The D.C. Office of Human Rights (OHR) today launched a new public-awareness campaign, ''Safe Bathrooms DC,'' aimed at making it easier for transgender people in the District to access facilities without fear of reprisal by ensuring that all single-stall restroom facilities in the District are gender-neutral.
The requirement that single-stall facilities be gender neutral is already part of existing statute. When the District amended its Human Rights Act in 2006 to include nondiscrimination protections for individuals based on their gender identity or expression, it included a provision that required all entities covered by the act to allow individuals to use gender-specific restrooms or facilities such as dressing rooms, homeless shelters and group homes that are consistent with their gender identity and expression. It also clarified that single-occupancy restroom facilities were to use gender-neutral signage and replace older signs designating such bathrooms as being for ''men'' or ''women.''
#safeBathroomsDC
Still, the statute has been difficult to enforce, in part due to conflicting regulations between the District's Human Rights Act and regulations adopted by the D.C. Department of Health (DOH) and the D.C. Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (DCRA).
David Mariner, executive director of The DC Center, the city's primary LGBT community center, has said over the past few years that he and several volunteers have consistently been reporting non-compliant facilities to OHR, but that some establishments have resisted retiring gender-specific restrooms.
According to OHR spokesman Elliot Imse, at the heart of the conflict over regulations was that both DOH and DCRA had adopted standard plumbing regulations, which state that if a facility has two single-stall bathrooms, one must be designated for men and the other for women. While OHR could inform businesses that they needed to comply with the Human Rights Act, there was no enforcement mechanism until last year when both DOH and DCRA changed their regulations to allow for gender-neutral, single-stall restrooms.
#safeBathroomsDC
Even after those conflicting regulations were resolved, the process to report venues that were non-compliant in relabeling single-stall facilities as gender-neutral remained cumbersome, as complainants needed to report to the Office of Human Rights and fill out a 20-question ''public accommodations complaint'' form, usually taking about 20 minutes to complete.
At an April 3 event held at the local LGBT community organization Casa Ruby, one of the partners in the Safe Bathrooms DC campaign, OHR announced it was asking community members to utilize social media, such as Twitter, and the OHR website to report non-compliant bathrooms. The OHR's website form consists has only five questions, expected to require less than a minute to complete. Community members reporting non-compliant establishments also have the option of submitting a photo of the non-compliant restroom. OHR is also asking for photos of violations to be tweeted, along with the business name and location, using the hashtag ''#safebathroomsDC.''
''We are encouraging people to take 30 seconds to notify us via Twitter or our website when a single-occupancy public bathroom is not gender-neural, so we can get it changed,'' OHR Director Monica Palacio said in a statement. ''By working together, we can ensure the transgender community and others who prefer using gender-neutral bathrooms have an increased number of safe places to use.''
#safeBathroomsDC
To promote the Safe Bathrooms DC campaign, OHR has released a series of ads featuring awkward bathroom experiences, such as waiting in line, running out of toilet paper, or using a shoe to avoid touching a toilet when flushing. The tagline on each reads: ''Public bathrooms are challenging enough. Help make them a bit easier for our transgender community.'' The ads also include information about reporting non-compliant establishments via Twitter or the new OHR complaint website. Samples of the ads, as well as additional information on gender-neutral bathroom regulations, can be found at ohr.dc.gov/bathrooms.
''The success of this campaign largely depends on rallying the LBGT community and its allies to report non-compliant bathrooms using Twitter or our website,'' Palacio said in a statement. ''So we are encouraging people to share of Safe Bathrooms DC advertisements on social media, in the hope that together we can dramatically increase the number of single-occupancy gender-neutral bathrooms here in the District. We believe harnessing social media to raise awareness on this issue can inspire municipalities around the nation to begin their own efforts.''
...moreThe Next Generation Leadership Foundation (NGLF), the D.C.-based, national nonprofit aimed at encouraging and mentoring LGBT youth leaders, announced Thursday that it has opened nominations for the sixth annual Next Generation Awards, which recognize local LGBT leaders under the age of 30.
Selected from community nominations, the honor celebrates the leadership and achievements of young LGBT people. The success of the Next Generation Awards, which were launched in 2009 and presented by Metro Weekly, led to NGLF's foundation last year. NGLF is also slated to sponsor its first annual Leadership Camp for graduating LGBT high school students in June.
''This is an exciting year for the Next Generations Awards,'' Sean Bugg, the executive director of NGLF and Metro Weekly's editor emeritus, said in a statement. ''It's our first year producing the awards as part of the Next Generation Leadership Foundation. We're looking forward to learning about the accomplishments and potential of all this year's nominees.''
Nominations can be submitted online through Friday, April 11. The award winners will be announced in a special annual edition of Metro Weekly on Thursday, May 15, and presented at a reception Friday, May 16, at a location to be announced.
''We're proud to not only continue our support of the awards but to support the work of the Next Generation Foundation,'' Randy Shulman, publisher and editor-in-chief of Metro Weekly, said in a statement. ''As always, it's an honor for the magazine to be able to feature the best and brightest of our LGBT youth and young adults.''
For more information about the Next Generation Leadership Foundation visit nglf.org.
...moreDistrict voters went to the polls April 1 to select nominees from each of the city's four major political parties for various offices in this November's general election, turning incumbent Mayor Vincent Gray and four-term Councilmember Jim Graham (Ward 1) out of office in their respective Democratic primaries.
Gray, who has been the target of a federal investigation looking into a shadow campaign during the 2010 mayoral election, was frequently under attack and had flat-lined in polls following a plea deal with businessman Jeffrey Thompson, who pleaded guilty to directing illegal campaign contributions into a Gray shadow campaign and claimed Gray had known of the plan. Following Thompson's plea deal, Gray's chief rival, Councilmember Muriel Bowser (D-Ward 4) surged, consolidating the support of a number of anti-Gray voters who had previously considered other candidates until polls showed Bowser breaking away from the pack of challengers.
Muriel Bowser
(Photo via Mayor Gray's Flickr)
Bowser triumphed over Gray by a 12-point margin, 44 percent to 32 percent, and won five of the city's eight wards, including her home base of Ward 4 and majority- or plurality-white wards west of Rock Creek Park and in the city's downtown and U Street corridors that had backed former Mayor Adrian Fenty (D) four years ago. Gray won three majority-African-American wards – Wards 5, 7 and 8 –largely on the east side of the Anacostia River. Based on results from the D.C. Board of Elections, Bowser also appears to have won handily in wards with high concentrations of LGBT voters.
According to the Williams Institute, a UCLA School of Law think tank conducting research on sexual-orientation and gender-identity laws and public policy, the 2010 Census shows tracts with more than 20 same-sex couples per 1,000 households overlapping all or parts of 43 voting precincts in the District. Bowser won 36 of those 43 precincts, some by lopsided margins.
Gray won in Precinct 20, a Ledroit Park precinct, and at Precinct 18, in the city's Shaw neighborhood. He also won three precincts – 67, 69 and 70 – in the city's Brookland and Michigan Park neighborhoods. Councilmember Tommy Wells (D-Ward 6), who came in third overall with 13 percent of the vote, won two other precincts, 90 and 90, located near his Capitol Hill base.
Overall voter turnout for the primaries was sluggish at many locations. Fewer votes were cast this year than were cast four years ago at every precinct in the city. Overall, voter turnout citywide was estimated at 22.5 percent, with turnout in some individual precincts dropping as low as 8 percent.
Bowser now heads into the November general election as the presumptive favorite in a city where almost three-quarters of voters identify as Democrats. She will face gay Councilmember David Catania (I-At Large), who announced his candidacy earlier this month, as well as Libertarian Party nominee Bruce Majors and Statehood Green Party nominee Faith Dane Crannitch, who appears on the ballot as ''Faith.''
In the D.C. Council races, incumbent Chairman Phil Mendelson and Councilmembers Anita Bonds (D-At-Large), Mary Cheh (D-Ward 3), and Kenyan McDuffie (D-Ward 5) won their respective primaries, while Graham, one of only two out gay men to ever serve on the D.C. Council, lost his bid for re-election to challenger Brianne Nadeau. In the race for the Ward 6 seat being vacated by Wells, Wells's former chief of staff, Charles Allen, defeated former U.S. Senate staffer Darrel Thompson in the Democratic primary.
Following her victory in the Ward 1 race, Nadeau gave a speech before supporters at Solly's U Street Tavern in the early morning hours Wednesday, April 2, in which she thanked Graham for his 15 years of service on the Council, despite a tough and, at times, heated campaign between the two.
''Tonight we're celebrating all the people of Ward 1, because we built this campaign with their voices in mind,'' Nadeau said. ''This campaign has never been about me. You've heard me say that before, and I mean it. This is about the people of Ward 1. … And now what we're going to be able to do is take all these voices to the Wilson Building!''
Nadeau, now the Democratic nominee in Ward 1, will face off against Independent Bryan Weaver, who dropped out of the Democratic primary in January.
Mendelson and McDuffie will run unchallenged in the general election, while Cheh faces Libertarian nominee Ryan Sabot and Allen faces Libertarian nominee Pranav Badhwar in their respective races. Bonds, as an At-Large member, will face three challengers – Republican Marc Morgan, Statehood Green nominee Eugene Puryear, and Libertarian Frederick Steiner – in a contest where the top two vote-getters are elected to the D.C. Council.
David Catania
(Photo via Mayor Gray's Flickr)
While some political observers have expressed dismay over the prospect of a Council without any openly gay councilmembers, should Catania continue with his mayoral run and following Graham's defeat, the hand-wringing may be premature, as Morgan, a gay African-American and current ANC commissioner from Ward 1, stands a good chance of getting elected if he is able to mobilize a small but dedicated base of voters who can get him enough votes to come in among the top two vote-getters.
At the polls, many voters expressed disappointment or anger with Gray, saying they felt the city needed a change in leadership. Fred Bowell, 56, and his partner, Doug Anderson, 47, both told Metro Weekly they were driven to the polls by their dislike of Gray and a ''throw the bums out'' attitude. Both men said they voted for Bowser in the U Street corridor's Precinct 22. The also both voted for Mendelson for chairman, but split their votes for At-Large and Ward 1 councilmember. Bowell voted for Anita Bonds and Jim Graham, while Anderson picked their respective challengers, Nate Bennett-Fleming and Brianne Nadeau.
''I just don't think Nadeau has enough experience for me to vote for her,'' Bowell told Metro Weekly. ''I look at whether a person has experience in government, not just business. That's what kept me from supporting Andy Shallal,'' he said, referring to the local businessman and restaurant owner who came in fifth place in the mayor's race with 3 percent of the vote.
Asked which candidate was the best on LGBT issues, Anderson said that all the mayoral candidates were the same.
''It's kind of a given,'' he said. ''Maybe we're complacent, but I think someone who was vocally anti-gay wouldn't go very far in the city.''
Mark Mastro, 41, who also voted at Precinct 22, did not want to share his choice for mayor, but did say he voted for Graham in the Ward 1 race, though he noted that even competitive elections such as that race were greatly overshadowed by the mayoral campaign.
Although Mastro is a registered Democrat, he has fiscally conservative leanings, which he said would make him consider voting for Catania. In all interviews conducted on Tuesday by Metro Weekly at various precincts throughout the city, every Democrat polled – regardless of which candidate they were supporting in the primary – said they would at least consider a Catania candidacy.
Liam Toohey, 33, who does not identify as LGBT but is supportive of candidates who are LGBT-friendly, voted at Precinct 23 in Columbia Heights. Toohey said he eventually voted for Tommy Wells, though it was a decision that came with reservations.
''It's tremendously important who gets picked, and I would hate to see a person win just because they got the most people to the polls,'' Toohey said, adding that he wanted to vote for a candidate who would support issues he cared about, such as education, small-business development, libraries and parks, and advocating that Virginia and Maryland contribute more funds to the operation of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority.
''I wasn't sure of who I'd vote for,'' Toohey said. ''I almost voted for Gray, because I'd prefer him over Bowser.''
Toohey also said he voted for Mendelson, Bonds and Nadeau in the down-ticket Council races, though he also said he was ''less invested'' in his vote for Bonds.
Toohey said that if Bowser were to win, he'd consider voting for Catania in the general election.
''As a Wells voter, there are enough issues that he was speaking to in his candidacy that the others weren't, and whoever addresses those issues is most likely to get my vote.''
As results began to trickle in late in the night due to delays at the D.C. Board of Elections, it became apparent that Bowser had staked out a substantial lead over Gray, bringing smiles to the faces of Bowser supporters and disappointing many LGBT voters, particularly transgender women of color, many of whom see Gray as their only outright champion in city government. Several transgender voters organized a ''get out the vote'' campaign via word-of-mouth and social media to encourage transgender voters to cast their votes for Gray during the city's early voting period.
''Muriel Bowser didn't defeat Mayor Vincent Gray,'' transgender activist Jeri Hughes told Metro Weekly. ''[U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia] Ron Machen defeated Mayor Vincent Gray. The real loser in this race is the District of Columbia.''
''We have lost the best Mayor we ever had,'' she continued, referring to Gray's advocacy on behalf of the transgender community, such as launching a program to help transgender people receive job training.
Lane Hudson, a local LGBT activist and one of the co-chairs of ''Gray Pride,'' the Gray team's LGBT outreach effort, posted a statement on Facebook following his candidate's loss.
''I am still proud of my mayor,'' Hudson wrote. ''He is one of the best public servants I have ever known. I will be taking some time to figure out my next steps. Will be listening very closely to what Muriel Bowser says and does to bring our party together, and also curious of the tone and approach that David Catania brings to this race.''
In her victory speech, Bowser congratulated her supporters and campaign team, and extended an olive branch to supporters of other candidates, praising Wells, Reta Jo Lewis, and Councilmember Jack Evans (D-Ward 2) and vowing that Democrats would be ''united'' for November's election.
''I promised then, as I promise now, that I would run a campaign of integrity, of vision, and energy, and inclusion,'' Bowser said. ''I promised that our campaign would reflect the collective values of all of us in all eight wards.''
Bowser supporters were ecstatic about her win.
Sean Wieland, who worked on previous Bowser campaigns for Ward 4, called Bowser an ''effective leader who always considers the needs of every resident,'' listing her accomplishments during her time on the Council.
''Muriel will continue to move D.C. forward through education reform, infrastructure improvements and addressing other quality-of-life issues,'' Wieland said.
''I am over the moon that she won,'' LGBT activist and longtime Bowser supporter Christopher Dyer said of Bowser's victory. ''I think that her vision for D.C. voters is positive, and it was great to see that the voters responded to her.''
Catania congratulated Bowser on her victory in an interview on Fox 5, but quickly transitioned into framing the general election as a choice rather than a referendum or a rubber stamp for a particular political party, foreshadowing his pitch to voters in the upcoming general election campaign. He also said the low turnout in Tuesday's election was ''not really an endorsement of the process, or candidly, the candidates.''
''This primary was really an election about who should not be mayor of our city,'' Catania told Fox 5. ''But the general election is different: The general election will be about who should be mayor of our city. … I look forward to a spirited debate about who can best secure the future of our city.''
...moreOpponents warn that the new law will allow widespread discrimination against LGBT people and others by those claiming serving such people or groups violates their 'religious freedom.'
The filmâs producer and director have both shared details about the upcoming adaptation of the '80s cartoon
A drama based on one of the most pivotal moments in the history of the LGBT civil rights movement is headed for the big screen.
This>This is easily the most spectacular musical to come out of Broadway this season. Director Alex Timbers has long been one of the American theatre’s most inventive stagers, and here he has truly outdone himself, with a stunning, climactic ending that will be hard for him to top going forward. Based on the 1976 film […]
The post Theatre Review: “Rocky” appeared first on GaySocialites.com.
The Friarâs Club Comedy Film Festival opened Tuesday night with the premiere of Psych star James Rodayâs new movie, Gravy. The film is a comedy horror featuring: Sarah Silverman, Michael Weston, Gabourey Sidibe, Paul Rodriguez, Jimmi Simpson, Sutton Foster, Lily Cole, Molly Ephraim, Lothaire Bluteau, Kate Rogal, Gabriel Luna and Ethan Sandler, with appearances from […]
The post World premiere of Gravy kicks off Friar’s Club Comedy Festival! appeared first on GaySocialites.com.
Playing President Lyndon B. Johnson, Bryan Cranston brilliantly captures that president’s tireless energy and ruthless political gamesmanship in this drama about the events between LBJ’s swearing-in as President following Kennedy’s assassination, and his actual election as president around a year later, with a very strong focus on Johnson’s commitment to the passage of the Civil […]
The post Theatre Review: “All the Way” appeared first on GaySocialites.com.
Same-sex couples in England and Wales are now allowed to legally marry under a new law that took place last week, and the major political parties are all on board. According to the BBC, Politicians from the main parties have hailed the change in the law. Prime Minister David Cameron said the move sent a […]
The post Gay marriage begins in England and Wales appeared first on GaySocialites.com.
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