director, National Stonewall Democrats
Gregory Varnum, Executive Director, National Youth Advocacy Coalition
Selisse Berry, Founding Executive Director, Out & Equal Workplace Advocates
Jody Huckaby, Executive Director, Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) National
Jo Kenny, Interim Director, Pride at Work AFL-CIO
Masen Davis, Executive Director, Transgender Law Center

Additional organizations may be added.

TransOhio November 2009 Newsletter Now Available!

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Hello TransOhio Family, Friends and Supporters!

The November 2009 issue of the TransOhio newsletter is now available! You can download the newsletter at: http://www.transohio.org/news/November2009.pdf.

Our TG support group meeting will be held on Wednesday, November 4th at 7pm at The Center on High, and our monthly general meeting on Sunday, November 15th, 3pm.

The next TransOhio Partners Discussion Group will be held on Saturday, November 21, 2009 at 2pm in Columbus at The Center on High (1160 N. High Street, Columbus, 43201).

There are tons of events & activities happening in November, so, make sure you take a look at the calendar and the other events noted throughout the newsletter! 

ENDA UPDATE!
We need YOU to help us pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA). It is of the utmost importance that you call your Representative and Senators to ask them to take swift action to pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA). Action needs to take place today, tomorrow, the day after and so on. Please take action today. All it takes is 2 minuted of your time to make 2 highly important calls! 120 seconds, that’s all!
See front page of newsletter for more information on how YOU can help!

Make an end-of-the-year TAX-DEDUCTIBLE donation to TransOhio!

  • Did you know that your donations to TransOhio are tax-deductible?
         It’s true, they are!   
  • Did you know that TransOhio is an all-volunteer board?
         It’s true, we don’t get paid!  
  • Did you know that your tax-deductible donations to TransOhio assist us in providing programs, outreach & educational programs and events FREE to the Ohio transgender community?
         It’s true!

Every dollar you donate to TransOhio makes a difference. It’s true, really. Every dollar counts!

To make your tax-deductible donation to TransOhio, visit  http://transohio.org/donate.html

Upcoming events:

  • Call Me Malcolm film & panel tour
  • Local performances & lectures
  • Transgender Day of Remembrance, Columbus, Thursday, November 19th, 2009
  • Transgender Day of Remembrance, Cleveland & Cincinnati, Friday, November 20, 2009
  • 3rd Annual Community Thanksgiving Dinner, Thursday, November 26th – All are welcome!
  • December Holiday Activities
  • and more!

Take care everybody!

TransOhio Board
Shane, Karen, Tara and Milo

3rd Annual TransOhio Community Thanksgiving Dinner

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Host:  TransOhio .Org
Location:  The Center on High (Stonewall Columbus)
1160 N. High Street, Columbus, OH 43201
When:  Thursday, November 26, 2:00pm
Phone:  614-441-8167

Can you believe how fast the year has gone?

Fall is here and the cold weather is starting to arrive and that must mean that Thanksgiving is approaching!

That’s right, here come the holidays…

What better way to spend them then with your friends and family of TransOhio!

TransOhio will once again be hosting a Community Thanksgiving Dinner on Thanksgiving day (Thursday, November 26, 2009).

This dinner is open to the entire Transgender, Queer, Intersex, Bisexual, Lesbian, Gay and Ally community. There are no excuses to spend the day alone! Come early and stay late!

The Community Thanksgiving Dinner will be at 2pm, at the Center on High (Stonewall Columbus), located at 1160 N. High Street, Columbus, OH 43201.

This is open to the entire GLBTQI and Ally community (kids are welcome!).  RSVP’s are not required, but it will help us in our planning.

TransOhio will provide the turkey & and necessary paper plate-ware. Please bring a dish to share with others (and a serving spoon, fork or knife) and something to drink.

After dinner, we will be showing a movie. Suggestions are welcomed!

Volunteers are needed to setup, decorate and clean up at the end of the evening.

If you can volunteer, please let us know – send an email to TransOhio@gmail.com or call us (614) 441-8167 (this is a voicemail only number, please leave a message).

Please join your TransOhio family on Thanksgiving!

History in the Making

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

NOTE TO MEDIA: As President Obama today signed the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, the following 29 organizations issued this joint statement:

History in the Making

It took much too long, more than a decade. And it came at too great a price: the brutal killings of Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. are just two among the thousands of crimes motivated by hate and bigotry.

But this week, the president put pen to paper and fulfilled a campaign promise, the signing of the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, extending the federal hate crimes statute to include sexual orientation and gender identity along with race, religion, gender, national origin and disability. Our deepest hope and strong belief is that this new law will save lives. Now, lawmakers and the president have made an imperative statement to the country and the world: Our nation will no longer tolerate hate-motivated violence against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people.

We have worked long and hard for this and its passage is historic.

According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Uniform Crime Reporting Program, there are nearly 8,000 hate crime-related incidents annually, and more than 1,200 of those incidents involve violence based on sexual orientation or gender identity. And even more alarming, while the overall occurrence of hate crimes is declining nationally, hate crimes against LGBT people have been increasing. This year alone, we saw hate crimes trials in the brutal killings of two transgender women, Angie Zapata and Lateisha Green.

As a result of this legislation, if local jurisdictions are unable or unwilling to investigate or prosecute hate crimes based on sexual orientation or gender identity, the Justice Department can now step in. And that’s why the LGBT community never stopped working for this historic day.

This legislation not only has practical value, but is a symbol of our progress. It is the first time in the nation’s history that Congress has passed explicit protections on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. We could not have reached this moment without the powerful support of our allies who stood with us every step of the way. We are deeply grateful to civil rights, civic, faith and disability rights groups, as well as law enforcement and district attorney organizations that worked side by side with the LGBT advocates. We are equally thankful to Congress, President Obama and members of his administration for passing and signing this bill into law.

While today we celebrate this marker of progress, we must recognize it as only one of the building blocks to full equality and demand that it be just a first step toward equal treatment under federal law in all areas of our lives. And we must focus on the next step.

The passage of the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act provides us with an opportunity. We must use this moment to educate and keep the momentum going so that we can continue to make progress on the local, state and federal levels. Yes, legislation takes a long time — often years of work. Yet, our community is on the cusp of passing much-needed protections.

This week, we call upon lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, families and allies to take this opportunity of increased media and public attention on hate crimes to educate co-workers, classmates, neighbors, family members and friends about our lives, and about why we need not only their friendship and love, but their vocal support for a more just and equal America for LGBT people. If your members of Congress voted in support of hate crimes legislation, call them and thank them. Then ask them to be there for us again when the vote turns to workplace nondiscrimination, military service and partnership rights.

With your help and our collective pressure, equality is within reach.

When talking about the need for hate crimes legislation, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said: “The time for debate is over.”

She was right.

Just as the time has finally come for stronger hate crime protections, it is also time to pass an inclusive Employment Non-Discrimination Act, repeal “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” and the so-called Defense of Marriage Act, and ensure that health care, economic policy and immigration reform incorporate the needs of LGBT people.

The time for debate is over.

Signed by:

Jo Kenny, AFL-CIO Pride at Work
Terry Stone, Centerlink: The Community of LGBT Centers
Gabe Javier, Consortium of Higher Education LGBT Resource Professionals
Marianne Duddy-Burke, DignityUSA
Toni Broaddus, Equality Federation
Jennifer Chrisler, Family Equality Council
Evan Wolfson, Freedom to Marry
Lee Swislow, Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders
Rebecca Allison, M.D., Gay & Lesbian Medical Association
Chuck Wolfe, Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund
Eliza Byard, Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network
Marjorie Hill, Gay Men’s Health Crisis
Joe Solmonese, Human Rights Campaign
Rachel Tiven, Immigration Equality
Earl Fowlkes, International Federation of Black Prides
Kevin M. Cathcart, Lambda Legal
Leslie Calman, Mautner Project: The National Lesbian Health Organization
Sharon Lettman, National Black Justice Coalition
Kate Kendell, National Center for Lesbian Rights
Mara Keisling, National Center for Transgender Equality
Justin Nelson, National Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce
Rea Carey, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force
Paul Kawata, National Minority AIDS Council
Kyle Bailey, National Stonewall Democrats
Greg Varnum, National Youth Advocacy Coalition
Sharon Stapel, New York Anti-Violence Project
Jody Michael Huckaby, PFLAG National
Aubrey Sarvis, Servicemembers Legal Defense Network
Michael Adams, Services and Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE)

TransOhio October 2009 Newsletter Available Now!

Monday, October 5, 200

Hello TransOhio Family, Friends and Supporters!

The October 2009 issue of the TransOhio newsletter is now available!

You can download the newsletter at:http://www.transohio.org/news/October2009.pdf.

Our TG support group meeting will be held on Wednesday, October 7th at 7pm at The Center on High, and our monthly general meeting on Sunday, October 18, 3pm.

The next TransOhio Partners Discussion Group will be held on Saturday, October 17, 2009 at 2pm in Columbus at The Center on High (1160 N. High Street, Columbus, 43201).

There are tons of events & activities happening in October, so, make sure you take a look at the calendar and the other events noted throughout the newsletter!

We’d also like to wish Karen a happy birthday (October 11) and offer our congratulations to Melissa and Paula who will be having their commitment ceremony this weekend!

Upcoming events we will need volunteers and committee members for:

  • Transgender Day of Remembrance, Thursday, November 19th, 2009
  • 3rd Annual Community Thanksgiving Dinner
  • December Holiday Activities
  • and more!

Take care everybody!

TransOhio Board

Shane, Karen, Tara and Milo