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Palm Springs Pride

Palm Springs Pride

November 6 – 9 | Palm Springs, CA | Learn more

Celebrate with GLAD Law at Palm Springs Pride!

Hosted by Greater Palm Springs Pride, the Palm Springs Pride Festival celebrates all that is LGBTQ+ in Palm Springs.

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2025 Justice with Pride: Palm Springs

Thank you for joining us at GLAD Law’s 2025 Justice with Pride: Palm Springs event on Sunday, March 9. With your help, we have officially raised over $53,000 and counting! Your support is inspiring. If you didn’t have a chance to make your gift at the event – you can still do so now by clicking here

Check out photos from the event!

Support GLAD Law’s Mission

YouTube video

This video was produced for GLAD Law’s 25th Spirit of Justice Award Dinner in November 2024. Follow GLAD Law’s most recent work and response to the new administration here.

Featured Speakers

Ricardo Martinez (he/him)

Executive Director

Ricardo joined GLAD Law as Executive Director in the summer of 2024 after serving on the front lines of state and national LGBTQ+ advocacy in Texas and Arizona. A first-generation immigrant from Mexico who grew up in Brooklyn, New York, Ricardo has amassed twenty years of nonprofit fundraising, advocacy, and leadership experience.

Most recently, as CEO of Equality Texas, Ricardo ensured the organization maximized its impact during intense and sustained anti-LGBTQ+ legislation.

Ricardo has an undergraduate degree from Stony Brook University and a master’s degree in nonprofit management from The New School in New York City. He was honored by the Obama Administration as an emerging LGBTQ Leader in 2012 and awarded Stony Brook University’s 40 Under 40 award for his impact in Civil Service and Activism.

Chris Erchull (any pronouns)

Senior Staff Attorney

Chris Erchull joined GLAD Law in 2019. Chris is a leading transgender rights attorney involved in both litigation and legislative work to defend against the onslaught of anti-trans laws and policies nationwide. His litigation is primarily focused on access to medical care and educational opportunities.

Host Committee

Hosted by

Frank Hundley

Co-Chairs

Rick McCarthy
Dr. Eric Swartz

Members

Michael Arden & Bob Blackford
Dennis De Groot
Peter J. Epstein
Adolfo Sandoval & David Raney
Hassan Shaibu
Ector Simpson
David Wildman

Sponsors

Silver

Michael Arden & Bob Blackford

Transgender Health and Wellness Center Logo
Brothers of the Dessert Logo
Logo for The Center: LGBTQ Community Center of the Desert
HARP (HIV Aging Research Project) Logo

As of March 11, 2025

Justice for All 2024: Palm Springs

Justice for All 2024: Palm Springs

Sunday, April 28 |  1:00pm – 3:00pm PST
Indian Canyon, Palm Springs, CA

We hope that you can join us for a special afternoon of food, fun and inspiration to support GLAD’s national efforts to defend and advance LGBTQ+ equality and the rights of people with HIV at our host’s beautiful Indian Canyon home. Exact location shared upon registration.

Featured Speakers

Ben Klein (he/him)

Senior Director of Litigation and HIV Law

As an GLAD attorney since 1994, Ben has been a pivotal figure in litigating groundbreaking cases across GLAD’s mission areas. Notably, his work in HIV litigation challenged discrimination, leading to the 1998 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Bragdon v. Abbott, establishing nationwide protection against discrimination for people with HIV under the Americans with Disabilities Act.

In the realm of sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination, Ben played a key role in landmark cases such as Kerrigan & Mock v. Department of Public Health (2008) and O’Donnabhain v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (2010). His contributions extend to expanding access to PrEP, securing the rights of transgender students, facilitating the placement of transgender women in women’s prisons, and challenging discrimination in religiously-affiliated institutions.

Richard Burns (he/him)

Interim Executive Director

Richard was president of GLAD’s founding board from 1978-1986 and has maintained his commitment to the organization for 45 years. Richard will provide updates on the critical work we’re doing to defend and promote LGBTQ+ justice and equity, and how you can help make a difference!

Progress is not a given and we must remain vigilant, especially as our opponents are more motivated than ever to rollback our decades of hard fought victories. We hope that you will join us to learn more about GLAD’s impact and how you can continue supporting our efforts.

Become an Individual Sponsor

(You can also find this information here)

SPONSOR
LEVEL
SOCIAL MEDIA
PROMOTION
RECOGNITION
FROM STAGE
EQUAL JUSTICE
COUNCIL* STATUS
FOR 1 YEAR
DIGITAL
INVITATIONS
EVENT
DISPLAY
EVENT
WEBSITE
TICKETS
$5,000
DIAMOND
LISTINGXXLISTINGPROMINENT
LISTING
LISTING8
$3,000
RUBY
XXLISTINGPROMINENT
LISTING
LISTING7
$1,978
PLATINUM
XLISTINGPROMINENT
LISTING
LISTING6
$1,500
GOLD
LISTINGLISTINGLISTING5
$1,000
SILVER
LISTINGLISTINGLISTING4
$500
BRONZE
LISTINGLISTING3
$300
COPPER
LISTING2
*EJC (Equal Justice Council) members receive special invitations to exclusive Major Donor events throughout the year as well as complimentary tickets to our Annual Summer Party, among other benefits.

To become a Sponsor and help make this event a success, contact our Assistant Director of Development, Josh Arsenault, at jarsenault@glad.org.

Tickets and Sponsorships:

While registration for this event are hosted at no cost, please consider making a donation at one of the suggested levels to provide crucial support to GLAD’s vital work in litigation, advocacy, and public education aimed at eradicating discrimination against LGBTQ+ people and the HIV+ community.

Host Committee

Hosted By

Phil Kleweno & Alain Verscheure

Co-Chairs

Rick McCarthy
Dr. Eric Swartz

Members

Michael Arden & Bob Blackford
Ted Chapin
Sergio Daitschman
Peter Epstein
Jill Langham
Adolfo Sandoval & David Raney
João Santos
Ector Simpson
R. Austin Smolka
David Wildman

As of April 23, 2024

Dignity, Opportunity, & Equal Justice Under Law

Dignity, Opportunity, & Equal Justice Under Law:
Where We’ve Been and Where We’re Going in the Work for LGBTQ+ Rights

GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders has been tirelessly fighting for LGBTQ+ justice in the courts and through legislative and policy advocacy for over 45 years. The current climate and resurgence in anti-LGBTQ+ laws have made this work even more urgent – and together, we can keep fighting and keep advancing toward equality.

We invite you to join us in Palm Springs, CA, for a conversation about what we can take from our shared history of LGBTQ+ rights advocacy to chart the path forward.

Graphic displaying logos for the event host and community partner organizations. Host Organizations: GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) and Mizell Center. Lead Community Partner: LGBTQ Community Center of the Desert. Community Partners: A Cabello, Brothers of the Desert, Palm Springs Classical Voices, Courageous Resistance, DAP Health, Desert Stonewall Democrats, HIV Plus Aging Research Project Palm Springs, Indivisible of the Desert, The L-Fund, the Leather Order of the Desert, LGBTQ+ History & Archives of the Desert, the Palm Springs Gay Men’s Chorus, A Cabello Project Connect, the Riverside County Democratic Party, the Rotary Club of Palm Springs Sunup, and Transgender Health & Wellness Center

Speakers

In front of a gray gradient backdrop, Ricardo smiles in a white button down and dusty rose blazer with a patterned pocket square. His vibe is warm and energetic, he has closely buzzed hair and stud earrings.

Ricardo Martinez
GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders
Executive Director

Thomi has long red hair and is wearing an orange blazer

Thomi Clinton
Transgender Health & Wellness Center
CEO and Founder

Portrait of Chris Erchull

Chris Erchull
GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders
Senior Staff Attorney

Joy Silver
Community Housing Opportunities Corp
Chief Strategy Officer

Photo of Amanda Johnston

Amanda Johnston
GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders
Director of Communications & Public Education

Moderator

photo of Mike Thompson, a masc person in a black button down, black short hair and short stubble

Mike Thompson
LGBTQ+ Community Center of the Desert
Chief Executive Officer

Event Details

The venue is mobility accessible.

For more information or additional accommodations, please contact Qwin Mbabazi at qmbabazi@glad.org.

Tickets

This event is put on in partnership with:

Host Organizations

Lead Community Partner

Community Partners

Wade v. Starbucks

GLAD joined a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Fifth Appellate District in California to reverse a trial court ruling against a former Starbucks employee Maddie Wade. Learn more from Lambda Legal and read our amicus brief here.

Murphy v. Twitter

GLAD, together with NCLR, Lamda Legal, Transgender Law Center, and HRC, submitted a friend-of-the-court brief in this case to support a provider’s ability to create and enforce policies against online abuse and harassment. The brief highlights the importance of policies that protect transgender people from abuse and harassment, including policies that prohibit the intentional misuse of a trans person’s name and pronouns.

From the brief:

“Online communities play a critically important role in enabling transgender people to connect with one another, build networks and communities, and participate in public debate and discussion. However, transgender people also often face disproportionate abuse and harassment online, including hate speech, slurs, and targeted efforts by other users to disparage their identity, experience, and existence as transgender individuals by deliberately assigning them the wrong gender or name—forms of verbal harassment sometimes referred to as “misgendering” and “deadnaming,” respectively, including in Twitter’s user code of conduct at issue in this case. The prevalence and severity of such abuse can substantially impair transgender people’s ability to access online spaces and communities, denigrates their identity, and in some cases can be associated with adverse mental health outcomes; it can also adversely affect the vibrancy of online communities themselves, by depriving those communities of full and open participation of transgender users, who may feel reluctant to speak up or engage in discussions for fear of attracting such abuse. Service providers have valid and well-founded interests, as expressed in Twitter’s own policy, in having rules that foster greater participation. And policies by social media companies that prohibit the use of their online platforms to target and denigrate other users on the basis of their gender identity—provided they can be meaningfully enforced when necessary—play an important role in ensuring that such spaces are available for transgender people to express themselves freely.

Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru and St. James School v. Biel

GLAD has signed onto a friend-of-the-court brief filed by the The National Women’s Law Center, along with the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, Kevin Russell of Goldstein & Russell, P.C., and 67 additional organizations, with the U.S. Supreme Court on March 11, 2020 in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru and St. James School v. Biel (consolidated).

At stake in these cases is the scope of a doctrine called the “ministerial exception.” This exception was originally created to allow houses of worship to hire and fire ministers without court involvement. But now religious employers—in these cases, Catholic schools—are trying to use this theory to deny civil rights protections to their lay employees.

Here, one schoolteacher, Ms. Biel brought a disability discrimination claim against her school, and in the other case, Ms. Morrissey-Berru brought an age discrimination claim against her school. But both teachers were denied their civil rights when the schools claimed they were “ministers.”

This brief was filed in support of these two schoolteachers, and all the other teachers and staff at religious schools who could be denied their civil rights in the workplace if the U.S. Supreme Court expands this exception.

The brief addresses how religious employers are using this exception to try to deny workplace rights, including protections against sexual harassment, unequal pay, disability discrimination, and claims for overtime pay. Alarmingly, employees have no way of knowing if they are being considered ministers by their employers until after they have faced discrimination and try to bring civil rights claims. If the Court expands the ministerial exception as requested by the religious employers in these cases, it would cause enormous harm to women, people of color, immigrants, people with disabilities, older workers, LGBTQ workers, and others who face multiple and intertwining forms of discrimination.

Participating organizations urge the Court to reject these attempts to expand the ministerial exception and instead, rule in a manner that allows teachers and other employees at religious schools to retain their critical workplace civil rights protections.

Protecting Title X-Funded Medical Centers

GLAD has joined an amicus brief supporting lawsuits against new regulations that directly restrict and control the type of medical care and counseling patients receive at Title X-funded family planning and reproductive health centers.

Excerpts from the brief:

Certain groups encounter obstacles to obtaining health care in the United States. Women seeking reproductive health care, as well as others who are members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) community, historically have struggled to access essential health care services because of stigma arising from social and political beliefs about sex, gender roles, and childbearing. For LGBTQ people in particular, this stigma, and its detrimental effect on access to basic health care, have led to significant health disparities compared to other populations. Some providers of reproductive health care, including Planned Parenthood affiliates and other Title X grantees, are significantly ameliorating these disparities by providing essential health care to the LGBTQ community. The Department of Health and Human Services’s Final Rule threatens this access to basic health care for many LGBTQ people. The Final Rule should be enjoined, not only because it is contrary to law, but also because it would cause irreparable harm to LGBTQ people. The Final Rule would eliminate health care providers essential to the LGBTQ community, increase health care disparities for LGBTQ people, and violate the equal dignity of Title X patients.

This case concerns recently issued regulations from the Department of Health and Human Services (the Department). The district court found that provisions of the Final Rule (DHHS’ new regulations) violate the statutes they purport to implement. First, the district court found that the Gag Rule, which forces medical providers in the Title X family planning program to direct individuals away from obtaining an abortion, violates a statutory provision requiring that all pregnancy counseling be “nondirective.”

Second, the district court found that the physical and financial Separation Requirements, which penalize Title X projects that also provide abortion care, violate a provision in the Affordable Care Act barring the Department from issuing any regulations that create barriers to appropriate medical care or interfere with communications regarding a full range of treatment options between patient and provider.

But the Final Rule does more than violate the law. In addition to these legal violations and the irreparable harms the district court identified, the Final Rule’s restrictions will drive qualified providers from a program designed for underserved communities and will exacerbate the serious health disparities LGBTQ people already experience. Those additional, irreparable harms support an injunction barring the Final Rule from taking effect.

Quine v. CDCR

GLAD and other LGBTQ legal organizations joined an amicus brief in Quine v. CDCR, urging the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to hold that transgender status warrants strict scrutiny.

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