Stay tuned for GSA bill in Senate

In case there was any doubt about which generation is providing leadership: Due to continuing legislative efforts to deny GLBTQ and allied youth their constitutionally protected right to freedom of expression and association, a new statewide grassroots youth coalition has been founded. The Commonwealth Education Equality Virginia Initiative was founded in response to HB 1308, the second attempt in two years by the Virginia General Assembly to deny youth the support they need by interfering with Gay/Straight Alliances. Read the CEEVA press release in the previous post, and please support these youth who are standing up for themselves. They need a little money for startup expenses.

HB 1308 was passed by the House, 70-29. Here is the vote roster:

YEAS–Abbitt, Albo, Armstrong, Athey, Barlow, Bell, Bulova, Byron, Callahan, Carrico, Cline, Cole, Cosgrove, Cox, Crockett-Stark, Dudley, Fralin, Frederick, Gear, Gilbert, Griffith, Hamilton, Hargrove, Hogan, Howell, A.T., Hugo, Hurt, Iaquinto, Ingram, Janis, Joannou, Johnson, Jones, S.C., Kilgore, Landes, Lewis, Lingamfelter, Lohr, Marsden, Marshall, D.W., Marshall, R.G., May, McQuigg, Miller, Moran, Morgan, Nixon, Nutter, O’Bannon, Oder, Orrock, Peace, Phillips, Purkey, Putney, Rapp, Reid, Rust, Saxman, Scott, E.T., Sherwood, Suit, Tata, Valentine, Wardrup, Ware, R.L., Welch, Wittman, Wright, Mr. Speaker–70.

NAYS–Alexander, Amundson, BaCote, Bowling, Brink, Caputo, Dance, Ebbin, Eisenberg, Englin, Hall, Hull, Jones, D.C., McClellan, McEachin, Melvin, Plum, Poisson, Scott, J.M., Shannon, Shuler, Sickles, Spruill, Toscano, Tyler, Waddell, Ward, Ware, O., Watts–29.

Delegate May actually co-patroned this bill last year, so the fact that he only voted for it this time represents a marginal improvement. He will benefit from continuing to hear factual information from his constituents.

Delegate Rust for some reason thinks that the bill has nothing to do with Gay/Straight Alliances, despite patron Matt Lohr’s explicit statement that his intention was to make it possible to prohibit school clubs “based on one’s sexual preference and orientation”. Delegate Rust’s position seems to be that, since in fact no school clubs “promote sexual behavior for unmarried minor students,” the bill does nothing.

This strikes us as a pretty weak argument. The fact that a bill is unneccessary, and that the problem it purports to solve doesn’t exist, is often cited as justification for voting against it. In fact, this was precisely the reason given by Delegates Oder and Suit for voting down a bill to give localities more control over local land use decisions. As cited in the Washington Post, Delegate Oder said, “I’m just not convinced this is necessary.” Delegate Suit added that there is no need for new legislation to authorize powers that local governments already have. “This can already be done,” she said. “Chesapeake has been doing it this way for years.”

Delegate Poisson had this to say about why he voted no:

“But there has also been a long list of bills that aren’t designed to fix problems but rather to create them.

One is HB 1308 that authorizes school boards to prohibit the use of school facilities by any student club or other student group that encourages or promotes sexual activity by unmarried minor students. School boards, however, already have that authority.

I can assure you that if our local school board allowed any student group to advocate illegal activity, including premarital sex, I would be the first to object. This bill was introduced simply to portray opponents as promoting sexual activity. I viewed this as political grandstanding at its worst, and so I voted against the bill.”

This is exactly right, and furthermore, the purpose of that dishonest portrayal is to set a trap for uninformed principals who would be led to believe that they could lawfully deny students the right to establish and maintain Gay/Straight Alliances or similar clubs. Any such denial will result in an expensive lawsuit that the school district unfortunate enough to fall victim to this trap will lose.

Introducing legislation at the state level that would encourage the violation of federal law seems to us to be a very bad idea, and putting hapless school districts at the risk of ending up in court seems to us to be more than nothing. Adding a provision giving the Attorney General discretion to defend school districts in these inevitable lawsuits only highlights the fact that this is a deliberate attempt to violate federal law.

HB 1308 will now be heard by the Senate Education and Health Committee, possibly the morning of Thursday, February 16. Last year, a virtually identical bill was defeated in this committee 9-6. The vote (to kill the bill) last year:

YEAS–Potts (Chairman), Saslaw, Lambert, Houck, Lucas, Howell, Quayle, Edwards, Whipple–9.

NAYS–Martin, Newman, Bolling, Ruff, Mims, Blevins–6.

Bolling and Mims have been replaced on this committee by Rerras and Bell.

Posted in Advocacy, Reports | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Stay tuned for GSA bill in Senate

Statewide group for gay youth forms

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February, 9, 2006
Contact: Tully Satre
Founder/Executive Director
info@CEEVAinitiative.org
540.219.1654

Statewide group for gay youth forms

Responding to continued attacks against Virginia’s gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) youth, a new coalition has been formed to work to protect the rights of students to assemble and meet on school property. The “CEEVA (Commonwealth Education Equality Virginia) Initiative” is working to bring together student groups, advisors and other professionals and advocates to oppose legislation that will restrict “Gay Straight Alliances” (GSAs) and other measures.

The second week of January, HB 1308 was filed by Delegate Matt Lohr (R-Harrisonburg.) HB 1308 was initially intended to target Gay/Straight Alliances, student clubs that provide peer support GLBT youth. The bill flew through the House Education Committee and passed through the House 70-29. The CEEVA coalition has responded to HB 1308.

CEEVA Initiative has formed into a statewide organization. “We are here to provide a resource network for Gay/Straight Alliance clubs and GLBT youth in Virginia,” says the organization’s founder, Tully Satre, a 16 year-old gay activist, “CEEVA will work towards equality, and fair treatment for Virginia’s GLBT high school youth.” CEEVA has been working to organize GSAs across the state. The group will also educate the commonwealth about GLBT youth in Virginia.

Groups such as GLSEN (Gay and Lesbian Straight Education Network, in regions of Richmond and Northern Virginia), and Virginia Out (a statewide group for GLBT college students) have made a strong presence in Virginia youth activism. “Gay youth are in need of protection in Virginia,” said Dyana Mason, Executive Director of Equality Virginia, Virginia’s leading gay rights group, “CEEVA will help advocate for that protection.”

“We know that GLBT and supportive youth can speak for themselves, CEEVA will simply bring them together as one strong voice.” declared Satre. You can visit the group online at www.CEEVAinitiative.org

Posted in Advocacy, Press releases | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Statewide group for gay youth forms

In Virginia, a Step Backward

Washington Post
February 5, 2006

Now that the Virginia legislature has passed the marriage amendment for a second time and the measure is almost certainly headed to the November ballot, Virginia voters should understand exactly what the amendment does.

Although proponents argue that it merely defines marriage as being between a man and a woman, the amendment goes much farther than that. If, as some polls suggest, most Virginia voters favor defining marriage as between a man and a woman but also believe that gay partners should be given equal rights concerning taxes, health benefits, hospital visitation, etc., this amendment runs counter to that belief.

The second and third sentences of the marriage amendment, although vague in certain aspects, are clear about banning civil unions and domestic partnerships between citizens, whether gay or straight.

Continue reading

Posted in Advocacy | Tagged , , | Comments Off on In Virginia, a Step Backward

What’s real marriage

Church takes on hot-button issue

Loudoun Times-Mirror
January 28, 2006
By Eileen M. Carlton

The congregations of St. James United Church of Christ in Lovettsville and Clarendon Presbyterian Church in Arlington differ in many ways.

But both congregations are united in their belief that the nature of marriage is changing and that the Christian approach to these changes should be one of tolerance and enlightenment.

The pastor of the Clarendon Presbyterian congregation, the Rev. David Ensign, made headlines last November by renouncing his state authority to marry couples, heterosexual or same sex, as a protest against Virginia laws banning same-sex marriage.

The pastor of St. James UCC, the Rev. Don Prange, supported his congregation’s suggestion to bring Ensign to Loudoun to be the keynote speaker at a forum discussing his decision and marriage in general.

more »

Posted in Advocacy, News | Tagged , , | Comments Off on What’s real marriage

Oppose attack on Gay/Straight Alliances

HB 1308, a bill intended to target Gay/Straight Alliances by misleading legislators about their purpose and activities, is being patroned by Delegate Matt Lohr. In case there was any doubt about his intention, we provide the following:

“I personally am against any sanctioned school club being formed on the basis of one’s sexual orientation. I understand the current law regarding the Equal Access Amendment and realize that school boards are currently limited in how they can deal with these clubs. I favor trying to change the law that so that local school boards have the power to refuse to sanction organizations based on one’s sexual preference and orientation.”

– Delegate Matt Lohr (R-Harrisonburg) on the subject of Gay/Straight Alliances in Virginia’s Public High Schools. (The Conservative Voice)

The bill was approved Wednesday in the House Committee on Education, and will go to the full House probably on Monday, January 30.

Send an email to your Delegate opposing this misguided and cruel bill at Equality Virginia’s action center.

PRESS RELEASE – Coalition formed to defeat anti-gay bill
Contact: Tully Satre
Project: Commonwealth Education Equality (CEE)
540.219.1654
tully@efcva.org

“House Bill 1308 counts on a deliberate misrepresentation of the nature and purpose of Gay-Straight Alliances,” says John Leppo, Chapter Co-Chair, Richmond chapter of GLSEN (Gay, Lesbian, Straight Education Network), “GSA clubs are not about sexual activity – they are about promoting understanding and reducing harassment in schools.”

The second week of January, HB 1308 was filed by Delegate Matt Lohr (R-Harrisonburg.) The bill was assigned to the House Committee of Education and can be heard as soon as next week. In response to this bill, a coalition of Virginia GLBT leaders, and organizations (such as the ACLU) have formed “Project: Commonwealth Education Equality” This coalition is communicating between organizations and GSAs to defeat HB 1308.

“The bill’s language misleads local school boards into believing GSA clubs can be prohibited under the Federal Equal Access Act,” says Leppo, “in fact, [GSAs] cannot be prohibited when they are formed and operate according to established rules for clubs. Unfortunately, Virginia taxpayers will be footing the bill for litigation costs in losing court cases if this bill becomes law.”

“Virginia’s gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender youth need to be equally protected in our school systems,” says Tully Satre, director of Project: Commonwealth Education Equality (CEE), “Gay/Straight Alliances provide support, and education to the group itself and its school community. These clubs are a voice for a minority in our schools.”

“It’s critical that our elected officials understand the intent of this bill; the Coalition coming together to fight this measure is working to organize GSAs across the state, educate our elected officials on the purpose of the organizations, and encourage fair-minded supporters to speak out,” said Dyana Mason, Equality Virginia Executive Director. The coalition currently includes Virginia Out, ACLU of Virginia, Equality Virginia, GLSEN Richmond and GLSEN Northern Virginia and numerous GSAs from around the state.

Posted in Advocacy | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

State’s Marriage Proposal Hits Home in Arlington

[Excellent coverage of the broad implications of the anti-marriage amendment and the fact that most Virginians will not support it if they know what it says. This is the information that needs to get out there.]

Washington Post Arlington Extra
January 26, 2006
By Jamie Stockwell

Gay County Board Member, Others Decry Amendment

Neither Jay Fisette nor his partner of 22 years has given much thought to the idea of marriage. Besides, as Virginians, marriage isn’t even an option for the same-sex couple.

And so Fisette, an Arlington County Board member, said he was surprised at how deeply hurt he felt last week by the overwhelming passage of state legislation to ban gay marriage.

The proposed constitutional amendment, poised to go before voters in November, sailed through the House of Delegates and was expected to face little resistance this week in the Senate. The measure passed both chambers last year but must be approved again this session before it can be put on the ballot.

more »

Posted in News | Tagged , , | Comments Off on State’s Marriage Proposal Hits Home in Arlington

Church Ceremony Celebrates Gay Pairs

Straight Couples Join in Vows of Commitment at Protest Event in Arlington

“This is not our choice,” [said Jay Fisette, Arlington County Board member] “It’s been thrust upon us. . . . We yearn for the day when these gestures are not viewed as threatening. We are not there yet. Our state has been slow to understand, slow to shed its fear.”

Washington Post
January 23, 2006
By Stephanie McCrummen

In a gesture of love that has become in Virginia, as elsewhere, a gesture of political protest, about 60 gay and heterosexual couples, some young and others who’ve been together 25 years or more, reaffirmed their vows of commitment yesterday in a ceremony at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Arlington.

Coming days after a Maryland judge ruled that a state law banning same-sex marriage is discriminatory and as Virginia legislators consider a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman, the ceremony had an air of celebration and defiance.

more »

Posted in Advocacy | Tagged , | Comments Off on Church Ceremony Celebrates Gay Pairs