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 LGBT EQUALITY NEWS- STATE BY STATE
Monday, July 13, 2009 (12:35 PM)
July 13, 2009

Marriage Equality 

California - California’s Governor and Attorney General have both shown support for challenges to Proposition 8, while Equality California is investigating the possibility of a 2010 ballot measure to overturn Proposition 8 and is already developing an extensive field organization.

Indiana - Anti-marriage equality Representatives in Indiana once again attempted to resurrect an anti-marriage equality bill known as the "Marriage Discrimination Amendment" during the Special Session of the Indiana General Assembly. The bill would include anti-marriage equality language in the State Constitution. Indiana Equality quickly sent out action alerts and alerted pro-equality Hoosiers to protest this attempt to sneak discrimination into law during a special session dedicated to working out the state budget. The bill was defeated on July 2nd, marking the fourth year the "Marriage Discrimination Amendment" has been denied by Indiana legislators.

Maine - Following the historical marriage equality win in Maine in May, 2009, anti-equality groups hae been gathering to initiate a ballot measure to deny rights to same-sex couples. Equality Maine continues its work of education and advocacy as events develop.

New York - Empire State Pride Agenda's Executive Director, Alan Van Capelle, issued a statement on Friday, July 10, on the end of the State Senate stalemate and in reference to the state's marriage equality bill: "Now that the stalemate is over and the State Senate has resumed its business, we expect that our equality will remain at the top of the chamber’s agenda....We are happy to see the State Senate functioning once again and we’re ready to get back to work with both Democrats and Republicans to pass legislation important to our community.” 


Employment Non-Discrimination

Ohio - Equality Ohio is continuing to push for the passage of HB 176, the Equal Housing and Employment Act. After a victory in committee, the expected vote by the entire Ohio House of Representatives on this bill was canceled for the legislators to focus on the state budget. 


Anti-Bullying/Safe Schools


North Carolina - Victory! After strong campaigns by Equality North Carolina, both the School Violence Prevention Act and the Healthy Youth Act have been passed by the state legislature--and signed into law by the governor! Equality North Carolina plans to take these historic laws (the first North Carolina LGBT-positive statute, which specifically includes sexual orientation and gender identity and expression, and the biggest--albeit incomplete--advancement in comprehensive inclusive sex ed) and use them as stepping stones toward true equality for all North Carolinians.

Tennessee - The Tennessee Transgender Political Coalition helped to block a bill that would have prevented public school teachers from discussing sexual diversity. TTPC also worked non-stop supporting safe school and anti-gang bills during the legislative session. In coalition, TTPC opposed an adoption bill that would have prevented unmarried, cohabiting couples from adopting. TTPC continues to work on hate-crime, health care, identification, and other key legislation and is looking forward to the next session. 


State Legislative ScoreCards Released

Maryland - Equality Maryland released its 2009 legislative scorecard, confirming that members of the House of Delegates are friendlier to LGBT issues than the more conservative Senate. Few Republicans racked up supportive votes, and several Democrats scored dismally.

Source: Equality Federation
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 Same-Sex Marriage Law Goes into Effect in Washington, D.C.
Tuesday, July 7, 2009 (7:29 AM)
(I'm feeling cheerful)
Filed by: John Shields
July 7, 2009 9:30 AM

At 12:01 a.m. today, our nation's capital began recognizing same-sex marriages performed in other states. Issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples in the District of Columbia, however, remains illegal.

The D.C. City Council overwhelmingly approved the new ordinance in a 12-to-1 vote in May. Democratic Mayor Adrian M. Fenty signed the bill into law.

And so that was that. Right? Wrong...

Laws passed by the District are subject to a 30-day review period by the United States Congress. That review period has now expired, but not after a few homophobes tried to get in the way. Several Republican members of the U.S. Congress objected to the law, but Democratic leaders refused to take up the issue.

As our own Michael Crawford said in a detailed post on how this has played out in our nation's power center, it is "worthy of a soap opera."

In June, the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics (BOEE) issued a ruling denying a request by a group of anti-gay clergy members to collect signatures to place on the ballot whether or not the District should recognize same-sex marriages performed in other jurisdictions.

The BOEE cited a provision in D.C, election law that prohibits a popular vote on a matter covered by the D.C. Human Rights Act - which includes sexual orientation.

The drama continued for a while, until the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics said enough.

Bilerico's Nancy Polikoff updated us, with this post:

DC Superior Court Judge Judith Retchin cleared the path for the D.C. law recognizing same-sex marriages from other jurisdictions.

The 15-page opinion rejects every ground put forward by Reverend Harry Jackson and others, who asked the judge to allow a referendum on the law to go forward and that, pending the referendum, the law be prevented from going into effect.

And so the marriage equality football moves two steps forward, one step back. Even the conservative Washington Times newspaper did an in-depth article on the issue today.

The D.C. Council has openly acknowledged their next move is to legalize marriage equality in the District.

Same-sex couples currently can get married in Connecticut, Massachusetts and Iowa; with Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont following suit in the next several months.

The city will also recognize the marriages of 18,000 same-sex couples in California before Proposition 8 reversed the legalization of gay marriage in the Golden State.

Legal marriages in foreign countries will also be recognized.

The rights include the ability to file "state" taxes jointly, hospital visitation rights, benefits for spouses of employees at private companies and in District government, and spousal immunity from testifying against each other.

Source: The Bilerico Project
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 Sean Kennedy’s Killer to be Released Early
Thursday, July 2, 2009 (11:09 AM)
(I'm feeling aggravated)
July 2, 2009 by Anna @ GLAAD 


Sean Kennedy

Upsetting news from South Carolina.

On July 1st, Stephen Andrew Moller was released early from prison after serving a reduced sentence for the 2007 murder of openly gay Sean Kennedy. Moller was found guilty in the death of Kennedy, who he attacked while using anti-gay slurs. While 30 states and the DC have hate crimes laws, South Carolina lacks any hate crimes protections, including protections for the LGBT community.


Elke Kennedy Speaking Out
Sean’s mother Elke Kennedy - with whom we have worked very closely to help bring awareness and visibility to Sean’s story and the vital need for LGBT-inclusive hate crimes protections - voiced her frustration with Moller’s early release, saying:

“He should have served every single day of the already short sentence, instead he was released from prison today, one week early.

Where is the justice?”

After her son’s death, Elke Kennedy established the foundation Sean’s Last Wish to advocate for hate crimes legislation in South Carolina.

Sean’s mother’s full statement and information on her foundation Sean’s Last Wish below…


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 1st, 2009

Contact: Elke Kennedy
Sean’s Last Wish
www.seanslastwish.org
(864)-884-5003
elke@seanslastwish.org

Stephen Moller get’s released 1 week early

Greenville, SC – Elke Kennedy was informed via Phone today, July 1st 2009, that Stephen Andrew Moller has been released from prison. Mr. Moller was responsible for the murder of her son Sean Kennedy on May 16th 2007. He was indicted for only involuntary manslaughter and sentenced on June 11 2008 to a 5 year sentence suspended to three years, received credit for the 199 he served in county lock-up. He was supposed to stay in prison till September 7th 2009, however he received 2 month credit for good behavior by getting his GED while in prison.

He was eligable for early parole on December 28th 2008 already. In an early parole hearing on February 11 2009 he was denied parole and his release date was set to July 7th 2009.

Again the judicial system failed they say one thing and do something else. He should have served every single day of the already short sentence, instead he was released from prison today, one week early.

Where is the justice?

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 Film festival, art exhibit mark quiet steps forward for China's gay community
Saturday, June 20, 2009 (7:21 AM)
(I'm feeling accomplished)
By TINI TRAN, Associated Press Writer | June 18, 2009

BEIJING (AP) — The first time director and movie buff Cui Zi'en tried to hold a gay and lesbian film festival in 2001, it was shut down by police before it even opened. When he tried to organize a gay cultural festival in 2005, five dozen police officers swarmed the venue, closing it.

But this Wednesday, Cui and other organizers managed to pull off the opening to the five-day Beijing Queer Film Festival with no police and no disruptions — drawing only an appreciative and low-key crowd to the Songzhuang Art District on the city's outskirts.

For China's gay community, this week's film festival and an art exhibition on sexual diversity in Beijing, along with last week's first gay pride festival in Shanghai, are quiet steps forward after years of slow but unmistakable progress.

Cui, a professor at the Beijing Film Academy, said the events mark a significant moment for China's fledgling gay movement.

"The biggest change is that I'm not the only one doing this," he said. "There's more support from the gay community. Society has become more relaxed and open-minded in its thinking."

But he sounded a note of caution that progress is often accompanied by setbacks, saying organizers would not consider the events a success unless they make it to their closing ceremony Sunday unscathed.

"In China, we were the first to put on queer events. In those events, we've had interference and that had lasting influences," Cui said.

"(Now) we've had a successful opening and if we can also achieve a successful closing to the event, it will have another kind of impact," he said.

China has indeed eased its control over some aspects of gay life. In 1997, sodomy was removed from the country's list of crimes, although homosexuality was not taken off the list of mental disorders until 2001.

In recent years, the gay community in China has gone from being virtually invisible to establishing a small foothold in society. In large cities, gay bars have opened and gay and lesbian activist and support groups have sprouted. Internet access to gay groups online has helped ease the isolation for those who live in rural areas.

Even so, the vast majority of the country's gay and lesbian population continues to face discrimination and stigmatization. Most remain deeply closeted in a still highly conservative society. Gay Web sites are often blocked by the government's Internet firewalls.

Still, community organizers see progress in the fact that gay-themed events that would have been banned outright even a few years ago are now being permitted.

"Ten years ago, this would have been completely impossible," said curator Yang Ziguang, who helped put together the Beijing art show, the first in the country to explore sexual diversity and gender issues. The works by 16 artists include explicit explorations of gay and gender issues.

The auditorium for the film festival's opening movie — a story of a Chinese man who searches for the soul of his dead Swiss lover — was packed with a lively crowd of about 100 people, mostly young and proudly gay.

Others who came were simply curious to know more about gay issues, a segment sought out by organizers who wanted to encourage dialogue between the gay community and the wider public.

"I don't know that much about the lifestyle so I was curious," said Du Jie, 30, an artist who lives in the area. "I really liked the movie. You see on-screen the raw emotions in the relationship between them. It's a very good opportunity for the public to better understand the gay community."

That's not to say that everything has gone smoothly. The art show curators ran into problems with local authorities just before opening day last Sunday.

"I used to think China was becoming more and more open. On TV, movies and magazines, you hear more and more about these issues," said Gogo, a second curator who goes by one name. "But before the exhibit started, they came and told us 'You can't do this.' That changed my mind a little about how ready China really is."

Furious negotiations followed, and in the end only four works were removed — including one photo showing a man holding a fish over his crotch and a painting depicting two naked men in a sexual act. Organizers decided to leave the empty white frames hanging on the wall as a statement on censorship.

Despite the initial problems, the exhibit's opening drew an estimated 500 people — an enthusiastic public response that left its organizers pleasantly shocked.

The organizers said they made a concerted effort to keep the events low profile to ward off unwanted attention. There were no fliers or public advertisements for the events — only announcements circulated on Web sites. And they chose to hold it in the remote Songzhuang Art District, almost an hour's drive from downtown Beijing.

"If we were to advertise this all over the place, then we would only cause problems for ourselves," said Zhu Rikun, another film festival organizer.

The same low-key approach was taken by organizers of the country's first gay pride festival last week in Shanghai, China's commercial hub. They carefully planned a week's worth of movie screenings, art shows and sports events — all held in private venues instead of public spaces, said festival spokesman Kenneth Tan.

Despite the attempt to avoid problems, several events still ended up getting delayed or canceled by authorities who claimed organizers didn't have the correct permits, said Tan.

Still the festival got high praise from the China Daily, the country's official English-language newspaper, which ran a front-page article lauding organizers for sending a strong signal about "greater acceptance and tolerance."

Overall, China has been slowly moving in a direction of more openness toward the gay community, Tan said.

"I think the government has given a lot of space for the local gay community to grow and flourish," he said. "I've been in China for seven years and the changes I've seen in the Shanghai gay scene is tremendous. It's a metamorphosis."

Source: Zap2it
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 21 Hurt in Bombing after Brazil Gay Pride Parade
Wednesday, June 17, 2009 (7:15 AM)
June 17, 2009

SAO PAULO – At least 21 people were injured when a homemade bomb exploded at a spot where participants gathered after the gay pride parade in Brazil’s largest city, authorities said Monday.

The explosive device was thrown around 9:00 p.m. Sunday in a square in downtown Sao Paulo where there are a number of nightclubs and which has become an area frequented by gays and lesbians.

Present at the time of the attack were dozens of people who had taken part a few hours earlier in the 13th edition of the gay pride parade that, with close to 3 million participants, is considered the biggest demonstration in the world in defense of gays.

The bomb explosion scattered shrapnel, injuring many of those at the scene where 21 people had to be treated by a team of doctors and paramedics that had been mobilized for the parade.

Most of the injuries were not serious and only five people had to be taken to hospital, doctors said.

Some witnesses said that the bomb was thrown from a building on the square.

The bombing was not the only show of homophobia during the gay pride parade.

Police said there had been reports of other attacks on people who took part in the parade, as well as several cases of robbery and assault.

A 17-year-old boy who took part in the parade remains in a coma at a Sao Paulo hospital after being attacked by a group of unknown persons who found him alone on an empty street after the nearly eight-hour parade.

Another youth was attacked in Roosevelt Plaza where the march ended, and a third was stabbed in Largo do Arouche Plaza.

Source: Latin American Herald Tribune
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 HAPPY PRIDE MONTH EVERYONE!
Sunday, June 14, 2009 (6:52 AM)
(I'm feeling happy)

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 New Hampshire: Marriage Equality Signed, Sealed and Delivered
Wednesday, June 3, 2009 (4:43 PM)
(I'm feeling ecstatic)
June 3, 2009 by Bryan
 
Governor John Lynch signed legislation that will give the legal protections of marriage to gay and lesbian couples in New Hampshire. Acting swiftly and decisively, Governor Lynch signed the legislation only an hour after the legislature took the final vote on the issue.
“Today is a historic day for all Granite Staters,” said Mo Baxley, executive director of the New Hampshire Freedom to Marry Coalition. “We applaud Governor Lynch, Speaker Norelli, President Larsen and the leadership of the General Court for making sure that all loving, committed couples have the freedom to marry. Today, our shared values of individual liberty, freedom, and fairness have been upheld.”

New Hampshire is now the 6th state in the United States to extend the freedom to marry to gay and lesbian couples. This new law will go into effect on January 1, 2010.
 

Source: Gay Rights Watch
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 Obama, Clinton recognize June as Pride month
Tuesday, June 2, 2009 (10:42 AM)
(I'm feeling pleased)

 President commits to 'achieving equal justice under law'
By CHRIS JOHNSON, Washington Blade
Jun 1 2009, 4:12 PM


President Obama on Monday officially proclaimed June to be Pride month and called on the U.S. government and American people "to work together to promote equal rights for all, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity."

The statement, which can be 
downloaded here, marks the first time in eight years that the White House has officially commemorated Pride. Former President Clinton made such proclamations in 1999 and 2000; the Bush administration did not continue the practice.

In the proclamation, Obama praised the work of LGBT Americans in contributing to the nation.

"LGBT Americans have made, and continue to make, great and lasting contributions that continue to strengthen the fabric of American society," he said. "There are many well-respected LGBT leaders in all professional fields, including the arts and business communities."

Obama noted that Pride this year commemorates the 40th anniversary of the Stonewall riots, which are seen as the catalyst for the modern LGBT rights movement.

"Forty years ago, patrons and supporters of the Stonewall Inn in New York City resisted police harassment that had become all too common for members of the [LGBT] community," he said. "During LGBT Pride Month, we commemorate the events of June 1969 and commit to achieving equal justice under law for LGBT Americans."

Obama also touted the work that he has done benefitting the LGBT community since he took office.

He noted that he was the first president to nominate openly LGBT candidates to Senate-confirmed positions in the first 100 days of an administration. He also noted that he had the U.S. join efforts at the United Nations to support a resolution that would decriminalize homosexuality throughout the world.

"The LGBT rights movement has achieved great progress, but there is more work to be done," he said. "LGBT youth should feel safe to learn without the fear of harassment, and LGBT families and seniors should be allowed to live their lives with dignity and respect."

Obama also reiterated his support for hate crimes legislation, civil unions and federal rights for LGBT people, outlawing discrimination in the workplace and ending "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" law "in a way that strengthens our Armed Forces and our national security."

The president also called on the nation to recommit itself to fighting the HIV/AIDS epidemic domestically and overseas.

"These issues affect not only the LGBT community, but also our entire Nation," he said. "As long as the promise of equality for all remains unfulfilled, all Americans are affected." 

Obama's proclamation came the same day that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton recognized June as Pride month and pledged to work toward ending discrimination against LGBT people.

"In honor of Gay and Lesbian Pride Month and on behalf of the State Department, I extend our appreciation to the global LGBT community for its courage and determination during the past 40 years, and I offer our support for the significant work that still lies ahead," she said.

A source familiar with the State Department said Clinton’s statement marks the first time in eight years that the department has acknowledged June as Pride month.

Clinton noted that LGBT people living overseas “live under constant threat of arrest, violence, [and] even torture.” She pledged to step up State Department efforts at ending human rights abuses against LGBT people overseas.

“The persecution of gays and lesbians is a violation of human rights and an affront to human decency, and it must end,” she said. “As Secretary of State, I will advance a comprehensive human rights agenda that includes the elimination of violence and discrimination against people based on sexual orientation or gender identity.”

In the statement, Clinton acknowledged the significance of the 40th anniversary of the Stonewall riots, which are largely seen as the catalyst for the modern LGBT rights movement.

“Forty years ago this month, the gay rights movement began with the Stonewall riots in New York City, as gays and lesbians demanded an end to the persecution they had long endured,” she said. “Now, after decades of hard work, the fight has grown into a global movement to achieve a world in which all people live free from violence and fear, regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity.”

Clinton said the State Department and the Obama administration is “grateful” for its LGBT employees in D.C. and around the world.

“They and their families make many sacrifices to serve our nation,” she said. “Their contributions are vital to our efforts to establish stability, prosperity and peace worldwide.”

Clinton is reportedly expected to make an announcement that would address the inequities faced by gay Foreign Service officers with same-sex partners, although the statement issued on Monday doesn’t directly address those issues.

Unlike the spouses of straight Foreign Service officers, the partners of gay Foreign Service officers aren’t included in travel orders, aren’t eligible for health insurance, aren’t entitled to emergency or medical evacuation and aren’t eligible for more than basic language and security training.

A State Department memo leaked to the media last month indicates that Clinton is planning to end these inequities soon.

Clinton says in the leaked memo that the State Department “will be extending a number of benefits and allowances to domestic partners of members of the Foreign Service assigned abroad.” 

“Historically, domestic partners of Foreign Service members have not been provided the same training, benefits, allowances, and protections that other family members receive,” she said. “These inequities are unfair and must end.” 

Source: The Washington Blade

HAPPY PRIDE MONTH EVERYONE!

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 The California Supreme Court ruling brings bitter news
Tuesday, May 26, 2009 (12:23 PM)
(I'm feeling aggravated)
May 26, 2009

From HRC President Joe Solmonese:

The California Supreme Court ruling brings bitter news: Proposition 8 will stand.
While we take some solace that the loving couples who did marry in California will stay married, an estimated one million more individuals have been denied that dignity and right.
We are heartbroken. But we won't back down.
We will work relentlessly, organizing communities of faith and other allies across the state, until Prop. 8 is repealed. It will take major resources to win – but the momentum of history is on our side.
HRC members from around the country have sent in beautiful images and messages of support in recent weeks. We'd like to share those with you now in a new video that expresses both our profound hurt and our fierce resolve to fight for equality. Watch the video. Look into the eyes of the people, LGBT and straight, who stand in solidarity today. And join the effort we must begin.

Watch the video and help HRC fight for marriage equality in California and across the country:
We Won't Back Down!

Today's decision hurts. But we have known this pain before. Ours is a movement powered by resilience. Once again, we will turn our anger into action.
In fact, we have already begun. To secure marriage equality, we know we must broaden, diversify and deepen faith-based support. So with California Faith for Equality, we have been building a coalition of clergy and lay leaders who will lead a long-term campaign of education and action. We will help train them to make equality part of their daily ministries. We'll give them the tools to be effective spokespeople who can speak of their faith and their belief in equality. We will also work with them to expand our volunteer base.
It's all about winning hearts and minds so we can repeal this hateful marriage ban, once and for all. And it's not just California. We need to keep the recent momentum for marriage equality alive until every loving couple across the nation has the right to marry.
HRC is committed to this fight, for as long as it takes. But we need to start NOW, and this effort will take significant resources. Please give us the critical support to begin.
Watch the video, pass it along to everyone you know, and support our work to fight for marriage equality everywhere. GIVE TODAY!
Our opponents may be celebrating at the courthouse steps today, but they are on the wrong side of history. In the end, equality will triumph over discrimination, because we will never, ever back down.
Warmly,

Joe Solmonese
President
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 LGBT Equality: State Highlights
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 (2:11 PM)
(I'm feeling accomplished)
 
Marriage Equality & Relationship Recognition 

In Vermont, the House and Senate made history on April 7, 2009, when they overrode the Governor's veto of a marriage equality bill, making Vermont the first state to embrace the freedom to marry through its elected representatives without a court order. Congratulations to Vermont Freedom to Marry Task Force, which lead the fight! Check out videos of the historic vote--and more--here. 

Connecticut--On April 23, 2009, as a result of the tireless work of Love Makes a Family, Connecticut legislators overwhelmingly approved a marriage codification bill (writing into law the state Supreme Court's marriage equality decision) which was signed into law by the Governor.
Iowa--In recognition of the first day same-sex Iowa couples could legally marry, April 27, 2009, One Iowa produced its first ever ad in support of marriage equality, which reminded Iowans of their shared values and tradition of protecting all families, as the first of many couples welcomed their new status as “married under the law.”

Maine--On May 6, 2009, Governor John Baldacci signed into law a freedom to marry bill which had been overwhelmingly approved by the Senate and House. Equality Maine led the fight to pass the bill, organizing a strong show of support for equality and producing a video featuring real life lgbt families which helped push the bill to win legislative approval.

New Hampshire--On May 6, 2009, the New Hampshire House voted, by a vote of 178 to 167, to accept the Senate version of the marriage equality bill and sent it to the Governor. New Hampshire Freedom To Marry has been campaigning non-stop to rally New Hampshire pro-equality supporters to urge Governor Lynch to sign the bill. On Thursday, May 14, the Governor announced he would sign the marriage equality bill only if amended to further expand exemptions for religious groups. The Speaker of the House and Senate President both said they would move "expeditiously" to get a workable gay marriage law on the books, which could the legislature as early as Wednesday, May 20.

New York--Governor Patterson announced he would be introducing a marriage equality bill and Empire State Pride Agenda has been actively engaging New Yorkers in a campaign to win more pro-equality support, rolling out a powerful new marriage equality video featuring a real New York family hurt by marriage discrimination. The ad is airing now, as the Senate takes up the marriage equality bill just days after the Assembly voted overwhelmingly in favor of the bill.

In Washington, Equal Rights Washington's 2009 Domestic Partner Expansion Bill, which will ensure that registered domestic partners in Washington have the same rights and responsibilities as married couples, was signed into law by the Governor on Tuesday, May 19.

The Washington D.C. Council approved legislation to provide marriage recognition to out-of-state same-sex couples in a vote of 12-0. Mayor Fenty signed the bill into law on May 7. While the bill does not go into
effect until after a 30-day Congressional review period, Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said Congress will not interfere. 


Employment Non Discrimination

In Ohio, Equality Ohio's Equal Housing and Employment Act is being cosponsored by Reps. Dan Stewart (D) and Ross McGregor (R). The bill would make it illegal to discriminate in Ohio in employment, housing, public accommodations and credit based on sexual orientation or gender identity.

In Maryland, Equality Maryland's inheritance tax bill passed through the legislature with overwhelming support of both the House and the Senate and is now before Governor O'Malley, who has said he will sign the bill into law. The law will exempt individuals from the inheritance tax paid on primary residences after the death of a domestic partner. Also, funding for health benefits for state employees’ same-sex partners has been approved and will take effect in July. 


Hate Crimes/Anti-bullying bills/Safe Schools

In Tennessee, a bill sponsored by Tennessee Transgender Political Coalition that would add “gender identity or expression” to Tennessee’s hate crimes sentencing enhancement statute passed a key committee vote but has since been tabled by the House Judiciary Committee.

In Oregon, Basic Rights Oregon is leading a coalition of more than 40 organizations to pass a bill that would strengthen and enhance anti-bullying protections in Oregon schools--a top priority for Basic Rights Oregon this year. The bill had its final committee hearing in the Senate on Wednesday, May 13, but the committee has not yet voted on this crucial bill.

In Minnesota, OutFront Minnesota worked with allies and legislators to pass the “Minnesota Safe Schools for All Bill”, a bill which would require schools to have policies prohibiting bullying and harassment, including protections for GLBT people and families. OutFront is now urging equality supporters to contact Governor Pawlenty to ensure that he signs the bill into law.

North Carolina--Equality North Carolina has been immersed in a whirlwind of legislative activity, pushing an anti-bullying bill and a sex-education bill (offering parents the option of comprehensive sex education, along with abstinence-only programs currently offered in most schools). On May 6th, the Senate voted 26-22 to pass the anti-bullying bill; the sex-education bill could reach the Senate floor for a vote as soon as Thursday, May 21.

Washington--On April 22, 2009, Washington State Governor Gregoire signed the Transgender Hate Crimes bill, expanding the state’s hate-crime law to include “gender expression and identity.” It is a now a felony act to threaten, damage the property of, or physically injure someone because of ethnicity, nationality, religion, gender, disability, sexual orientation or gender expression or identity. This was one of the highest priorities of Equal Rights Washington’s 2009 legislative agenda. 


Pro-Equality Victory at the Ballot Box

Florida--In Gainesville, Equality Florida helped wage a successful campaign to defeat another attempt to roll back local anti-discrimination laws. On March 24, 2009, Gainesville voters cast their votes, 58% to 42%, rejecting Charter Amendment 1, an extreme attempt to remove anti-discrimination protections for Gainesville’s gay and transgender citizens.

Source: Equality Federation
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