Thursday, December 13, 2007

Marilee Lindemann wins award!

With permission, an email from Professor William A. Cohen:
Dear LGBTQI Friends, Colleagues, and Allies,

It is a great pleasure to inform you that our own Marilee Lindemann is
the recipient of a Michael Lynch Service Award from the
Gay-Lesbian/Queer Caucus of the Modern Language Association of America
for 2007. The award honors Marilee's extensive service in building and
directing the LGBT Studies program at the University of Maryland, as
well as her innovative scholarship and teaching in queer studies.

The Michael Lynch Service Award is meant, in Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's
words, "to publicize and celebrate--and as widely as possible--the
range, the forms, the energy, and the history of queer activism by
academics." The prize will be awarded at the MLA Convention in Chicago
later this month.

Please join me in congratulating Marilee for this impressive and
well-deserved honor.

Best wishes for the end of the semester,

Bill

--
William A. Cohen
Associate Professor
Department of English
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742
wcohen@umd.edu
Congrats Dr. Lindemann!!!

Friday, December 7, 2007

Trans in College

The Columbia Spectator, Columbia University's student newspaper, published a story today titled "Transgender Students Search for Campus Niche."

It is a very interesting story that touches on a lot of the struggles faced by transgender college students across the country.

To read the story, click here.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Colleges Recruit with Pro-LGBT Message

According to a Campus Pride press release:
CHARLOTTE, December 4, 2007 –This past weekend thirty colleges from across the United States came out to recruit high school youth and highlight their programs and services for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people. The national East Coast fair took place this past Satuday, December 1 on the campus of University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

...

The thirty colleges who participated in the East Coast fair were: Bucknell University, Columbia University, Connecticut College, Williams College, Eugene Lang College, Georgetown University, Goucher College, Illinois Institute of Technology, Lehigh University, Lewis & Clark College, Alfred University, Barnard College, Binghamton State University of New York, Michigan Tech, Syracuse University, Swarthmore College, Roosevelt University, Pennsylvania State University, Washington & Lee University, Monmouth University, Towson University, Princeton University, Brandeis University, Marymount Manhattan College, Emory University, University of Utah, University of Texas Austin, Hofstra University and University of Pennsylvania.
Very encouraging news! And, it's great to see that University System of Maryland was represented with Towson University attending! I attended Towson for one semester and am proud to see that it is involved in LGBT outreach.

Monday, December 3, 2007

LGB(T?) Greek Life study

Released today, from CampusPride.org:
The Lambda 10 Project, an educational initiative of Campus Pride, released results and a set of strategic recommendations from the first-ever national formal research exploring the LGBT experience within fraternities and sororities from 1960 to 2007.
The press release about the new research, which can be found here, states the following:

Results published in the Lambda 10 Project report suggest that fraternity and sorority organizations are more welcoming of LGB members today than in the past. Over 75% of the respondents were "out" to members of their fraternity/sorority, with current undergraduates reporting that they were more "out" (83%) than their alumni/ae counterparts (25%). The study also indicated the main reason LGBT people join fraternities and sororities are for "friendship" and that a significant number of these students are involved as leaders in their respective chapters.

"Overall the research is very encouraging and echoes the change in attitudes from younger generations to be more open-minded and inclusive of LGBT people," said Sue Rankin, Ph.D., the lead researcher for the study. "However, as the results suggest, we still have some work to do given that over 50% of current undergraduate (n=98) respondents reported that the climate within their chapters was somewhat homophobic."

This is an intriguing study, but I have a qualm. The use of the acronym "LGBT" seems like the most inclusive way to address our community these days, but if you aren't talking about transgender people, then don't imply you are.

Here is something to consider about the Lambda 10 project, also from the press release:
The report released today by the Lambda 10 Project is the first-ever formal research of its kind and the largest national study to date. The research builds on the data from an informal assessment published by Case (1995). Four hundred and forty people who self-identified as either current or past fraternity and sorority members responded to the call to participate in February 2006. The participants included 347 men, 88 women and one transgender person.
ONE transgender person?? ONE?

I question whether this report should be called "Experiences of LGBT People in Fraternities & Sororities." Maybe just LGB?

Either way, should be an interesting read!

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

"Brothers on the Down Low" Presentation at UMD

"Bridging the Gap between Love and Sexuality"
Brothers on the Down Low Part Two
A Discussion with J.L King
Featuring Def Poet ButtaFlySoul

Friday, Nov. 30
7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
University of Maryland Reckord Armory 0135
Free Admission

"This program is the second of a two part series addressing the topic of "men on the down low". It will seek to answer these questions: What is your perception/stereotype of men? How about men on the down low? What are the truths that underlie the myths of the brother on down low? Is there a correlation between down low men and HIV/AIDS? The Discussion will be lead by J.L. King, Author of “On the Down Low: A Journey into the Lives of 'Straight' Black Men Who Sleep with Men.” Also featuring a performance by Poet and Activist ButtaFlySoul from Russell Simmons’s HBO series, Def Poetry.

"Down Low" (DL) defined: men who traditionally identify as "straight" while having sex with other men—refusing to employ the standardized descriptors of sexual identity. "

Presented by Delta Sigma Theta, Pride Alliance, Student Entertainment Events, Student Global AIDS Campaign, University Health Center, and Zeta Phi Beta.

*Information from Facebook event listing.

Opinion Columns on Transgender and HIV/AIDS Issues

In the The Diamondback's opinion section - which I am an editor of - today, University of Maryland senior Andrew Bowen wrote a column about transgender issues at the university, in the state and across the country.

Check out the column here.

Also today, staff opinion columnist Matthew John Phillips - a University of Maryland junior - wrote his feelings about how we think about HIV/AIDS today, referencing the 19th annual World AIDS Day on Dec. 1.

Check that column out here.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Shopping for Trans Remembrance w/ HRC

Checking my mailbox today, I saw a new email from Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese titled "New! '08 Buying for Equality guide."

Opening the email, I was chagrined to see that the HRC had sent an email about shopping instead of one about Transgender Day of Remembrance - which is today. Although it is a commendable wish to have members of the LGBT community and our allies do their holiday shopping with companies that support equality, which is the goal of the guide, couldn't that email have been sent tomorrow, or the next day, or any day other than Transgender Day of Remembrance?

Where is the HRC's email about this important day? Maybe I missed it?

Going to the HRC's website, the first thing I saw was an advertisement for an ornament being sold at the HRC Store. The only mention of Transgender Day of Remembrance was a small link farther down the page.

The HRC is a great organization that does a lot of good. But it certainly missed the mark today.

Resources for Today, Transgender Day of Remembrance

Today is the day for everyone to contemplate the discrimination and violence faced by our transgender family, friends, peers, colleagues and coworkers. It is a day to think about all the ways in which we can fight against that discrimination and violence.

A great place to get some insight on the issue from the perspective of someone in tune with campus communities can be found here, on CampusProgress.org.

Check out some of the Gay-Straight Alliance network's recommendations for activities to take part in today here, via a blog from the Washington Blade. Another great resource can be found here.

Today is also a great day to think about the realities behind the noninclusive ENDA.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Partial Domestic Partner Benefits for TAs

Last year, partial domestic partner benefits were extended to faculty and staff at the University of Maryland. It was a way for the university to extend as many benefits as possible to domestic partners without the Board of Regents consent. The Board of Regents has continuously been the roadblock to the university extending full domestic partner benefits.

Now, the University Senate is dealing with whether or not to extend similar partial benefits to teaching and research assistants.

Check out The Diamondback's story about the Senate's postponement on the proposal here.

Also, in today's Diamondback, the editorial board - which I am part of - wrote a Staff Editorial about the issue. Check that out here.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Arguments over ENDA

I have argued that the House passing ENDA only further isolated transgender people. I still believe that. But I found this editorial by The New York Times Friday saying that progress must be accepted incrementally interesting, especially for its inclusion of a link to the HRC's Timeline of Federal Civil Rights Laws.

Much to think about. But, what remains clear to me is this: regardless of whether change occurs incrementally, voicing what is right can be done at once. If nobody was challenging the non-inclusiveness of ENDA, how much further behind would we be in the fight for trans rights?

Thursday, November 8, 2007

ENDA Passes House...Big Whoop

So, the non-transinclusive ENDA passed yesterday in the House of Representatives. (Get the Washington Blade's story here.)

Forgive me if I'm not excited, even a little turned off. In my mind, this is not a great civil rights victory. It smells too much like false hopes and desertion - namely the latter.

First off, we have this, from the Blade's story, to consider:
Despite the historic House vote, there is little chance that ENDA will become law this year. The measure has yet to be introduced in the U.S. Senate, and last week, the White House issued a statement saying that senior advisers have recommended that President Bush veto the bill should Congress pass it.
Second, what we have to consider is the fact that this legislation leaves transgender people even more isolated in the American workforce than ever before, regardless of whether it passes into law. Gay and lesbian Americans yesterday received direct reassurance that the discrimination they face in the workforce is not being taken lightly by legislators. Transgender people, on the other hand, only received reassurance that they will continue to be ignored by those same legislators (and continue to be discriminated against).

(Tammy Baldwin deserves some respect. At least the amendment she introduced and then withdrew acknowledged the discrimination transgender people face. It shouldn't have been withdrawn though.)

How can we as gay and lesbian people grasp longingly at workplace protections that mean isolation for transgender people? You never leave comrades behind. A soldier who doesn't go back for his fallen friend may be doing the safe, smart thing - the thing that will probably afford him the best chance of survival at the time - but he isn't doing the brave thing, the valiant thing, the type of thing that people look back to for inspiration and humanity. When he does go back, however, he is saying, "We are in this together," and he is setting an example for others in the future who may be in a similar situation.

While the passage of a non-transinclusive ENDA may have been the safe, smart thing for gay and lesbian people to wish for, it will not be looked back on as any great achievement for them. It will be looked back on as a cold-hearted maneauver that left transgender people alone and vulnerable in the trenches.

So much for a great civil rights victory.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Wojahn Wins in District 1!

As reported by The Diamondback today, Patrick Wojahn, a civil rights lawyer, College Park resident and plaintiff in the state's recent same-sex marriage case, has won a District 1 seat on the College Park City Council.

Congratulations Patrick! It is great that there will now be a gay council member in the home city of the University of Maryland.

As a side note, College Park already offers domestic partner benefits, unlike the University of Maryland.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Queer and Feminism Lectures at UMDCP

“Queering Performance in Three Films: American Beauty, Being John Malkovich and Boys Don't Cry”
Lecture by Dr. Christine Holmlund
Professor of French, Cinema Studies and Women’s Studies
University of Tennessee
When: 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 8
Where: St. Mary's Hall Multipurpose Room, UMDCP
Also:

Dr. Holmlund will discuss "Feminism and Post-colonialism in French Cinema"
in Caroline Eades' FREN 699G Seminar

When: 3:30 p.m. Nov. 8
Where: Jimenez Hall 3120
All are welcome to attend.
For more information, contact:
Caroline Eades
301 405 4029
ceades@umd.edu

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Queer Theater! This Saturday @ Towson Univ.

Check it out: some queer theater at Towson University!!

Walk Like A Man - The Play
Saturday, November 3, 2007 on the Mainstage at Towson University Center for the Arts
8000 York Road, Towson, MD.
Showtime is 7:00 p.m.
"With a mission to educate and promote diversity through theatre, Positive Scribe Productions uses spoken word and dramatic monologues to bring to life everyday realities in the gay community. The scene “Dress Right Dress,” helps the audience understand the ramifications of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” when they witness two older lesbians who finally find the love for which they have been searching. But when one dies as a casualty of war, the other has to maintain the façade of “just a friend” to protect her deceased partner’s secret. Other scenes portray couples dealing with emotional infidelity, same-sex domestic violence, gender identification, homophobia at work, homosexuality and religion, the joy of new love and the loss of an old one."

"But be warned, this is groundbreaking theatre that dares to tackle labels, issues, and stereotypes commonly faced in the LGBT community."

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Body, Sexuality and Society Presentations

Passing along:

The Department and Program of American Studies at University of Maryland, College Park are proud to present the fourth installment of the American Studies Fall 2007 Colloquium Series:

Body, Sexuality, and Society Graduate Student Presentations
Introduced by Dr. Nancy Struna

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 12—2 pm
1108 Holzapfel Hall, UMDCP Campus

The following graduate students will read their research papers from the Body, Sexuality, and Society seminar.

Robert Choflet — "Neoliberal Healthcare and Maryland's Carceral Spaces"

Kenyatta Graves — "Girl, How Can You Tell?: The Down-Low and Di(ck)straction in Black Communities"

Christopher J. Pérez — "Scripting Trauma / Tran-Scripting Trauma: The 'Body' of Evidence and Interviewers' Roles in Political Asylum"

Kristen Williams — "Stuffed Shirts and Talking Heads, or The Body as Marginalia in Political Performance"

For more information about the American Studies Colloquium Series, contact Mary Corbin Sies: marycorbinsies@yahoo.com

(Brown Bag Lunch — Light Refreshments Will Be Served)

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Gay men earn less

As reported by Reuters Life! today:
"Gay men, but not lesbians, face discrimination at work, earning up to 23 percent less than married men in some jobs, according to a new study."
Check out the full story here.

Monday, October 22, 2007

A New Gay Icon?


There is now a gay icon in schools across the world. Dumbledore is gay!

Long live J.K. Rowling and her books.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Colloquium on "The Construction of Risk in Gay Neighborhood History"

Passing on the message:

The Department and Program of American Studies at University of Maryland, College Park is proud to present the third installment of the American Studies Fall 2007 Colloquium Series :

Dr. Christina Hanhardt, Department of American Studies and Program in LGBT Studies

"Safe Bet?: The Construction of Risk in Gay Neighborhood History"

OCTOBER 23, 12:30-2pm, 0142 Holzapfel Hall

For more information about the American Studies Colloquium Series, contact Mary Corbin Sies: marycorbinsies@yahoo.com

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Our Opponents (The "Frightful" Ones)

Check out the QUEERTY list of "The 20 Most Frightful Anti-Gay Activists."

An interesting read. Click here.

Friday, October 12, 2007

My favorite Rally speakers!

Yesterday, on National Coming Out Day, many wonderful speakers reiterated the need for domestic partner benefits at the University of Maryland.

Check out The Diamondback's story on the event here.

Here are some pictures of my favorite speakers:

Elbridge James (President of Progressive MD, Former President of NAACP MD):
"One Maryland!"




Phil Nash (Asian American Studies Department): A straight ally!



Marilee Lindemann (Director of LGBT Studies Program): Benefits now!

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

National Coming Out Day

Tomorrow is National Coming Out Day!
Thursday, Oct. 11

EVENTS at UMD:

"Minorities Within the GLBT Minority - Scratching the Surface at the Intersections of Race, Gender and Sexual Orientation."

w/ Cuc Vu, Chief Diversity Officer & Che Juan Gonzales Tabisola, Manager, Research Center, Human Rights Campaign

Noon - 1:30 p.m.
Multipurpose Room, Nyumburu Cultural Center

RALLY for Domestic Partners!!

4:00 p.m.
Nyumburu Amphitheater

*see post below for details

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

In the News

The Washington Blade yesterday announced the domestic partner benefits rally to be held at the University of Maryland's Nyumburu Amphitheater Thursday.

Check it out here.

Also, on the front page of today's New York Times, there is a very important story on elderly LGBT people facing discrimination - and the efforts to change that - titled, "Aging and Gay, And Facing Prejudice in Twilight."

The story is heartbreaking, precautionary and informative.

Read the story here.

Monday, October 8, 2007

In the News

Today, The Chronicle of Higher Education published a story titled "Domestic Partners Got Health Benefits at More Colleges This Year, Survey Finds."

"According to the survey," the article states, "40 percent of colleges and universities now offer health coverage to same-sex partners, compared with 38 percent last year."

To read the whole story, click here.

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Personal thoughts on ENDA

Gay, lesbian and bisexual people who think it acceptable to pass a version of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act that leaves out transgender people should take a refresher course in gay history.

Maybe then they would realize the 1969 riot at the Stonewall Inn so often credited with instigating the gay rights movement would never have had the impact it did were it not for the drag queens who stood up to the New York City police.

They should also read the Human Rights Campaign’s 2008 Corporate Equality Index, which reports 98 percent of rated employers “provide employment protections on the basis of sexual orientation,” while only 58 percent provide protections on the basis of “gender identity.”

A trans-exclusive ENDA only leaves the members of the LGBT community most vulnerable to workplace discrimination more isolated. Any gay, lesbian or bisexual people who think otherwise should understand their opinion reeks of the same sour smell effused by early feminists who disregarded lesbians, early white activists who disregarded the existence of non-white gays and lesbians and all of those people who still think the military operates without the valuable services of LGBT people.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Neat GLBT History Month Website

October is GLBT History Month.

As part of this year's celebration, organizers have developed a website full of interesting information on 31 icons of GLBT history.

Click here to go to the interactive website. It is really interesting.

Also, check out the Washington Blade's story on the month here.

OCT 11 RALLY ON CAMPUS!!

From the University of Maryland Pride Alliance:

Rally to Support President Mote's Domestic Partnership Proposal
October 11th, 2007 at 4:00pm
Nyumburu Amphitheater

In 1994, the University of Maryland's University Senate voted by a large margin in favor of domestic partner benefits; yet despite repeated attempts to move forward, off campus forces have prevented implementation. On April 16, 2007 President Mote submitted a proposal to Chancellor Kirwan.

The proposal requests that the University of Maryland, College Park be permitted to use existing funds to implement Domestic Partnership Benefits.
The Pride Alliance understands that government agencies are reviewing the President's proposal, yet it is far past time to move forward on Domestic Partnership Benefits.
We are urging Governor O'Malley, Chancellor Kirwan, and the Board of Regents to make President Mote's proposal a reality.
The Pride Alliance invites you to attend our rally and show your support for Domestic Partnership Benefits.

Confirmed Speakers:

Dr. Phil Nash (Asian American Studies Dept.)
Delegate Mizuer (MD District 20)
Delegate Pena-Melnyk (MD District 21)
Senator Raskin (MD District 20)
Senator Madaleno (MD District 18)
Pat Wojahn & Dave Kolesar (Plantiffs in MD Marriage Court Case)
Doug Duncan (Former Montgomery County Executive, VP of Academic Affairs UMD)
Elbridge James (President of Progressive MD, Former President of NAACP MD)


For more information, please contact VP.Pride@umd.edu or 301.405.0755

Kudos to the Pride Alliance. I know all its officers have been working very hard. This is exactly the type of event needed. If you can make it, make it. Numbers mean a lot.

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Update and News

I haven't posted in a few days because I have been quite busy. At the end of last week I rejoined The Diamondback staff as one of two Opinion Editors.

I will continue to pen this blog, and acknowledge my doing so in full disclosure if and when I decide to write opinion columns.

I did so today.

There has been much talk surrounding two recent hate crimes at the University of Maryland - one a noose hung near the university's Nyumburu Cultural Center, and the other a swastika spray-painted on a car outside of a fraternity.

In light of those crimes, my column today questions a fraternity whose brothers denounced "homosexuality" last week in a step show at Nyumburu. It aims to remind people that LGBT people were persecuted by Nazis and their swastikas as well, and that two young men in Iran were just hung with nooses for, many said, being gay.

Click here to check it out.

Also, the Washington Blade reported yesterday on an alleged anti-gay assault at nearby Georgetown University.

To read the Blade's story, click here.

Monday, October 1, 2007

In the News

The Diamondback ran another opinion column today on same-sex marriage.

Click here to check it out.

Friday, September 28, 2007

Wojahn for City Council

As I previously wrote, Patrick Wojahn, one of the plaintiffs in the recent court decision to uphold Maryland's same-sex marriage ban, is running for a District 1 seat in the College Park City Council.

It would be great to have an openly-gay city council member so near to the University of Maryland.

To read today's Washington Blade's story, click here.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Senate passes Matthew Shepard Act

The Human Rights Campaign announced today in a press release:
WASHINGTON– In an historic step toward equality for GLBT Americans, the U.S. Senate voted to pass the Matthew Shepard Act, which updates and expands the federal hate crimes laws to include bias motivated violence based on a victim’s sexual orientation, gender identity, gender, and disability, and provides new resources and tools to assist local law enforcement in prosecuting vicious crimes.
To read the entire press release, click here.

In an email sent to those on HRC's email list, HRC President Joe Solmonese also noted:
But even as we celebrate this victory – we know we face a tough road ahead. The bill has to survive final negotiations between the House and Senate before it gets to President Bush. Even then, he has threatened to veto it.

Misleading, misleading, misleading!

I went to The Chronicle of Higher Education's website today, and was shocked to read this on the homepage:
U. of Arizona is the first state university to hire a paid full-time director of gay-and-lesbian affairs
"Huh?" I said. "That's not true! What about Luke Jensen (Director of the Office of LGBT Equity, UMDCP)??"

I then followed the Chronicle's link to the Tucson Citizen story that it was reporting, which can be seen here.

"Yes, ok, now I see," I said. University of Arizona is the first state university in ARIZONA to hire someone for this type of position.

Hmm.

Why would the Chronicle write its tease for the story in such a misleading way?? If you go to the website for The National Consortium of Directors of LGBT Resources in Higher Education, you can view a very long list of people in positions similar to the one being announced at the University of Arizona. To get there, click here.

Was the lack of unclarity unrealized? Were they trying to make the story seem more monumental than it was, to draw more readers?

For someone unfamiliar with LGBT issues in higher education, the Chronicle's tease could cause a severe misunderstanding of where the LGBT community stands in higher education.

Not to mention that this comes not long after the Chronicle botched a story on the number of "openly gay" university presidents there are in the country.

Shoddy.

Column on Ahmadinejad

Towson University's The Towerlight today included a "Pespective" piece on why Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had a right to speak at Columbia University (where, by the way, he denounced homosexuality and claimed the "phenomenon" didn't exist in his country).

I like student writer Andrew Carton's argument supporting the freedom of speech and the value of dialogue.

His column begins:
I really wonder if Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, upon receiving the invitation from Columbia University, said to his staff, "I've been invited to a city full of people I want to see eradicated. What a splendid idea. Perhaps my awesome powers of persuasion will stop them from hating me."
Check out Carton's entire piece here.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

In the News

Today, in a story titled "Struck down, but undeterred," The Diamondback asked questions about the Maryland Court of Appeals' recent decision to uphold the state's ban on same-sex marriage to two plaintiffs in the case - Dave Kolesar and Patrick Wojahn - who live in College Park.

For the story, click here.

Also:

Wojahn is running for a city council position, aiming to represent District 1 in College Park.

For information on voting in College Park, click here. The deadline to register is October 7.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

In the News

Not long ago, I wrote a story about The Chronicle of Higher Education having a bit of a mix-up in terms of the number of "openly gay" university presidents in the country. (This is not the post immediately prior to this one, which details an entirely different story from the Chronicle.)

Well, the Associated Press sat down with Ralph Hexter, the openly gay president of Hampshire College, to ask him a few questions about "some of the issues facing gay college presidents."

Check out that Q&A here.

In the News

In the September 28 issue of The Chronicle of Higher Education, a very informative article titled "Gay Professors Face Less Discrimination, but Many Still Fight for Benefits" addresses a changing tide in the number of colleges and universities that offer domestic partner benefits. It begins:

Gay and lesbian faculty members may no longer be desperate to hide their true identities in academe, but many are desperately seeking health insurance for their partners.

With anti-gay discrimination fading, obtaining health and other benefits for partners is still a major concern for many gay and lesbian academics. A growing number of colleges and universities have been adding such benefits since they were first introduced in the early 1990s. No full tally exists, but a survey this year by the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources found that 40 percent of 544 institutions responding — or 217 — extended health insurance to same-sex domestic partners. The Human Rights Campaign, which describes itself as the country's largest advocacy group for gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people, has identified a larger number: 304 institutions, up from 178 five years ago.

For those of us frustrated with the limbo-status of domestic partner benefits in our own state system, this article is particularly interesting in its detailing of how other states have dealt or are dealing with the same situation.

For the full story, click here.

New Direction at Towson University

As reported by Towson University's student newspaper The Towerlight at the beginning of this month:
The Center for Student Diversity has expanded its offerings to students by adding a director of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender student development.

Samuel Santos, who started two months ago, now serves as Towson's first director of LGBT development.
Such positions are quite rare. In fact, I believe Towson and UMD College Park are the only institutions within the University System of Maryland to have positions of this sort. The lack of such positions elsewhere is something to be considered, and challenged.

Check out the entire Towerlight story here.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Opinion

A guest opinion column of mine regarding last week's court decision upholding Maryland's ban on same-sex marriage was published today in The Diamondback. It begins:
There is nothing appealing about the Maryland Court of Appeals' decision last week to uphold the state's 1973 ban on same-sex marriage.

Even though we are in a country where civil rights are granted an almost divine reverence, gay and lesbian couples in Maryland are still second-class citizens denied the right to one of the most cherished institutions of our citizenry.

Although gay and lesbian couples are capable of maintaining loving relationships and are competent in raising well-rounded, healthy children, the court supported the ban by citing the "[s]tate's legitimate interests in fostering procreation and encouraging the traditional family structures in which children are born."
Check out the entire column here.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Out For Work

The Third Annual
National Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Ally Student
Career Conference & PRIDE Career Fair


September 29-30, 2007
Washington, D.C.

http://www.outforwork.com

Thursday, September 20, 2007

'Change of Heart'

San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders announced yesterday that he had changed his mind on same-sex marriage - from being supportive of civil unions to being supportive of full marriage rights.

After stating on Tuesday that he would veto a City Council decision to support same-sex marriage before the state Supreme Court - which will soon review the state's ban on such marriages - Sanders said yesterday that he would back the Council instead.

He attributed his change of heart to conversations with gay and lesbian friends and with his daughter Lisa, a lesbian.

This is proof that personal stories from gay and lesbian individuals and couples can change people's minds on same-sex marriage, and these are exactly the type of conversations that Marylanders need to have with their own legislators!

With the court decision on Tuesday to uphold the ban on same-sex marriage in Maryland, state legislators may soon be dealing with their own feelings on same-sex marriage. Conversations they have with lesbian and gay people during that time can be extremely effective in building support for same-sex marriage in the legislature.

If you don't know how to meet with your own legislators, contact Equality Maryland for some advice. Now is the time.

I applaud Mayor Sanders for having an open mind and an open heart.

In the News

The Diamondback reports today:
For faculty looking to gain the right to collect health and tuition remission benefits for their gay or lesbian partners, the fight became all the more urgent Tuesday.

Maryland's highest court upheld the state's 34-year-old statute defining marriage as exclusively between a man and a woman. And, unless the state legislature decides to reverse the ban on gay marriage in the future, the decision leaves partner benefits the only foreseeable option for those seeking the same rights extended to spouses of university faculty.
For the full story, click here.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Anger and Frustration

I went to sleep thinking about it last night, and woke up this morning doing the same.

Tuesday's decision, in one inarticulate but fitting word, sucked! And, it had me shying away from writing here all day.

I've instead spent the day really trying to wrap my mind around it all, thinking about my former co-workers at Equality Maryland and all the hard work they and the plaintiffs put into this case.

Last night's rally was reviving. Dan Furmansky, Equality Maryland's Executive Director, was inspirational, as were the many other speakers.

Still, it is hard to realize that my summer dream of having my home state accept same-sex marriage is not yet to be.

But I won't lose hope. Someday same-sex marriage will be realized in Maryland. Until then, we just have to keep up the fight!

My heart goes out to all the same-sex couples in the state.

All the best.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Equality Maryland Rally Pictures





















Same-Sex Marriage Ban Upheld in Maryland

Here is the lede from the Washington Blade:
Maryland's highest court on Tuesday upheld a state law defining marriage as a union between a man and a woman, ending a lawsuit filed by same-sex couples who claimed they were being denied fundamental rights.
Check out the full story here.

For more details, go to Equality Maryland's website, which offers the written decision, legal documents, plaintiff biographies and questions and answers.

To get to Equality Maryland's press release on the decision, click here.

Also:

RALLIES TONIGHT AT 6:30 PM!

BALTIMORE CITY

First Unitarian Church
1 West Hamilton Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21201
(at the corner of Charles and Franklin Streets)
http://www.firstunitarian.net/

PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY

St George's Episcopal Church
7010 Glenn Dale Rd.
Glenn Dale, Maryland 20769
http://www.stgeo.org

Monday, September 17, 2007

A Rough Road Home - By Damien Frierson

Here is the first of what I hope will be many contributions to my blog!

“A Rough Road Home: Voices of Black LGBTs in the Academy”

For Black lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender scholars, the journey from objects within the discipline of African American Studies to subjects at the center of discourse has been, as our elders would say, “a rough road home.” From its inception, the discipline of African American Studies proved to be a project immersed in revelation and truth through its telling of “our” stories, history and most importantly our everyday experience. Yet, in this endeavor for liberation, empowerment, consciousness, and social change, Black LGBTs were some how erased from this project. Because it chose to exclude its own LGBT community, the discipline fell short in accomplishing its goal of empowering the larger community. The home that had been built for us in academia had become a place that had no room for our lives, our stories, our truths. It was to this end that my foremothers and forefathers before me began that proverbial “rough road home.”

I have had the privilege to count myself as both alumni and adjunct faculty in the Department of African American Studies at Temple University. While in the past the department has been adamantly against the inclusion of Black LGBTs, I have been honored to have both advocated for and taught the first course within the department that speaks to the Black LGBT experience. For the last four years, it has been my desire to emphasize the intersection of race, gender, sexual orientation, and class so that Black LGBT lives are not marginalized but viewed as a part of the overarching progress of African American Studies. That is, to make the scholarship, research, and relevance of African American Studies authentic. However, I stand on the shoulders of many activists, scholars, writers, and poets who throughout the 70’s, 80’s and 90’s challenged not only the homophobia within their Black communities but racism and bigotry within their white LGBT communities.

It was Black feminist lesbian scholars such as Cheryl Clarke, Barbara Smith, Audre Lorde, Jewell Gomez, Donna Allegra, and Pat Parker who challenged the ideology of patriarchy and sexism as an accepted aspect of our community. It was Black gay writers, poets and activists such as Essex Hemphill, Marlon Riggs, Joseph Beam, Ron Simmons, James Baldwin, and Bayard Rustin who refused to be silenced and demanded inclusion regardless of their sexuality or race. It was Hemphill who challenged African American Studies by demanding that we as gay men and lesbians be allowed to “come home” as who we truly are:

“It is not enough to tell us that one was a brilliant poet, scientist, educator, or rebel. Who did he love? It makes a difference. I can’t become a whole man simply on what is fed to me: watered-down versions of black life in America. I need the ass-splitting truth to be told, so I will have something to emulate, a reason to remain loyal.”

It was this desire to give voice to their experiences that was captured in Hemphill’s declaration, “We are coming home.” It is on the backs and shoulders of these men and women that I have been allowed to teach as a Black, openly gay man in the academy. Through their making “our truths from scratch” African American studies becomes a true and holistic discipline. It is because of these African American Studies foremothers and forefathers, contemporary scholars and writers such as Keith Boykin, Dwight McBride, Cathy Cohen, Horace Griffin, Lisa Moore, etc. that we are able to find room where there was once no home. It is because of these early pioneers that I am able to say my “road isn’t so rough after all.”

Damien T. Frierson, MA, MSW

Damien Frierson is an adjunct faculty member at Temple University and former Outreach and Education Director at Equality Maryland.

In the News

In the September 14 issue of the Washington Blade, Joan Garry - the former executive director of GLAAD - wrote a "Viewpoint" piece titled "A freshman's orientation."

The article recapped the experience of one of Garry's daughter's friends, who arrived at college to find he had a homophobic roommate. His college was one described as "a large university in the Northeast."

The article brings up important lessons for both housing officials and for students who may find themselves in a similar situation.

To check out the article, click here.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Chronicling the Numbers

As a journalism major with a blog on LGBT issues in higher education, the following information has me intrigued.

On August 10, The Chronicle of Higher Education published an article discussing the politicized - and assumedly quite rare - process of naming a lesbian or gay man president of a university. The article was titled "And Now There Are 3," and the lede read:

With Sean T. Buffington's appointment as president of the University of the Arts late last month, the number of openly gay university presidents in the United States appears to have increased by 50 percent, from two to three. "We have a long, long way to go," says Charles R. Middleton, president of Roosevelt University, one of the small group, which also includes Ralph J. Hexter, president of Hampshire College. Mr. Middleton, 62, says a "Plexiglas ceiling" has prevented the appointment of more gay presidents.
Then, on September 7, the Chronicle published another article that seemed to be a correction of the first. This article, titled "Openly Gay Presidents: 11 and Counting," began:

The Chronicle (August 10) recently reported that the nation's colleges now count at least three openly gay presidents among them. In response, several presidents have written to ask, "What about me?"
The wording of the article was slightly hedged, and referred only to "university" presidents. That's a good thing, because by press time the list of openly gay college presidents had grown to 11.
The article goes on to list all 11 presidents, and ends with the following:
Although the list is now more complete, the question remains: How many openly gay presidents has the Chronicle left out?
Both articles are very interesting reads, but troublesome.

The first article offered, among other veins of discussion, this insight:

Self-selection contributes to the lack of openly gay college presidents, experts say. Many up-and-coming administrators who are gay may give up on becoming presidents to avoid unpleasant examinations of their lifestyles. Others might stay completely in the closet or steer clear of discussing their private lives.
Could that impulse of presidents to "steer clear of discussing their private lives" be the reason the Chronicle got their numbers mixed up and lost the bigger picture?

Even though the new list was tabulated in part after some of those presidents left off the list came forward to claim their deserved spot on it, why wasn't the information already widely available? Why didn't we already know?

People definitely shouldn't have to disclose their sexual orientation in any work situation. But if these presidents are indeed "openly gay" already, why aren't they making more noise about it?! It could only help the LGBT community.

Is this shoddy journalism, or a systemic avoidance of announcing the "abnormal"?

I'm tempted to think the latter.

Both articles can be found on LexisNexis.

"And Now There Are 3," The Chronicle of Higher Education, Pg. 18 Vol. 53 No. 49

"Openly Gay Presidents: 11 and Counting," The Chronicle of Higher Education, Pg. 37 Vol. 54 No. 2

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Show Your Support

The following is a letter drafted by Phil Nash of the University of Maryland's Asian American Studies Program regarding domestic partner benefits within the USM. With help from Equality Maryland, Phil and others have created an online petition that system faculty and staff can sign to show their support for those benefits.

Last I heard, about 400 people had signed!

Check it out:


Dear University System of Maryland
Faculty and Staff,

What would you say if some of our colleagues
were going to be denied health insurance
coverage based on their race?
Surely the
unfairness of a system that rewards equal work
with unequal compensation for one racial group
would lead to a loud outcry and demands for fairness.

Today, a similar situation faces our brothers
and sisters who are lesbians, gays, bisexuals
and transgendered (LGBT).
On every campus
and in many classrooms and offices, LGBT
employees are putting our students and university
first, but are being asked to accept a second-class
level of health insurance coverage.

The Board of Regents may soon decide
whether to extend domestic partner benefits
to the unmarried partners of USM employees, and
if we raise our voices now then we can make a difference.

My Japanese American mother and my English
American father were married in 1951, and
if people like you had not fought to legalize
interracial marriage, my family would have
faced the same issues facing LGBT families today.

That is why, as a straight man who has spent over
a decade teaching at College Park and over two
decades working as a civil rights lawyer, I am
strongly supportive of this extension of domestic
partnership rights. Will you join me?

Please go to http://eqfed.org/campaign/benefits to
read, sign and forward the petition urging the Board
of Regents to support and implement domestic
partner benefits.

Thank you for taking the time to stand up for your
University of Maryland colleagues!

In solidarity with our LGBT brothers and sisters,

Phil

Phil Tajitsu Nash
Asian American Studies Program
UMCP

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Transgender is Good - A Look Back


















If you don’t learn from the past, you are doomed to repeat it. Doing a little research on the history of the
University of Maryland’s Human Relations Code, I found an example of just that.

Digging through old bound copies of The Diamondback, I found one news story and one editorial that shine some light on how the mistake to exclude the transgender community from the Human Relations Code in 2003 mirrors a similar mistake in 1974.


In 2003, the university’s Senate voted unanimously to add “gender identity and expression” to the Code – an addition that would have directly protected transgender university community members from discrimination.

Although President Dan Mote immediately signed off on the addition in approval, the state attorney general’s office suggested the addition was unnecessary, and the Board of Regents never approved the addition.

Instead, President Mote told the campus community that the university would interpret the code to protect transgender community members.

The following news story and editorial from The Diamondback of 1974 shine light on how the same mistake was made concerning the addition of sexual orientation to the Human Relations Code that year.

“Gays object to being excluded from relation code’s protection
By Harvey Schevitz
The Diamondback
Friday, October 18, 1974

After four years of attempting to set up a human relations code that would guarantee protection to everyone, the University has a code which leaves homosexuals out in the cold.
Homosexuals were denied protection because the Board of Regents recommended not to include them, according to Human Relations Director Yolande Ford.
The board took this action because of a legal requirement to do so, said Louis L. Kaplan, board chairman.
“As a state agency, we cannot go beyond the state or the county code on human relations,” Kaplan said. “We adopted the language used in the Prince George’s County code.”
The code provides for protection from discrimination on the basis of “race, color, creed, sex, age, marital status, political opinion, national origin, personal appearance and occupation,” according to Betty Lee, an employee of the county’s Human Relations Office.
It applies to any resident or person served by the county in the areas of housing, law enforcement, public accommodations, community services and employment, Lee said.
“Homosexuals are not covered per se,” she said, “but they could be covered under the other areas, if they are applicable.”
However, if no other criteria fit the person, they are not protected from discrimination, Lee said.
The code, adopted earlier this month by the College Park Senate, is the result of four years of bickering between the senate and the regents over the extent of protection to be included in the University code.
The senate approved a code last semester which did extend protection to homosexuals, but it was rejected by the regents. The approved code was amended to comply with the regents’ recommendations.
The University’s code includes all measures of protection mentioned in the county code. It will go into effect after Dorsey forwards it to Elkins if it is approved by the state Attorney General, Ford said.
Don Cris, a spokesman for the Gay Student Alliance, said “I don’t see why they used the Prince George’s County code, this is a state university.”
He said he has sent letters to Acting Chancellor John W. Dorsey and University President Wilson H. Elkins explaining the GSA’s position, and he plans to write a letter to the editor of the Diamondback.
Cris admitted there is little to be done now, “but we’re going to do what we can.”
Ford said she regrets the lack of protection for homosexuals. “I hope we’re able to make more progress in the area of covering homosexuals,” she said. “They appreciate efforts being made in their behalf.”
Ford said her office will continue to talk to people who may be able to win legal protection for homosexuals.
“We will lobby and try to persuade people in this county to help us,” she said.
Under the present code, homosexuals are covered under a category if they fit the description, she said, but “They will suffer extreme discrimination” without a separate grouping for sexual discriminations.
She was unable to provide information concerning the frequency of discriminations toward homosexuals, but she said it could happen frequently since there is no protection for them.
Kaplan said if homosexuals want “specific mention” in the code, they will have to “try and get it themselves.””

A couple days later, an editorial titled “backtalk: Gay is good” was printed in The Diamondback:

“We, the members of the Gay Student Alliance, in order to promote the cause for humanity, establish justice and ensure civil liberty, hereby request a reversal in the decision to exclude homosexuals from the human relations code. We decry this order as being unfounded in the principles of ethics and self-defeating in its state purpose.
Therefore, we call upon the Board of Regents and the College Park Senate to recall the code before its final approval, to reinsert the clause prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and to repass the code in this form.
Merely a year ago, the American Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality from its revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, a classification of mental disorders. Also, in that same year, the D.C. Court of Appeals passed Title 34, which guarantees equal rights to gay people in housing and employment in the nation’s capital.
We can only view this recent shift in the human relations code as a giant step backwards in the struggle for civil rights and matters of free choice. It is time for the administration to wake up, change their medieval attitudes and amend the present code in order to serve the basis needs of the gay community at the University. Gay is good.

Gay Student Alliance
Don Cris
Senior”

If nothing else, this is much to think about – and hopefully, learn from.

Transgender is good.



Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Domestic Partner Benefits Status

Extending health and other benefits to the same-sex partners of LGBT faculty and staff members within the University System of Maryland has been a concern for more than a decade, especially at the University of Maryland.

Such benefits make up a substantial portion of employee compensation, and both straight and LGBT employees who are not married to their partners get the short end of the stick, receiving unequal pay for equal work.

The problem is especially poignant for LGBT employees because they are not allowed to marry, and so they are essentially barred from attaining the status of having a “spouse,” the term which dictates many of the benefit policies within the USM.

In April of this year, I reported for The Diamondback that the University of Maryland had requested that the USM Board of Regents allow it to extend domestic partner benefits to its employees with its own funding. That story can be found here.

However, the Board of Regents has yet to address the request, or the issue at large, since then.

Wanting an update on the status, I emailed USM spokesman John Buettner, who replied with the following:

"Recently, Maryland's Department of Budget Management began a feasibility study on extending domestic partner benefits to state employees. It is preparing this for the Governor and the General Assembly, as it will require legislation to enact changes to the rules affecting state employees. The Chancellor [Brit Kirwan] has expressed his support for providing a domestic partner benefit plan to USM faculty and staff, and he has agreed to refer it to the Board of Regents for consideration once USM gets the information generated by this report and direction from the Governor and General Assembly."

So, that is where we stand for now. I think if state employees are granted domestic partner benefits, the Board of Regents will face much higher levels of pressure to extend the same benefits to USM employees.

For more information on what is happening with the state employees union – which employees of the USM are not part of – click here.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Introduction

In the fall of 2004, I was a sophomore at the University of Maryland eager to begin expressing my identity as a gay student. I had already come out to a number of close friends, but was still in the proverbial closet to most of the important people in my life.

At the time, the media were streamlining same-sex marriage into the public discourse – albeit as “gay marriage” – with previously unknown persistence, yet I felt dialogue on the issue in my own university’s student newspaper, The Diamondback, was lacking.

In an act of sudden (and terrifying) bravery, I wrote an opinion column addressing gay marriage and outing myself as a gay student. When it was published the next day, my world changed forever; I was essentially out to everyone in my life.

That initial (and guest) participation in The Diamondback eventually evolved into a year of staff opinion column writing, two years as a reporter and a summer as an editor. Throughout that time, I remained passionately tied to LGBT issues on and around the campus.

My experience at The Diamonback made me conscious of how intricate (and complicated) many LGBT issues in the state’s higher education system are, and how important it is for academia to address those issues in a constructive way.

My hope for this blog is that it becomes a resource for understanding, challenging and creating dialogue on LGBT issues in the state’s academic communities.

Log on. Gather information. Broach new subjects. Teach what you know. L.G.B.T.