Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Columbus Earns Perfect Score on HRC Equality Index



For Immediate Release                                           
Tuesday, November 19, 2013


Contact:              Dan Williamson, Mayor’s Office
                              John Ivanic, City Council
                              Paul Guequierre, HRC,

Columbus Earns Perfect Score on Equality Index

According to a new report by the Human Rights Campaign, the City of Columbus has achieved a perfect score in terms of treating its gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender residents with dignity and respect. HRC today released its new Municipal Equality Index, a rating system of LBGT inclusion in municipal law. One year after receiving a score of 83 percent in the most recent Municipal Equality Index, Columbus this year was one of 25 U.S. municipalities to score 100 percent.

“Our gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender residents provide leadership, creativity and ingenuity to make Columbus great,” Mayor Michael B. Coleman said. “Protecting their rights and fighting for their equality is the least we can do.”

HRC surveyed 291 cities of varying sizes. HRC’s Municipal Equality Index is based on 47 criteria falling under six broad categories:

·        Nondiscrimination laws
·        Relationship recognition
·        Municipality’s employment and contracting policies
·        Inclusiveness of city services
·        Law enforcement,
·        Municipal leadership on matters of equality

“Columbus has long been recognized as one of the most open and inclusive cities in the nation,” said Council President Andrew J. Ginther. “Our HRC MEI score confirms this, and I look forward to the day when all cities in Ohio and across the country welcome the LGBT community as proudly as Columbus has.”

Columbus’ score was tops among Ohio cities, including Cincinnati (90 percent), Cleveland (83 percent), Toledo (70 percent) and Akron (48 percent).

“Columbus’ hard work to raise the city’s score from 83 points last year to 100 points this year shows its dedication to ensuring that LGBT citizens are treated equally,” said Cathryn M. Oakley, HRC’s legislative counsel for state and municipal advocacy.  “As a leader in Ohio and the region, Columbus demonstrates how much can be accomplished by a city who is dedicated to equality”.

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Even in the Reddest of States, America’s Cities are Leading the Way in the Fight for LGBT Equality, HRC Releases 2013 Municipal Equality Index



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 19, 2013
Paul Guequierre 


Even in the Reddest of States, America’s Cities are Leading the Way in the Fight for LGBT Equality, HRC Releases 2013 Municipal Equality Index  

Across the country, municipalities extend vital protections to LGBT citizens

WASHINGTON — From coast to coast, America’s cities are demonstrating a commitment to treating lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people with dignity and respect by passing laws and implementing policies that treat all people equally.  That’s according to a new report by the Human Rights Campaign Foundation, the educational arm of the nation’s largest LGBT civil rights organization.  The 2013 Municipal Equality Index (MEI) is the second edition of the only rating system of LGBT inclusion in municipal law.  This year’s index finds that cities across the country – including in Idaho, Kentucky, Georgia, Montana, Missouri, and Texas – continued to prove that municipalities will act to support equality for LGBT people, even where states and the federal government have failed to do so.  The MEI is issued in partnership with the Equality Federation Institute.

Key findings from the MEI create a snapshot of LGBT equality in 291 municipalities of varying sizes drawn from every state in the nation – these include the 50 state capitals, the 150 most populous cities in the country, the three largest cities in every state, the city home to each state’s largest public university, and the 25 large, 25 mid-size, and 25 small municipalities with the highest proportion of same-sex couples.  Twenty-five cities earned a perfect 100-point score and serve as shining examples of LGBT inclusivity, with excellent policies ranging from non-discrimination laws, equal employee benefits, and cutting-edge city services. 

2013 MEI at a glance:
  • Cities across the country achieved excellent scores, demonstrating that cities have a commitment to LGBT equality that is unbridled by regionalism and not confined to parts of the country many people assume are most LGBT friendly;
  • 25 cities received perfect scores (100 points) in 2013; 11 did in 2012;
  • Of cities that scored 100, 8 cities came from states without comprehensive relationship recognition and without statewide non-discrimination laws (compared to two such cities in 2012);
  • 31 million people live in cities where trans people are protected at the city level alone;
  • In 2012 we rated 137 cities with a total population of 55,853,651; in 2013 we rated 291 cities with a population total of 77,851,822;
  • 10% of cities scored over 96 points, 25% scored over 78 points.  The average score was 57 points, half of cities scored over 60 points. 25% of cities scored 35 points or fewer; and 3.5% of cities scored 10 points or fewer.
  • Cities tended to have higher scores where the city was selected for having a high proportion of same-sex couples, and the presence of openly LGBT city officials and LGBT police liaisons also tended to be correlated with higher scores. 
“Equality isn’t just for the coasts anymore,” said HRC President Chad Griffin. “This groundbreaking report shows that cities and towns across the country, from Vicco, Kentucky to Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, are leading the charge for basic fairness for LGBT people.”

The MEI rates cities based on 47 criteria falling under six broad categories:
  • Non-discrimination laws;
  • Relationship recognition;
  • Municipality’s employment and contracting policies;
  • Inclusiveness of city services;
  • Law enforcement; and
  • Municipal leadership on matters of equality.
"Change is possible everywhere, and the Municipal Equality Index showcases the monumental progress we've made. In cities and towns across America, advocates are telling their stories, organizing their friends, and changing the hearts and minds of our policymakers and neighbors," said Rebecca Isaacs, executive director of Equality Federation. "We're winning equality where it matters most -- in the communities we call home."

The full report, including detailed scorecards for every city and a searchable database, is available online at www.hrc.org/mei.

The Human Rights Campaign Foundation is the educational arm of the Human Rights Campaign, America’s largest civil rights organization working to achieve lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality. By inspiring and engaging all Americans, HRC and the HRC Foundation strive to end discrimination against LGBT citizens and realize a nation that achieves fundamental fairness and equality for all. 

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Friday, November 15, 2013

HRC - Speaker Boehner Brings Hate-Peddlers to Capitol Hill



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 15, 2013
Paul Guequierre 

Speaker Boehner Brings Hate-Peddlers to Capitol Hill

HRC: Speaker should be ashamed of associating with anti-LGBT group

WASHINGTON – Buzzfeed reports that House Speaker John Boehner today secured meeting space for the top American supporters of Russia’s anti-LGBT laws. The news comes after Sen. Mark Kirk withdrew their original meeting space with a spokesperson saying, “Senator Kirk will not host groups that advance a hateful agenda.” 

The World Congress of Families – which sent nearly a dozen anti-LGBT American activists to Russia to support these heinous laws – used today’s event to promote using Russia’s anti-gay laws as a model for the U.S.
Human Rights Campaign (HRC) President Chad Griffin issued the following statement:

"Speaker Boehner's embrace of these ambassadors of hate is shameful and despicable. These individuals have supported the subhuman treatment of LGBT people around the world, and now they want to do the same here. 

The fact that the Speaker would welcome a panelist who praised Uganda’s proposal to sentence gay people to death should shock the conscience of all Americans.”

The roundtable discussion, hosted by the World Congress of Families, is entitled “Family Policy Lessons from Other Lands: What Should America Learn?” The event is presented in innocent-sounding language, but the biographies of the participants reveal their malicious intent.

Three of the four panelists, Austin Ruse, Allan Carlson, and Steven Mosher, have traveled to Russia to meet with other anti-LGBT leaders during critical stages of Russia’s recent anti-LGBT crackdown. The fourth panelist, Janice Crouse, celebrated a proposed law in Uganda that would make being LGBT punishable by death. Crouse called it a, “biblical and cultural stand against the radical homosexual agenda.” For more on the panelists see this background document.

With the help of rogue American activists like those on this panel, Russia continues to demonize and harass its LGBT community.

In June, Russia enacted an "anti-propaganda" law that outlaws even modest public gestures of support of the LGBT community. Foreigners breaking this law, such as those visiting Russia for the 2014 Sochi Olympic Games, face arrest for up to 15 days followed by deportation.

Russia also enacted a law this summer that prohibits LGBT Russians from adopting children and prohibits adoptions by single foreigners from countries that recognize marriage equality. In September, an even more draconian piece of legislation was proposed that would allow courts to take children away from parents who are LGBT or are suspected of being LGBT.

This state-sanctioned homophobia and transphobia contributes to a culture of violence and harassment against the Russian LGBT community that goes unchecked by law enforcement. Just last week, two masked men with a gun and bat broke into the screening of an LGBT film in St. Petersburg. Several individuals were attacked—two had to be sent to the hospital, one of whom was shot in the eye.

For more information on these laws, and for updates as the situation in Russia develops, click here.

The Human Rights Campaign is America's largest civil rights organization working to achieve lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality. By inspiring and engaging all Americans, HRC strives to end discrimination against LGBT citizens and realize a nation that achieves fundamental fairness and equality for all.
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Thursday, November 14, 2013

HRC - Why John Boehner is Still Wrong on ENDA



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 14, 2012
Dan Rafter

Why John Boehner is Still Wrong on ENDA

Washington – House Speaker John Boehner again today offered a false and factually inaccurate explanation for why he won’t support the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) – which passed the Senate one week ago with bipartisan support from 10 Republicans. Boehner re-iterated his opposition to the legislation that would simply protect hardworking lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Americans from workplace discrimination, saying it would lead to frivolous lawsuits and wrongly claiming that such protections already exist.

“The late, great Senator Moynihan of New York said that everyone is entitled to their own opinions but not their own facts,” said Human Rights Campaign president Chad Griffin. “It’s shocking that Speaker Boehner, entrusted by the people to make laws, is so fundamentally mistaken about what’s currently on the books. The Speaker is flat out wrong on the facts and the law.”

This is not the first time Speaker Boehner has disseminated misinformation about ENDA. He did so most recently right before the bill’s successful Senate passage last week. Here’s why John Boehner is still wrong on ENDA:

ENDA will not lead to an increase in lawsuits
  • ENDA will not lead to an increase in frivolous lawsuits. In fact, a July 2013 GAO report looking at employment complaints in states with sexual orientation and gender identity non-discrimination policies in place found no major uptick in complaints filed.
  • A top leader at General Mills directly rebuffed this faulty premise when it was raised during a June 2012 hearing about ENDA on Capitol Hill, telling lawmakers: “Not at all. Again, it's absolutely not been an issue for us. You know, frequently, we talk about the cost of this legislation in terms of accommodations and potential litigation. There is a real cost that all U.S. companies are paying right now in terms of loss of engagement when employees are in fear, loss of productivity when they can't concentrate on bringing their whole self to their work every day, and loss of talent because of these artificial barriers to entry. 
 There currently aren’t adequate workplace protections for LGBT people
  • There is no state law in 29 states prohibiting workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation, or in 33 states based on gender identity. For far too many LGBT Americans, there is simply no legal remedy when they are denied a job, denied a promotion or fired simply because of who they are.
  • There is nothing “special” about the protections created by ENDA. The bill simply embodies the longstanding, deeply American principle that people should be judged at work solely on their merits. It closely follows the longstanding federal workplace protections for individuals based on race, sex, religion or disability.
Discrimination is a very real problem for LGBT people
  • In testimony before the Senate HELP Committee, academic experts have outlined recent national surveys of LGBT people that show 42 percent of lesbian, gay and bisexual people, and 78 percent of transgender people, have experienced mistreatment on the job because of who they are.
  • In addition, studies show significant wage disparities between LGBT and heterosexual people, with one analysis showing gay men make 10 to 32 percent less than their straight counterparts.
Businesses big and small back ENDA
  • More than 100 Fortune 500s and other major companies support ENDA through HRC’s Business Coalition for Workplace Fairness. Leaders at these companies have testified on Capitol Hill, spoken out in the media and put internal practices in place that show they take seriously the American values embodied in the legislation.
  • ENDA includes a small business exemption – but even small business owners support the legislation. In the run-up to the Senate vote, nearly 500 small business owners from across the country signed letters to their Senators expressing support for ENDA.
Learn more about ENDA – and why this legislation is so necessary – at www.hrc.org/enda

The Human Rights Campaign is America’s largest civil rights organization working to achieve lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality. By inspiring and engaging all Americans, HRC strives to end discrimination against LGBT citizens and realize a nation that achieves fundamental fairness and equality for all.
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