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LGBTQ Paths to Parentage Security: New Guide from GLAD and Mombian Helps LGBTQ Parents Understand Options for Protecting Their Families

Resource answers frequently asked questions about securing legal ties between children and parents in the face of a national patchwork of protections and outdated laws

GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) and Mombian have partnered to create “LGBTQ-Wege zur Abstammungssicherheit,” a resource for LGBTQ+ parents and others that answers frequently asked questions about how LGBTQ+ parents can ensure their child-parent relationships will be secure and recognized in every state. It reflects the latest options and terminology as more states like Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Colorado expand access to ways of protecting children born via assisted reproduction and those with LGBTQ+ parents.

Not all states offer the same paths to parentage for these families, however. Because of bias and discrimination, both married and unmarried LGBTQ+ parents are advised to have the security of a court judgment to protect their child-parent relationships. Children have been pulled into the child welfare system because a parent who loves and cares for them wasn’t recognized as a legal parent, and non-birth parents who planned for and raised their kids have been stripped of their parental rights because a court relied on outdated laws that fail to acknowledge the existence of same-gender parents.

“LGBTQ Paths to Parentage Security” offers straightforward answers to questions like: 

  • What is parentage?
  • Is it important to get a court judgment establishing that I am a parent?
  • Was ist, wenn ich bereits auf der Geburtsurkunde meines Kindes stehe?
  • What options do I have to ensure my parental status will be recognized In all states?
  • Brauche ich einen Anwalt?

Polly Crozier, Director of Family Advocacy at GLAD, said, “It is critical for LGBTQ+ parents to have the information and guidance they need about establishing and securing their legal ties to their children, in order to protect their children no matter where the family may move or travel.

“At the same time, states must update their parentage laws to better protect all children and families. States like Rhode Island are paving the way by passing comprehensive parentage protections and streamlining the process for confirmatory adoption,” she added, “We need more states to remove existing barriers to legal parentage, including outdated laws that leave LGBTQ+ parents and their children vulnerable.”

Dana Rudolph, Founder and Publisher of Mombian (mombian.com), an award-winning blog for LGBTQ parents, said, “One of the most frequent questions I hear from other LGBTQ parents is whether they need to take additional steps to secure their parentage, particularly if they’re already on their child’s birth certificate. This guide can help them understand why such steps are necessary and what their options may be.”

“LGBTQ Paths to Parentage Security” complements a new report, “Beziehungen in Gefahr: Warum wir die staatlichen Elternschaftsgesetze aktualisieren müssen, um Kinder und Familien zu schützen,” from the Movement Advancement Project (MAP), in partnership with COLAGE, Family Equality, GLAD, and the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR).

The report details how the current patchwork of parentage laws across the country – many of which haven’t been updated in decades – leaves LGBTQ parents and their children vulnerable. It offers recommendations for all states to update and improve parentage laws, highlighting states that have taken crucial steps to update their parentage laws in recent years, including Colorado, Connecticut, and Rhode Island – and states like Massachusetts, which has the opportunity right now to protect LGBTQ+ families with the Massachusetts Parentage Act (H 1713 / S 947).

Find “LGBTQ Paths to Parentage Security” at lgbtqparentage.org

Find “Relationships at Risk” at mapresearch.org/2023-parentage-report

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GLAD Praises Refiling of the Equality Act in Congress

Federal legislation would provide nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQI+ Americans

Today, the Congressional Equality Caucus refiled the Equality Act, (H.R. 15/S. 5), legislation that would amend existing civil rights laws to explicitly prohibit discrimination against LGBTQI+ people in employment, housing, public accommodations, education, federally-funded programs, credit, and jury service.

GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) strongly supports the Equality Act as a means to ensure LGBTQ+ Americans are treated with the same dignity, fairness, and respect afforded to others.

“An overwhelming majority of Americans across political parties, states, and walks of life support updating our federal laws to explicitly prohibit discrimination against LGBTQ+ people. The Equality Act will ensure that LGBTQ+ people—and all people—can support their families and contribute to their communities and workplaces while being treated with the dignity and equality all Americans need and deserve,” said Janson Wu, executive director of GLAD.

The lead sponsors of the Equality Act are Representative Mark Takano and Senator Jeff Merkley, who was joined by Senator Tammy Baldwin and Senator Cory Booker for reintroduction in the Senate. The Equality Act garnered bipartisan support when it passed in the House in 2019 and 2021.

“We are grateful to Representative Takano and Senator Merkley for their leadership in re-introducing the Equality Act at this moment,” Wu added. “While some politicians are targeting LGBTQ+ people, especially transgender people, with extremely harmful legislation, with this bill Congress has an opportunity to uphold the will of the American people and ensure explicit protections in federal law for LGBTQ+ people in housing, employment, and all areas of life.”

In addition to the aforementioned protections for LGBTQI+ people, the Equality Act would also prohibit discrimination on the basis of sex in public accommodations and federally funded programs. It also expands the definition of public accommodations in the Civil Rights Act, strengthening protections not just on the basis of sex (including sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex characteristics), but also on the basis of race, color, national origin, and religion.

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At the Supreme Court: 303 Creative v. Elenis Puts Critical Anti-discrimination Protections at Risk

The Supreme Court building. Photo by Joe Ravi
Photo by Joe Ravi

This June, the U.S. Supreme Court will issue a ruling in 303 Creative v. Elenis, in which a business seeks to use the owner’s disapproval of same-sex marriage to justify side-stepping anti-discrimination laws.

The plaintiff, a Colorado website design business, is asking the Court to create a “free speech” exemption from state anti-discrimination laws. For the Court to do so would dramatically reverse decades of both case law and public norms, undercutting the bedrock of assurances we all depend on to access goods and services in the general marketplace every day.

Specifically, 303 Creative, which is subject to Colorado’s LGBTQ- inclusive anti-discrimination law, wants the right to refuse to sell wedding-related websites to same-sex couples. The business says it is entitled to an exemption allowing it to turn away LGBTQ+ people it does not want to serve so that it and other companies are not “compelled to speak” a message of support for same-sex couples by the act of selling its service.

“To be clear, the serious danger in this case is not whether this one business will sell wedding websites to same-sex couples — no couple has asked them to, and in fact, they don’t even sell wedding websites at this time,” says Mary Bonauto, GLAD’s Senior Director of Civil Rights and Litigation Strategies. “The danger is that this business owner seeks sweeping changes to current law ensuring that goods and services are available to all of us regardless of whether people operating the business might approve of their customers or not. For the Court to find a free speech right for stores, shops, and services to discriminate would be a radical departure from iconic precedents that will fuel the escalating efforts to chip away at vital protections for LGBTQ+ people and other groups facing discrimination.”

The Court framed the question in the case as whether an “artist” would be “compelled to speak or stay silent” by virtue of the anti-discrimination law. But the “artist” here is a business open to the general public, and for many decades there has been no question that states are free to regulate businesses — including businesses that use creativity — when they sell their services in the general marketplace, as 303 Creative plans to do. The Supreme Court and lower courts have repeatedly rejected First Amendment claims to the contrary. That’s because denying service to someone because of who they are is discriminatory conduct, not artistry or self-expression.

The impact of a ruling for the business in this case could be staggering. A loss here could take many forms, such as allowing refusals specifically for wedding-related services, creating a specific right to refuse service to LGBTQ+ people, or permitting any business that is open to the public to evade anti-discrimination laws if they can argue their business is “artistic” or “expressive.”

For the Court to grant beliebig constitutional exemption to anti-discrimination laws allowing people to be turned away because of who they are would be a remarkable turning point and incredibly harmful. While this case targets LGBTQ+ people and same-sex couples who seek to marry, a new free speech defense to businesses providing service without discrimination could be invoked against people from all walks of life. Any ruling for 303 Kreativ also risks being seen by some as a green light to assert a free speech defense in other areas of law.

We remain determined to fight and forge our path forward in these precarious times for our LGBTQ+ community and all Americans’ individual and civil rights. We certainly hope the Court will come to the right conclusion in this case, affirm decades of precedent, and issue a ruling upholding our anti-discrimination laws. But no matter how the Court rules, it is crucial for us all to reaffirm that every individual, regardless of who we are or whom we love, deserves the fundamental freedom to go about our daily lives and access the goods and services we need without discrimination.

Read GLAD’s brief in 303 Kreativ, developed with Lambda Legal and the National Center for Lesbian Rights, and also joined by HRC and the Task Force.

UPDATE: On June 30, 2023, the Supreme Court ruled on 303 Kreativ. Read our statement here.


This story was originally published in the Summer 2023 GLAD Briefs newsletter. Mehr lesen.

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Defending LGBTQ+ Inclusion and the Freedom to Learn in Our Public Schools

Public schools are under attack in the US

Spurred on by extremist politicians, a small but vocal minority is seeking to undo schools as student-centered places where young people are safe and engaged in learning what they need to succeed in life — under the banner of “parents’ rights.” In addition to putting students at risk, these efforts seek to extend the parental preferences of some into every classroom and add to the already heavy burden borne by the teachers and other professionals who work tirelessly every day to support and educate kids.

At least 177 bills have been introduced in state legislatures this session, many of which also explicitly or implicitly target LGBTQ+ and other vulnerable students for exclusion and surveillance or making them invisible, such as with “CRT” bans. These bills are part of a coordinated, national effort at work in New England, too. In Maine, for instance, we have already opposed 18 different bills targeting education, with more to come, while also supporting counselor/social worker to student confidentiality and rulemaking addressing discrimination. In Rhode Island, we’ve seen at least nine such bills. Fortunately, the efforts of GLAD, our state partners, pro-equality legislators, and community members have been able to slow or stop most of these bills in New England, but we are not done and cannot let our guard down.

These bills run the gamut. Some attempt to police what books are available in school or classroom libraries, stifling student learning and denying them the opportunities for discovery and to see themselves and their families and friends represented. Many of the bills attempt to micromanage curriculum, even when already locally approved with public input, by insisting that teachers must accommodate parental preferences and allow broad opt-outs from whatever a particular parent might believe is “divisive” or against their values. Some would ban schools from using different names, nicknames, or pronouns at school and require monitoring of students for “changes” that must then be reported to parents, with parents obtaining a private right to sue to enforce this vague requirement. Still others aim to censor discussion of any topics related to race or sex, including sexual orientation and gender identity, restricting students’ ability to learn a fuller picture of American history and values, develop critical thinking skills, and learn to take their places in our democracy. In the end, schools are student-centered for a reason: Schools are for young people. The information parents want is also largely available from the school or school system website, the child’s school account, from talking with teachers and state, and from existing information required to be provided to parents under state and federal laws.

In addition to making the case to the people’s representatives as they seek to make or change laws, GLAD, along with the ACLU of NH, Disability Rights Center — NH, and the National Educators Association — NH chapter, is in court continuing to challenge a related New Hampshire law that vaguely defines race, disability, gender, sexual orientation, and gender identity as “divisive concepts,” discouraging teachers from saying anything that might imperil their teaching licenses, all to the detriment of students. School district DEI professionals in New Hampshire report that the law is causing confusion and fear for teachers, stifling teaching on essential topics, and creating greater isolation for students. A federal judge denied the state’s motion to dismiss our lawsuit in January because of its inevitable connection to teacher censorship, saying, “Given the severe consequences that teachers face if they are found to have taught or advocated a banned concept, plaintiffs have pleaded a plausible claim that the amendments are unconstitutionally vague.”

Beyond restrictions on class materials and discussion, another dangerous trend is gaining a troubling amount of traction this year – bills and targeted litigation aimed at forcing schools to “out” LGBTQ+ students and cutting them off from the support of trusted adults they rely on at school.

In New England, we’ve directly contested these bills in Maine, Rhode Island, and New Hampshire and are working with our state partners to stop them.

In New Hampshire, GLAD and our coalition partners narrowly but soundly defeated such a bill in May. SB 272 purposely singled out transgender and gender nonconforming youth to be surveilled and reported on by school staff, including any request to use a different name or pronoun, change in a student’s gender presentation, or attendance at a GSA meeting. With the bill’s defeat, New Hampshire has affirmed that schools should be a space of safety for LGBTQ+ students and that they can have conversations with their families when they are ready to do so. In Maine, we are also working with partners and providing extensive legal background explaining how these bills, if passed, would disrupt or deny the legally acknowledged obligations of schools to manage their learning environments and of students’ rights to equal educational opportunity. In Rhode Island, we have likewise joined with partners to speak out against several bills that threaten schools and teachers with penalties for not complying with vague requirements to allow virtually any individual parent to dictate school lesson plans, as well as bills aimed at removing teachers’ and school staff’s ability to support LGBTQ+ students in school.

To be clear, we support parents and their involvement in schools. A strong parent-child relationship is a lifelong protective factor. But these bills use the language of “parents’ rights” to impose specific parental preferences on how public schools operate their day-to-day activities and meet their obligation to support and provide an equal education for all students.

Two non-binary students doing work together in class
Foto von The Gender Spectrum Collection

We are also working to defend positive school policies in the courts. GLAD and ACLU-NH filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the New Hampshire Supreme Court in Doe gegen Manchester School District, supporting a lower court ruling upholding the district’s policy of supporting transgender students. That policy includes referring to students by their requested names and pronouns and maintaining student privacy when appropriate. Our brief notes the school’s legal obligation to ensure students can learn no matter who they are and their right to control the learning environment to do so. The brief also cites substantial research showing that a positive school climate that fosters a sense of safety, belonging, and respect is optimal for learning. Lawsuits like these show that some parents, despite asserting parental rights, seek to have the school insert itself into family relationships with “outing” and reporting to parents on student behavior at school.

As GLAD Attorney Chris Erchull explained, “Forcing schools to disclose information against a student’s wishes takes away a trusted source of support from transgender and gender nonconforming students and shuts down the opportunity for an important, voluntary conversation between the child and parent when the student is ready.” GLAD is also engaged in the pending 1st Circuit case, Foote v. Ludlow Public Schools, raising many of the same issues. Read our Ludlow brief here.

GLAD submitted a friend-of-the-court brief with the Massachusetts Superintendents Association in the District Court, which dismissed the case in December. GLAD will continue its involvement at the First Circuit, where the question remains whether the parents have adequately alleged facts to make a legal claim so that they can proceed with the litigation and try to prove their case of a violation of their rights. All rulings in this legal area are consequential. Parents and schools can and should be natural allies when it comes to ensuring students are safe, protected, and able to learn what they need to succeed in life. The current wave of attacks on schools, libraries, and LGBTQ+ students is only creating false conflicts between parents and schools at a time when we should all be focused on ensuring that every young person, including LGBTQ+ youth, can learn and thrive in a safe environment while at school.


This story was originally published in the Summer 2023 GLAD Briefs newsletter. Mehr lesen.

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Healthcare Bans are an Attack on Our Community’s Well-being, Decision-making, and Freedom

“Taking away our opportunity to help our daughter live a healthy and happy life is cruel and unfair.”

The quotes on this page are all from Florida parents GLAD represents in Doe gegen Ladapo challenging a policy, first enacted by the state Boards of Medicine and Osteopathic Medicine codified in SB 254, that bans them from meeting essential healthcare needs for their transgender children. GLAD’s Senior Director of Transgender and Queer Rights, Jennifer Levi, was in federal court in Tallahassee on May 19 asking the judge to halt the ban and stop the unimaginable cruelty and distress these families face because they can’t access the healthcare they need.

In the ongoing campaign against LGBTQ+ rights, extremist forces are pushing for discriminatory legislation that specifically targets vulnerable members of our community, particularly LGBTQ+ youth and their families. One of the most alarming aspects of this campaign is the banning and, in some cases, criminalizing of safe and effective medical care for transgender youth.

“This ban puts me and other parents in the nightmare position of not being able to help our child when they need us most.”

As of May 2023, at least 19 states (Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, and West Virginia) have implemented these policies.

These bans disregard scientific evidence, representing an unjustified intrusion into personal and family medical decision-making. They contradict established guidelines based on extensive clinical research and are endorsed by esteemed medical associations such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Medical Association, and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Doctors with expertise in treating the distress experienced by transgender youth unable to live authentically, as well as parents who witness the positive transformation in their transgender children when supported, widely criticize these bans.

“Having the resources and support to make the best decisions for our daughter’s wellbeing has been so important for our family. We just want to do what’s right for our kid.”

GLAD is challenging the bans in Florida and Alabama, arguing that they unlawfully deprive parents of their right to make decisions about their children’s medical treatment and violate the equal protection rights of transgender youth by denying them essential, doctor-recommended healthcare.

In fact, LGBTQ+ legal organizations are contesting these policies in nearly every state where they have been passed.

Encouragingly, even judges in the most conservative communities have recognized the unconstitutional nature of these bans, which infringe upon parents’ rights to make informed healthcare choices for their children and unfairly target transgender adolescents. Although litigation is ongoing, judges have issued temporary injunctions against these bans in Alabama, Florida, Indiana, Missouri, and Oklahoma and permanently blocked the ban in Arkansas.

Senior Director of Transgender and Queer Rights Jennifer Levi and Human Rights Campaign Litigation Director Cynthia Cheng-Wun Weaver
Senior Director of Transgender and Queer Rights Jennifer Levi and Human Rights Campaign Litigation Director Cynthia Cheng-Wun Weaver

Last spring, GLAD helped secure a federal judge’s ruling in Alabama that blocked implementing the state’s criminal ban while the case moves forward. As we prepare for an anticipated trial, this injunction remains in effect.

In Florida, our motion for a preliminary injunction to halt the ban became more urgent when the state legislature passed SB 254 at the end of the session. This new law codifies the Boards of Medicine bans and adds criminal and civil penalties.

On June 6, a federal judge issued a strong ruling that blocks the enforcement of SB 254 and the Boards of Medicine rules for the plaintiff families, ensuring that their children can continue to access needed care.

The ruling also makes it clear that the law is unconstitutional and that the plaintiffs are likely to prevail once the Court issues a final ruling on the merits. It says powerfully that the ban violates parents’ rights to make medical decisions for their children and violates the equal protection rights of transgender people by denying them medically necessary, doctor-recommended healthcare.

Halting and overturning these harmful laws is crucial to safe-guarding access to essential healthcare and ensuring that parents of transgender youth can continue to provide guidance and support. It is also vital in countering the spread of misinformation, anti-LGBTQ+ legislation, and attacks on scientific knowledge and bodily autonomy, which aim to hinder progress.

“Our daughter is a happy, confident child, but this ban takes away our right to provide her with recommended healthcare.”

While LGBTQ+ community members and advocates are diligently working to halt these laws and provide support through mutual aid and information sharing, several states are also taking positive steps. As of May 2023, ten states—California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Vermont, and Washington— and the District of Columbia have enacted laws that protect transgender people’s access to healthcare. These laws include provisions to shield patients and providers from punitive measures in other states.

Additionally, bills addressing similar concerns are pending in Maine, Oregon, and elsewhere. These efforts reflect the widespread recognition of these healthcare bans for what they truly are: attacks on science, our families, our autonomy over our bodies, and our freedom and dignity. All of us — LGBTQ+ youth, adults, parents and families, supporters, and sensible policymakers — must join forces to reverse this backward trend and instead propel our nation toward greater liberation for all.


This story was originally published in the Summer 2023 GLAD Briefs newsletter. Mehr lesen.

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Title IX Ensures Inclusion for Transgender Youth In School and on the Field

All students deserve an equal education and to participate fully in school life. This includes the opportunity to play on school sports teams. Not only are sports beneficial for young people’s physical and mental health, but they also provide the opportunity to develop crucial skills like cooperation, leadership, confidence, and self-respect.

For the vast majority of youth, including transgender youth, school sports are about playing on a team with their friends, experiencing a sense of belonging and sportsmanship, and building confidence that comes from developing their game.

Through a soccer net, kids in team uniforms play soccer on a bright field
Foto von Alyssa Ledesma

Young people shouldn’t have to fight for their right to be included. But transgender youth like Sarah Huckman from New Hampshire, who loves to ski and run track, and Lane Joslin, a high schooler from Maine who loves to play soccer, have had to testify repeatedly against school sports bans in their states. They are making a difference for all transgender youth, and we’re honored to help them along the way.

Sarah Huckman
Sarah Huckman
Lane Joslin
Lane Joslin

While we’ve fortunately been able to stop bans on transgender youth participation in school sports in New Hampshire and Maine, sports bans have passed in 21 states across the country, and state legislatures have introduced at least 71 bills that target transgender athletes this session. The U.S. House also voted to pass a federal ban, HR734. While we expect it will fail in the Senate, the fact that such a discriminatory bill made it to Congress is alarming.

Anti-transgender sports bans harm transgender students, counter important efforts to create supportive school environments, and send a terrible message to all students. They also violate federal civil rights law.

In April of this year, the Department of Education issued a draft rule affirming that Title IX of the Civil Rights Act — our federal law that prohibits sex-based discrimination in education — requires the inclusion of transgender students in school sports.

The rule specifically:

  • Prohibits policies restricting the ability of transgender students to participate in school sports in elementary and middle school and would permit such policies in high school only in rare circumstances and at highly competitive levels.
  • Prohibits categorical bans of transgender athletes at any level, including colleges and universities.
  • Presumes that any restriction on transgender students is invalid and puts a high burden on the government or school proposing the restriction to justify any exception based on specific, demonstrable, and essential educational objectives. Under the rule, the following justifications could not be used as reasons to exclude transgender students: anti-transgender bias, stereotypes, or unsupported assertions that transgender women and girls have a competitive advantage over non-transgender women and girls.

The 30-day public comment period on this proposed rule has ended, and we anticipate the Department of Education to issue the final rule by the fall. In anticipation of its release, you can read our comment and a fact sheet on the proposed rule on our website.

Many of the state laws barring transgender girls from playing on girls’ teams are already being challenged in court as violations of Title IX, and this rule strengthens those challenges. It also provides clear affirmation and guidance to states and schools that have maintained inclusive policies and will hopefully help stop further bans from being adopted. But we know it won’t make these harmful laws disappear overnight.

Our work must continue to ensure that transgender youth — and all LGBTQ+ youth — are included and can thrive in all areas of life. That’s what young people deserve, and it’s what GLAD has fought for, for decades.

Excluding one group of people because they are different sets a bad example that has no place in our schools. An educational environment is at its best when kids learn to embrace difference and create unity across identities. In an ever-diversifying country, learning how to be part of a team with different types of people is an essential life skill. We’ll keep using all the tools we have in the courts and beyond to build a system that prioritizes the well-being of all young people.

This story was originally published in the Summer 2023 GLAD Briefs newsletter. Mehr lesen.

Youth Organizations | National

  • Advocates for Youth partners with young people and their adult allies to champion youth rights to bodily autonomy and build power to transform policies, programs and systems to secure sexual health and equity for all youth.
  • AIDS Action Committee of Massachusetts is New England’s largest provider of services to people living with HIV/AIDS and populations at risk of infection.
  • Athlete Ally educates athletic communities at all levels — sport governing bodies, teams, and individual athletes — to understand obstacles to inclusion for LGBTQ people in sports and how they can build inclusive communities on their teams or within their organizations.
  • Big Sister Association of Greater Boston‘s mission is to ignite girls’ passion and power to succeed through positive mentoring relationships with women and enrichment programs that support girls’ healthy development.
  • Bisexual Resource Center works to connect the bi+ community and help its members thrive through resources, support, and celebration.
  • Boston Alliance of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Youth (BAGLY) is a youth-led, adult-supported organization committed to social justice, and creating, sustaining and advocating for programs, policies and services for the LGBTQ+ youth community.
  • Boston Children’s Hospital is committed to providing comprehensive and affirming treatment to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) patients and families. They are enhancing the health of LGBTQ+ patients and families by understanding and addressing the gaps in their care, while creating a welcoming hospital environment inclusive of the entire LGBTQ+ community.
  • Boston Gay & Lesbian Adolescent Social Services (GLASS) is offering in-person HIV/STI testing, treatment, and PrEP for LGBTQ+ youth ages 16-29.
  • Bostoner HIV-Anbieter für Jugendliche und Peer-Education-Netzwerk für Dienstleistungen (HAPPENS) provides services to youth ages 12 to 24 years who are HIV positive or at risk for the disease and other sexually transmitted diseases. HAPPENS offers free HIV counseling and testing for young adults ages 13 and older, and free sexual transmitted infections and viral hepatitis testing for young adults ages 13 to 24.
  • Boston Mobilization develops and empowers teen leaders for social justice. Through popular education, community organizing and connecting across difference, our teen leaders move local communities toward justice.
  • Bridge provides effective and innovative services to runaway, homeless and high-risk youth, helps youth avoid a lifetime of dependency on social services, guides youth towards self-sufficiency, and enables youth to transform their lives and build fulfilling, meaningful futures.
  • COLAGE unites people with one or more lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, and/or asexual parent into a network of peers and supports them as they nurture and empower each other to be skilled, self-confident, and just leaders in our collective communities.
  • Fenway Gesundheit is committed to providing high quality, culturally competent care and services to all of our patients, including trans and gender diverse youth. They also conduct research and education and engage in advocacy to expand care for and protect the rights of trans and gender diverse youth across the United States.
  • GLSEN (Gay Lesbian, Straight Education Network) ensures that every member of every school community is valued and respected regardless of sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression.
  • GSA-Netzwerk is a next-generation LGBTQ racial and gender justice organization that empowers and trains queer, trans and allied youth leaders to advocate, organize, and mobilize an intersectional movement for safer schools and healthier communities.
  • History Unerased encourages confidence in delivering LGBT and other erased histories through the mentoring and support of educators — by educators.
  • Human Rights Campaign (HRC) envisions a world where every member of the LGBTQ+ family has the freedom to live their truth without fear, and with equality under the law.
  • Home to Hope provides targeted outreach, support, and advocacy services for unaccompanied homeless LGBTQ youth and young adults, and training to those working with youth. Using teams of peers, they connect with youth and young adults (ages 13-24) on the street and in community spaces. With a growing network of collaborators, they support homeless youth and young adults as they seek health and stability.
  • NAGLY is a place where youth can discuss issues of importance to them, explore their identities, build self-awareness, and learn skills for being safe and healthy. Through group building and community service opportunities, the youth and staff at NAGLY have created a strong community that promotes respect for self and for others.
  • InterACT – Advocates for Intersex Youth uses innovative legal and other strategies, to advocate for the human rights of children born with intersex traits.
  • It Gets Better Project uplifts, empowers, and connects lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) youth around the globe.
  • LGBT National Helpline provides vital peer support, community connections, and resource information. Their services focus on sexual orientation and/or gender identity and expression.
  • LGBT National Youth Talkline provides a confidential safe space where callers of any age can speak about sexual orientation or gender identity/expression issues. This includes coming out issues, relationship concerns, family, bullying, school issues, HIV/AIDS anxiety, safer sex information, suicide, and much more.
  • Massachusetts-Kommission für LGBTQ-Jugend advises others in state government on effective policies, programs, and resources for LGBTQ youth.
  • More Than Words is a nonprofit social enterprise that empowers system-involved youth to take charge of their lives by taking charge of a business. They also have a youth-led advocacy group Und youth housing model.
  • Jetzt erhältlich is a LGBTQ+ youth group dedicated to promoting health & well-being, self-determination, and community building through anti-oppression organizing and peer support. They provide a safe space for queer youth & allies who are 22 and under to learn about themselves, develop lasting friendships and leadership skills, explore LGBTQ+ history, and so much more.
  • OUT MetroWest builds communities where LGBTQ+ youth thrive. Their free programs connect LGBTQ+ youth with supportive peers and LGBTQ+ adult role models.
  • PFLAG is the first and largest organization dedicated to supporting, educating, and advocating for LGBTQ+ people and their families.
  • Queer Youth Assemble is a queer youth-led nonprofit serving queer youth under 25 in the US.
  • Safe Homes is a program supporting lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning (LGBTQ) young people, and their straight allies, between the ages of 14 and 23. The group is led by youth peer leaders, professional staff, and volunteers who offer support, resources, and opportunities for socialization in a safe and nurturing environment.
  • Safe Schools for All is a coalition of LGBTQ+ supporting organizations that shares information on how rights of LGBTQ+ students in schools.
  • SAYFTEE is a socially conscious group practice offering a range of services including family therapy, individual therapy, couple/relationship therapy, groups, workshops, training, consultation, and supervision.
  • Silver Lining Mentoring empowers youth in foster care to thrive through committed mentoring relationships and the development of essential life skills. We are one of only a few mentoring organizations in the country exclusively focused on youth impacted by foster care.
  • Studentische Einwandererbewegung (SIM) has been committed to empowering immigrant students through advocacy, training, mobilizing, and organizing. They welcome all young people regardless of immigration status who support their mission to get involved.
  • The Island Wide Youth Collaborative (IWYC), A Massachusetts Family Resource Center, provides services for at-risk families, young people and community members. The goal of a Family Resource Center is to support families to strengthen their bonds, connect to others and engage in their community.
  • Das Trevor-Projekt’s mission is to end suicide among LGBTQ young people.
  • Thrive at CIGSYA (The Cape & Islands Gay & Straight Youth Alliance) is a community-based alliance of young people from fourteen to twenty-two that exists to improve the lives of LGBTIQQS (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer, questioning and straight) youth on Cape Cod and the Islands by addressing key risk factors such as the self hate, isolation and fear, which are often prevalent in their lives.
  • Trans-Athlet is a resource for students, athletes, coaches, and administrators to find information about trans inclusion in athletics at various levels of play.
  • Trans Lifeline connects trans people to the community support and resources they need to survive and thrive.
  • Voices of Liberation is dedicated to empowering youth to change their lives and the conditions of their communities through education, coalition building, organizing and direct action.
  • Waltham House – The Home for Little Wanderers is the first residential group home in New England designed specifically for LGBTQ+ youth, and was among the first of its kind in the nation when it opened in 2002. Its founding principles are that every child deserves to live in an environment in which they feel safe, respected, supported and cared for by those around them.
  • Jugendstolz, Inc.‘s mission is to meet the unique, ongoing needs of LGBTQ+ youth and young adults through direct service, support, advocacy, and education.

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On LGBTQ Families Day a New Report Calls for Updating State Parentage Laws to Protect Children and LGBTQ Families

Especially as LGBTQ families face growing threats across the country, we urgently need more states to pass comprehensive parentage reform to recognize contemporary families and protect all children, regardless of the circumstances of their birth.

– Polly Crozier, Director of Family Advocacy at GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders

Five leading national organizations that advocate for LGBTQ families joined forces on a new report, Beziehungen in Gefahr: Warum wir die staatlichen Elternschaftsgesetze aktualisieren müssen, um Kinder und Familien zu schützen: Movement Advancement Project (MAP), COLAGE, Family Equality, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), and NCLR.

The report details how the current patchwork of parentage laws across the country – many of which haven’t been updated in decades – leaves LGBTQ parents and their children vulnerable. Nearly 1 in 3 LGBTQ adults in the U.S. are raising children under the age of 18, many of them in states that still have outdated laws. This means that far too many children in LGBTQ families are potentially at risk.

Why Parentage Is So Important to Children and LGBTQ Families

Parentage is the legal relationship between a child and their parents, which is essential to children’s security and well-being. Parentage is crucial so that parents can make critical healthcare and education decisions for their children, and so that children have access to important benefits including insurance coverage, social security survivor benefits, and inheritance. Legal parentage also ensures a child does not lose their important connection to a parent in circumstances such as the death of one parent or the end of the parents’ relationship.

“All children, regardless of who their parents are, should be able to establish a secure legal tie to the parents who love and care for them. Yet, many states’ parentage laws are more than 40 years out of date. This leaves too many LGBTQ families navigating complicated and costly systems to safeguard their connections to their children,” said Naomi Goldberg, Deputy Director of MAP and the lead author of the report. 

State-By-State Examination of Parentage Laws Shows Many Are Out of Date and Out of Step with How Families Form

The report reviews the ways in which legal parentage may be established, which states have updated their laws, and in which states LGBTQ families remain at risk. Families form in many different ways. Yet despite the increasing number of LGBTQ families and the increasing number of all families formed through assisted reproduction, to date fewer than a dozen states have comprehensively updated their parentage laws to reflect the diverse ways today’s families form.

More than half of states lack clear, accessible, and equitable pathways for LGBTQ parents to establish parentage. As a result, many families face complicated, time-consuming, and costly processes to establish legal ties between parents and children. LGBTQ parents in many states must still undergo demeaning and unnecessary “home studies” to adopt their own children and spend thousands in legal costs to secure their parentage. And for many parents that cost, and access to the courts, is completely out of reach, leaving them at tremendous risk because their state has not updated its parentage laws. In the most heart-wrenching cases, children have been pulled into the child welfare system because a parent who loves and cares for them wasn’t recognized as a legal parent, and non-birth parents who planned for and raised their kids have been stripped of their parental rights because a court relied on outdated laws that fail to acknowledge the existence of same-gender parents.

“LGBTQ families are a part of every community across the country, yet many LGBTQ families still face expensive and demeaning barriers to providing legal security for their children,” said Stacey Stevenson, CEO of Family Equality. “Parents shouldn’t have to navigate a complicated legal system just to ensure their kids are protected.”

“LGBTQ families form through love, intention and care and children of LGBTQ parents, like all children, need and deserve to know their families are secure. Our laws should protect families, not create barriers to their stability,” said Jordan Budd, Executive Director of COLAGE. 

“We are seeing far too many heart-breaking examples of the discrimination that LGBTQ+ parents continue to face in the United States. When states and courts refuse to give LGBTQ families the same protections as other families, it leaves parents at risk of being shut out of their child’s life and children at risk of losing a parent who loves and cares for them,” said Nesta Johnson, NCLR Family Law Staff Attorney. 

Progress is Happening Across the Country to Update State Parentage Laws and to Protect LGBTQ Families

While detailing the importance of legal parentage and outlining the risks to LGBTQ families, the report also shows the path forward. It highlights states that have taken crucial steps to update their parentage laws in recent years, including Colorado, Connecticut, and Rhode Island–and states like Massachusetts, which has the opportunity right now to protect LGBTQ families.

“Families form in many ways and our laws must reflect that so children have equality and security. States like Maine, Vermont, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Colorado have led the way by updating their laws to ensure child-centered, equal, and accessible paths to legal parentage for all families, including LGBTQ families. Especially as LGBTQ families face growing threats across the country, we urgently need more states to pass comprehensive parentage reform to recognize contemporary families and protect all children, regardless of the circumstances of their birth,” sagte Polly Crozier, Direktorin für Familienvertretung bei GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD). 

Story spotlight: parents should not be at the mercy of chance

Outdated parentage laws can mean children don’t have their parents when they need them most, like during a medical crisis, as happened to parents Moira and Hillary.

When Moira underwent an emergency c-section and their daughter June was immediately rushed to the NICU, Hillary had no legal standing as a parent because their second-parent adoption was still pending. With Moira incapacitated and Hillary’s parental status unclear, neither parent was able to make medical decisions for June and the NICU staff were left to do what they thought was best. Thankfully they were kind enough to let Hillary be with June, but she knows that was not guaranteed.

“Had we been at a different hospital, or had we interacted with different staff,” Hillary says,” I might have been shut out entirely. Even though things worked out, parents like us should not be at the mercy of chance.”

Moira, Hillary and June’s story helped encourage the Rhode Island legislature to update their state parentage laws in 2020 to ensure other families don’t face that same uncertainty at a time of crisis.

About the Report

The report was authored by the Movement Advancement Project, in partnership with COLAGE, Family Equality, GLAD, and NCLR, with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. It is available online at: www.mapresearch.org/2023-parentage-report

Der Blog

LGBTQ+-Familien mit Stolz feiern

Schönen LGBTQ-Familientag! 

Heute, zu Beginn des Pride-Monats, feiern wir unsere Familien in all ihren schönen und vielfältigen Formen.

GLADs langjähriges Engagement für die Gleichstellung unserer Beziehungen und Familien vor dem Gesetz hat zu entscheidenden Fortschritten bei der Gleichstellung von Familien geführt – und da LGBTQ+-Familien zunehmender Voreingenommenheit und Diskriminierung ausgesetzt sind, ist unsere Arbeit zum Schutz unserer Rechte und zur Gewährleistung von Rechtssicherheit dringender denn je.

Wir haben bei der Aktualisierung veralteter Gesetze, die Kinder aus LGBTQ+-Familien in ganz Neuengland schutzlos aussetzen, eine Vorreiterrolle übernommen. Dabei stützten wir uns auf die Modellgesetzgebung. das Uniform Parentage Act.

  • Connecticut: Am 1. Juni 2021 feierten wir die Unterzeichnung des Connecticut Parentage Act – die umfassendsten Aktualisierungen des Elternrechts bis heute! Wir setzen nun unsere Innovationsarbeit im Verfassungsstaat fort, indem wir uns für eine Rechnung zur Sicherstellung des Versicherungsschutzes für Fruchtbarkeitsbehandlungen LGBTQ+ und Alleinstehende einschließt und dass HUSKY Health die Fruchtbarkeitsbehandlungen abdeckt.
  • Maine: Wir haben uns für den Maine Parentage Act von 2016 eingesetzt und im letzten Jahr den Schutz in Maine verbessert. durch die Erweiterung des Zugangs in ein einfaches, zugängliches Formular namens Freiwillige Anerkennung der Abstammung – eine wirkungsvolle und inklusive Möglichkeit für Eltern, ihre Beziehung bei der Geburt ihres Kindes zu bekräftigen. Diese Arbeit wird in diesem Jahr mit einem Gesetzentwurf fortgesetzt, der die Bestätigungsadoption vereinfachen soll. Dadurch wird es für LGBTQ+-Eltern einfacher, schneller und kostengünstiger, ihre rechtliche Abstammung zu bestätigen, sodass sie und ihre Kinder geschützt sind, egal wohin ihre Familien ziehen oder reisen. Der Gesetzentwurf LD 1906 wurde Anfang dieser Woche vom Ausschuss positiv verabschiedet.
  • New Hampshire: Wir haben uns für die Aktualisierung von Gesetzen eingesetzt, die Eltern durch vereinfachte Adoptionsverfahren anerkennen. Im Jahr 2020 wir haben uns für einen Gesetzentwurf eingesetzt Das schließt erhebliche rechtliche Lücken und macht die Sicherheit der Elternschaft für mehr Kinder und Familien zugänglich. Die bestätigende Adoption bietet Eltern eine unkomplizierte Möglichkeit, ihre eigenen Kinder zu adoptieren, ohne langwierige, teure und aufdringliche Hausbesuche und veraltete Adoptionspraktiken.
  • Rhode Island: Im Juli 2020 feierten wir die bedeutsame Unterzeichnung des Einheitliches Elternschaftsgesetz von Rhode Island als Teil einer Koalition lokaler Familien und Organisationen. Auf dem Höhepunkt der COVID-19-Pandemie haben wir über 40 Jahre alte Abstammungsgesetze aktualisiert. Diese Arbeit wird in diesem Jahr mit einem Gesetzentwurf fortgesetzt, der die Bestätigungsadoption vereinfachen und es LGBTQ+-Eltern einfacher, schneller und kostengünstiger machen soll, ihre rechtliche Abstammung zu bestätigen, sodass sie und ihre Kinder geschützt sind, egal wohin ihre Familien ziehen oder reisen. Der Senat des Bundesstaates hat letzten Monat S0121 verabschiedet. und das Repräsentantenhaus prüft derzeit das Gegenstück, H 5226.
  • Vermont: Wir haben die Aktualisierung der veralteten Gesetze Vermonts vorangetrieben mit der Vermont Parentage Act von 2017. In diesem Jahr hat Vermont auch zwei Schildgesetze, HB 89 und SB 37, die den bislang umfassendsten Schutz für Anbieter und Suchende von Gesundheitsversorgung für Transgender sowie reproduktiver Versorgung schaffen.

Wir haben große Fortschritte in Richtung Gleichberechtigung gemacht, doch LGBTQ+-Familien im ganzen Land sind zunehmenden Risiken ausgesetzt. Extremisten haben Hunderte von Gesetzentwürfen gegen LGBTQ+ eingereicht, und jüngste Klagen vor staatlichen Gerichten sowie veraltete Elternschaftsgesetze führen zu erheblichen Härten für LGBTQ+-Eltern und ihre Kinder. Wir müssen unsere Arbeit fortsetzen, um sicherzustellen, dass unsere Familien nicht nur sicher und geschützt sind, sondern auch gedeihen können.

Deshalb haben wir mit dem Movement Advancement Project in Zusammenarbeit mit COLAGE, Family Equality und dem National Center for Lesbian Rights zusammengearbeitet, um veröffentlichen Sie heute einen neuen Bericht – am LGBTQ-Familientag – zum Stand der Elternschaftsgesetze im ganzen Land.

Lesen Sie den neuen nationalen Bericht

Dieser Bericht zeigt, wie unser aktueller Flickenteppich an Elternschaftsgesetzen – von denen viele seit Jahrzehnten nicht mehr aktualisiert wurden – LGBTQ+-Eltern und ihre Kinder gefährdet. Es bietet aber auch einen Weg nach vorn und hebt Staaten hervor, die in den letzten Jahren wichtige Schritte zur Aktualisierung ihrer Elternschaftsgesetze unternommen haben, wie Connecticut, Colorado, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island und Vermont, und hebt Staaten hervor – wie Massachusetts –, in denen derzeit eine Gesetzgebung ansteht.

Wir sind außerdem stolz, gemeinsam mit Mombian, dem Gründer des LGBTQ Families Day, eine neue Ressource zu starten, die LGBTQ+-Eltern dabei hilft, Wege zu finden, um den rechtlichen Schutz ihrer Familien zu gewährleisten: LGBTQ-Wege zur Abstammungssicherheit.

Angesichts der aktuellen Bedrohungen der Gleichberechtigung werden wir unsere Gemeinschaft vehement verteidigen, uns unermüdlich für Gesetze einsetzen, die unsere Beziehungen schützen, und unsere wunderbaren Familien mit Stolz feiern.

MPA advocate J. Shia and her son embracing

Verabschiedung des Massachusetts Parentage Act

Kontaktieren Sie Ihre Gesetzgeber in Massachusetts, um das dringend wichtige MA Parentage Act mitzuunterstützen!

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The National Center for Lesbian Rights, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), and The Trevor Project – along with the National Education Association and more than a dozen other organizations – have submitted comments to the U.S. Department of Education supporting its proposed rule requiring equal treatment of transgender students in school sports under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. In addition to the National Education Association, the coalition of organizations includes Family Equality, the Los Angeles LGBT Center, and SAGE.

The comments commend the Department for affirming that Title IX prohibits discrimination against transgender students in school sports, noting the urgency of creating clear federal policy in the face of the unlawful bans proliferating in many states. The proposed rule states that any policy that categorically bans transgender girls or women from playing on girls’ or women’s sports teams, or that prohibits transgender boys or men from playing on boys or men’s sports teams, is prohibited.

“We applaud the Department of Education for drafting a rule that protects transgender students from discrimination and ensures their equal inclusion in school sports,” said NCLR Federal Policy Director Juliana S. Gonen.  

“With so many states adopting policies that exclude transgender athletes in violation of Title IX, it is urgent the Department of Education finalizes its rule that makes clear transgender students must be given full and equal inclusion in school sports programs,” said GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders Senior Director of Transgender and Queer Rights Jennifer Levi.

“Following the wave of anti-transgender state laws we’ve witnessed that prohibit trans young people from participating in school sports, it is crucial that the Department of Education reject these discriminatory policies and stand firmly in support of trans students with this rule. No young person should be denied the opportunity to be part of a team simply because of who they are,” said Kasey Suffredini (he/him), Vice President of Advocacy and Government Affairs at The Trevor Project. 

Earlier this year, NCLR and GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defender (GLAD) jointly produced a fact sheet explaining the proposed rule and its protection of transgender students in school sports under Title IX.

NCLR has filed lawsuits challenging state laws banning transgender students from school sports in Utah Und Arizona.

Read the public comment.

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