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A 23-year veteran of the Air Force and Marine Corps and his 21-year-old adult daughter today filed a challenge to a 1976 federal statute that prohibits the Military Health System, administered by an entity within the Department of Defense called TRICARE, from providing coverage for medically necessary surgical treatments for gender dysphoria for dependents of servicemembers. The complaint was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maine.

The plaintiff John Doe receives healthcare coverage for himself and his family through the military health system, just as other current and former servicemembers do. John’s daughter, Jane, is a 21-year-old transgender woman who, as a college student, remains on her father’s health plan.

At the recommendation of her doctors, Jane, who suffers from gender dysphoria, began treatment for gender transition, as a young adult. While TRICARE covers the cost of medications Jane needs, it does not cover essential surgical care.

“I just want what others who have served their country want – the ability to take care of my family,” said John Doe. “My family has served right alongside me. My wife and I want our daughter to be healthy and happy, like any parents would. My daughter shouldn’t be denied the healthcare she needs just because she’s transgender.”

Healthcare experts and professional health organizations including the American Medical Association and the American Psychological Association recognize gender affirming surgeries as safe, effective and medically necessary treatments for gender dysphoria.

“People who have sacrificed to serve our country should not be denied the ability to care for their families,” said GLAD Attorney Ben Klein. “The U.S. military is taking steps to ensure transgender servicemembers are treated fairly and with the respect they deserve. There is no justification for TRICARE to deny coverage for service members’ loved ones, just because they are transgender.”

“The military has made serious progress in treating transgender service members more fairly,” said GLAD Attorney Jennifer Levi, who also brought a legal challenge that blocked the former ban on military service by transgender Americans. “And now it’s time to end this outdated and archaic denial of healthcare for transgender members of military families.”

“As a former servicemember myself, I know firsthand how many sacrifices military spouses and families make,” said Orrick’s Shane McCammon, who served for over 12 years as an active-duty Air Force JAG and a leading member of the firm’s pro bono effort in this case. “These unsung heroes are entitled to get their medically necessary healthcare, and in this instance needed care free from discrimination. The Supreme Court has already recognized that discrimination against individuals based on their gender identity is unlawful, and the medical community has vastly expanded its understanding of gender dysphoria and transgender health care. It’s time to finally remove this relic from the books and bring the law into the 21st century.”

The plaintiffs are represented by GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) attorneys Ben Klein and Jennifer Levi, and Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP attorneys Shane McCammon, Matthew Moses, Seth Harrington, Brittany Roehrs, and Ethan Dowling. They are challenging the statutory exclusion of coverage for transgender dependents’ medically necessary care as a violation of their constitutional rights to Equal Protection and Due Process, and as a violation of the federal Rehabilitation Act.

Visit the case page to stay up-to-date on the lawsuit.

Doe v. Austin

“I just want what others who have served their country want – the ability to take care of my family…My daughter shouldn’t be denied the health care she needs just because she’s transgender.”

–John Doe, plaintiff in Doe v. Austin

更新: Victory! On November 1, a federal district court judge issued a ruling in our plaintiffs’ favor, saying that the exclusion of this essential health care is unconstitutional as applied to transgender people experiencing gender dysphoria.


A 23-year veteran of the Air Force and Marine Corps and his 21-year-old adult daughter are challenging a 1976 federal statute that prohibits the Military Health System, administered by an entity within the Department of Defense called TRICARE, from providing coverage for medically necessary surgical treatments for gender dysphoria for dependents of servicemembers.

The plaintiff John Doe receives health care coverage for himself and his family through the military health system, just as other current and former servicemembers do. John’s daughter, Jane, is a 21-year-old transgender woman who, as a college student, remains on her father’s health plan.

At the recommendation of her doctors, Jane, who suffers from gender dysphoria, began treatment for gender transition, as a young adult. While TRICARE covers the cost of medications Jane needs, it does not cover essential surgical care.

Healthcare experts and professional health organizations, including the American Medical Association and the American Psychological Association, recognize transgender care surgeries as safe, effective, and medically necessary treatments for gender dysphoria.

John Doe and his daughter are represented by GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) attorneys Ben Klein and Jennifer Levi, and Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP attorneys Shane McCammon, Matthew Moses, Seth Harrington, Brittany Roehrs, and Ethan Dowling. They are challenging the statutory exclusion of coverage for transgender dependents’ medically necessary care as a violation of their constitutional rights to Equal Protection and Due Process, and as a violation of the federal Rehabilitation Act.

博客

尽管最高法院的一些人质疑个人权利,但我们的工作仍在继续,以确保我们的家庭得到认可和保护

美国最高法院今年夏天的裁决推翻了 罗诉韦德案 堕胎权已经对全美数百万需要堕胎服务的人们造成了毁灭性的影响。一些州正在实施限制或彻底禁止堕胎政策,而这些政策对有色人种及其家庭,以及那些无力前往外州或寻求其他途径寻求医疗服务的人,将造成最严重的打击。

LGBTQ+ 运动与生殖正义运动有着根本的联系,同性恋者堕胎联盟 (GLAD) 正与生殖平等运动的合作伙伴携手,为所有有需要的人争取堕胎权。今年夏天,在马萨诸塞州,在参议员乔安妮·科默福德 (Joanne Comerford)、参议员朱利安·赛尔 (Julian Cyr) 和众议员凯特·霍根 (Kate Hogan) 等 LGBTQ+ 党团成员的立法领导下,我们帮助确保了 通过一项新法律 加强对堕胎和性别确认护理的保障。我们正在与新英格兰其他州就类似措施进行磋商。

影响 多布斯 裁决的范围超出了对堕胎的有害限制。克拉伦斯·托马斯大法官在一份同意意见中表示,影响LGBTQ+群体关系、家庭建设和婚姻自由的关键决定——包括 劳伦斯 (确认同性之间自愿亲密关系的权利)以及 奥贝格费尔 (肯定婚姻自由)——也应该重新考虑。

需要明确的是: 劳伦斯 和 奥贝格费尔 这些裁决仍然是国家法律——同性恋者联盟(GLAD)将捍卫这些裁决,使其免受任何挑战,因为这些裁决既有利于我们的国家,也是正确的。我们相信我们终将胜利,因为宪法保障自由和平等保护,是这些裁决的基础。数百万美国人依靠自身或家庭成员的能力,与所爱之人结婚并建立家庭。任何可能的政府利益都不能成为通过破坏婚姻平等来破坏家庭稳定的理由。

联邦《尊重婚姻法》

国会也应发挥应有的作用,确保婚姻继续得到承认,并向家庭保证其将保护他们最重要的关系。同性恋者反歧视联盟在推动通过 尊重婚姻法这项迟来的联邦立法将正式废除整个《婚姻保护法》(DOMA)。同性恋者反歧视联盟(GLAD)牵头发起了首批由多名原告组成的诉讼,挑战《婚姻保护法》第三条(即承认全美范围内的婚姻),并协调了一项法庭之友行动。 温莎 最高法院的判决。 温莎 导致第3条被宣布违宪。《尊重婚姻法》将确保联邦  各州政府继续承认和尊重所有婚姻,不因性别、性取向、国籍、民族或种族而歧视—— 无论。

这项两党法案于今年夏天在众议院获得通过,我们都必须呼吁参议院在11月复会后尽快通过该法案。 立即采取行动保护婚姻平等.

推进国家层面的家庭保护

保护我们的孩子和我们的家庭,无论他们如何形成,一直是 GLAD 四十多年来 LGBTQ+ 正义工作的支柱。亲子关系——儿童与其父母或父母之间的法律关系——对儿童的安全和福祉至关重要。多年来, GLAD 已领导努力 更新各州关于谁是合法父母的法律。同性恋者反歧视联盟 (GLAD) 已在佛蒙特州、罗德岛州、康涅狄格州、缅因州、新罕布什尔州和科罗拉多州等多个州开展工作,通过亲子关系改革立法加强对家庭的保护。

鉴于 多布斯 裁决。

最近几个月,我们看到缅因州一家初审法院以缺乏血缘关系为由剥夺了一名孩子与其LGBTQ+已婚母亲的监护权。我们还看到爱达荷州最高法院拒绝承认一名LGBTQ+已婚父母的监护权,因为她与孩子没有血缘关系。在新罕布什尔州,州儿童抚养机构最近试图确认一位已知的配子捐赠者为合法父母,并要求其提供经济支持。同性恋者代孕协会 (GLAD) 代表捐赠者,并与母亲的律师协调,明确说明她是孩子唯一的合法父母,并强调父母、子女、捐赠者和州政府都必须明确谁是父母。

在马萨诸塞州,在 GLAD 成立近 20 年后 古德里奇 尽管该胜利使得同性伴侣可以合法结婚,但 LGBTQ+ 家庭仍然面临伤害,因为州法律尚未更新以反映当今家庭的形成方式。

GLAD 与 Resolve New England 共同领导一个由家庭、律师和合作组织组成的联盟,致力于通过 马萨诸塞州亲子法 (MPA)。MPA 将更新州法律,明确哪些人可以成为父母以及如何确认亲子关系,并为非婚生子女以及通过辅助生殖和代孕出生的子女增加重要保护。它还将使 LGBTQ+ 父母能够像其他家庭一样确认亲子关系,包括通过自愿确认亲子关系。

如果没有《个人保护法案》(MPA),马萨诸塞州现行的家庭法将LGBTQ+家庭及其子女置于二等公民的地位。父母——无论已婚或未婚——可能仍需经历昂贵、耗时且不尊重的收养子女程序,才能完全保障家庭安全。如果州亲子法没有明确纳入,父母和子女将面临被儿童福利系统分离的风险。代孕出生的儿童得不到任何保护,这意味着有些孩子需要等待数年才能确定自己的亲子关系。此外, 事实上 自 1999 年以来,马萨诸塞州法院就已授予亲子父母身份,但他们无法获得完全的合法父母身份,因此无法为子女提供医疗保健或为他们做出决定。

事实父母关系优先考虑孩子,保护孩子与履行其父母职责的人之间的关系,通常是在另一方父母无法照顾孩子的情况下。它保护孩子——尤其是那些来自经济困难家庭的孩子——并使孩子免于接受儿童福利系统的救助。但目前在马萨诸塞州,事实父母关系只允许探视,这是一种二等公民身份,会给孩子和家庭带来持续的伤害。只有合法父母关系才能获得稳定和幸福的基石——决策权、子女抚养费、福利金等等。

马萨诸塞州最高法院呼吁立法机构更新亲子关系法,为家庭法院提供更清晰的解释。《亲子关系法案》(MPA)将为法院解决亲子关系争议提供清晰的标准。该法案还制定了比现行法律更为严格的事实亲子关系认定标准——包括诉讼资格要求、七个必须由明确且令人信服的证据证明的因素,以及对家庭暴力幸存者的明确保护。

GLAD 致力于更新新英格兰其他各州的亲子关系法。我们必须制定法律来保护马萨诸塞州乃至全国的儿童。我们将永不停止为 LGBTQ+ 家庭的平等、安全和尊严而努力——捍卫我们选择结婚对象的权利,扩大生育自由,并保护各种类型的亲子关系。我们渴望一个每个人都能建立和保护自己的家庭,并获得应有的认可和尊重的未来。

阅读更多 J. Shia 和 Audai 的故事 和 了解有关马萨诸塞州亲子法的更多信息.

J Shia 和 Audai

MPA 联盟成员 J. Shia 19岁时,她当时的女友怀孕了。他们的关系从恋爱关系发展为友谊。但当 Audai 出生,他的母亲开始面临一系列问题时,J 挺身而出照顾他,从此一直扮演着他父亲的角色。

J. 分享了一个令人心碎的故事:Audai 被送往寄养家庭,因为州政府拒绝承认 J 的父母身份,尽管她从 Audai 出生起就一直抚养着他。虽然获得法定监护权使她的儿子能够回到她身边,但人们仍然经常质疑他们之间的家庭关系。

“我每天都会把儿子监护权表格的公证件放在钱包里。我需要在学校、医生和牙医预约时出示这份文件,”J.说。“我总是被盘问。对于一个从Audai出生那天起就一直是他主要监护人的人来说,这种情况简直太丢人了。我是他的父母,而不仅仅是他的监护人。”

J. 必须获得许可才能带 Audai 出州旅行,而且她每年都必须重新申请 Audai 的健康保险。除了日常的实际困难之外,J. 还深知自己的监护权随时可能被撤销。MPA 将允许像 J. 这样的父母寻求事实上的父母身份,即与 Audai 享有同等的合法父母身份,并享有所有父母的权利和责任。而且,这种身份不需要终止 Audai 生母的权利或将其排除在 Audai 的生活之外。马萨诸塞州在保护事实上的父母子女方面落后于其他州,而 MPA 将弥补这一缺陷。

常问问题: 疫情过后,如何保护你的 LGBTQ+ 家庭 多布斯

这 多布斯 在LGBTQ+群体已经面临全国性立法攻击之际,这项决议的出台震惊了我们的社区。GLAD与COLAGE、家庭平等组织和NCLR合作,发布了一项 常问问题 提供LGBTQ+人士现在可以采取的措施,以保护他们的配偶和亲子关系。我们也鼓励任何人 联系 GLAD Answers 并提出具体问题。

博客

“Equal Justice Under Law”

The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing several cases this term with important implications for nondiscrimination protections, voting rights, and civil rights.

Among these are two cases, argued on October 31, that address whether colleges and universities can continue to consider race as one factor among many in admissions to ensure a diverse student body and learning environment. GLAD joined a brief supporting the universities’ admissions practices with the National Women’s Law Center, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, and more than 30 other organizations. Read the brief 在 Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard  Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina.

Merrill v. Milligan, argued in early October by NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the Solicitor General, and private counsel, is a case brought by Black Alabama voters who state that the state’s 2021 redistricting map violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. While Black people represent 27% of the state population, Alabama has only one majority Black district out of 7, giving rise to the claim that the map illegally dilutes the voting power of the Black community.

A Colorado website company that wants to enter the wedding business without serving same-sex couples is the plaintiff in 303 Creative v. Elenis. This case brings the question of whether our nation’s public accommodation laws will continue to prohibit businesses from refusing service to people because of their sexual orientation or gender identity, their religion, their sex, or their race.

[If] you run a business, no matter what you make or how you think or feel about it, once you open your doors to the public, you serve everyone.

The company is aided by the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), the legal organization advancing many religion-based challenges to nondiscrimination laws. Their team seeks to use the First Amendment’s protection of free speech to turn away same-sex couples they would rather not serve. ADF and the business claim that abiding by Colorado’s nondiscrimination law would compel them to convey a message with which they disagree, i.e., support for same-sex couples’ weddings.

Sellers and service providers are free to express their beliefs, religious and otherwise, like every other individual — that is a fundamental liberty protected by the constitution. But as a nation, we also agreed a long time ago that if you run a business, no matter what you make or how you think or feel about it, once you open your doors to the public, you serve everyone.

GLAD submitted a friend-of-the-court brief co-authored with the National Center for Lesbian Rights, Lambda Legal, and a team of lawyers at White & Case LLP chronicling the development of nondiscrimination laws in public accommodations, that is, public-facing businesses. These federal and state laws, from the 1964 Civil Rights Act to the Colorado law at issue in this case, have been enacted and enforced to realize our nation’s aspirations of full citizenship and equal participation in a free marketplace for everyone.

“Our public accommodation laws are a unifying force that respects the rights of every person to obtain the goods and services they need to live their lives.”

Historically, the Supreme Court has flatly rejected 1st Amendment challenges to nondiscrimination laws. In the 1968 case Newman v. Piggie Park, a barbecue restaurant argued it should not have to serve Black customers equally because doing so would mean conveying a message of support for integration, which was against the owner’s “sincerely held religious beliefs.” The Court said such a claim was “frivolous” and made clear that what the restaurant owner tried to cast as “speech” was the exact type of conduct that public accommodation laws were enacted to prohibit — the act of discrimination in turning someone away because of who they are.

That understanding of our nondiscrimination laws has held for over half a century and should also hold today. To grant the far-reaching and unprecedented exemption sought by 303 Creative risks turning us back towards a time when commercial businesses could blatantly deny access to not only LGBTQ+ people but also Black, Irish, Jewish, Catholic, or Asian Americans, as well as women, people with disabilities, and people of many faiths.

“Our public accommodation laws are a unifying force that respects the rights of every person to obtain the goods and services they need to live their lives,” says Mary Bonauto, GLAD Senior Director of Civil Rights and Legal Strategies. “The change sought here would take us backward to a time when sellers regularly turned people away because of who they were. But we agreed long ago that that is not the country we want to live in.” GLAD is watching this case closely and urging the Court not to make a drastic change in the law that will lead to more discrimination, polarization, group-based animosity, and people struggling to get the goods and services they need.

“People shouldn’t have to call ahead to find out whether a business will serve people of their faith or their race or if they will be denied service because they are LGBTQ+,” Bonauto adds. “Exclusion and segregation in the public market harm us all.”

303 Creative v. Elenis is scheduled for oral argument on December 5. Read GLAD’s friend-of-the-court brief.

博客

This year, for Native American Heritage Month, we spotlight organizations that are led by or serve Native American individuals and communities. Throughout the country, groups like the ones featured below are building support structures for LGBTQ+ and 2-Spirit tribal members and other Indigenous folks.

Southwest Indigenous Women’s Coalition

SWIWC logo in purple with a patterned C and "Sacred We Are" underneath

Southwest Indigenous Women’s Coalition (SWIWC) works to create safe indigenous communities by supporting tribes to increase their capacity to address and respond to violence through education, training, technical assistance, policy advocacy, and culturally sensitive supportive services. SWIWC serves all 22 tribes in Arizona. SWIWC also has a Native LGBTQ/2S Advisory Council to advise the SWIWC staff and Governing board on the best ways to educate, support, and empower Native communities to increase awareness, safety, healing, justice, and resources for the LGBTQ/2S+ community. The LGBTQ/2S Advisory Council offers guidance on training and technical assistance (T/TA) approaches, data inclusion, resource development/funding opportunities, policy development, and tribal and on-site trainings with activities that come directly from the voices and presence of the LGBTQ/2S+ community.

Indifenous Peoples Task Force logo with 4 directions wheel bird and ceremonial pipe next to it

这 Indigenous Peoples Task Force was founded to develop and implement culturally-appropriate HIV education and direct services to the Native community in Minnesota. The Indigenous Peoples Task force works to strengthen the wellness of communities and restore relationships between individuals and the relationship people have with the earth. Through their HIV Program, the Indigenous Peoples Task Force supports all people living on Reservations and in Greater Minnesota to navigate housing and medical care through services that are rooted in indigenous ways of knowing and healing.

Navajo Nation Pride logo with a background of rainbow color sky and landscape silhouette

Navajo Nation Pride/Diné Pride is the largest indigenous LGBTQ/2S+ pride. Navajo Nation Pride/Diné Pride honors and celebrates the LGBTQ/2S+ community while reaffirming the sacredness of their identities. Diné Pride reintroduces the traditional knowledge and teachings that kept LGBTQ/2S+ individuals safe and revered at one point in history.

NIWRC logo with illustrations of four Indigenous women from diverse tribal affiliation

National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center 

这 National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center (NIWRC) provides national leadership to end violence against American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian women by supporting culturally grounded, grassroots advocacy. NIWRC develops resources and training opportunities to support Tribes, grassroots advocates, and survivors in prioritizing the safety of Native women and their children and requiring accountability of offenders and communities.
The Montana-based organization offers LGBTQ/2S+ focused toolkits and webinars.

BAAITS logo with four directions wheel and eagle on one side

Bay Area American Indian Two-Spirits (BAAITS) is a community-based volunteer organization that exists to restore and recover the role of Two-Spirit people within the American Indian/First Nations community. BAAITS creates a safe environment for Two-Spirit people to socialize and explore their heritage through culturally relevant activities for LGBTQ/2S+ individuals of Native American ancestry, including an annual powwow.

Native Movement

NM logo of a yellow circle with orange gradient, a white feather superimposed over the circle

Alaska-based Native Movement supports grassroots-led projects that dismantle oppressive systems for all and ensure social justice, Indigenous Peoples’ rights, and the rights of Mother Earth. Native Movement is committed to supporting community initiatives toward personal and communal healing, including gender justice. Native Movement demands justice for the thousands of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls, and 2-Spirit people and works to support healing by acknowledging the correlation between violence against the earth and gender-based violence.

Donor-Conceived People in LGBTQ Families: Experiences & Legal Landscape

This LGBTQ+ community webinar will highlight stories from people who were born into LGBTQ+ families through donor conception. As policy recommendations about donor conception are in the news, it’s important that the experiences of donor-conceived people in LGBTQ+ families are uplifted and understood. This free online event will also include an overview of current and proposed practices and laws impacting donor-conceived people, LGBTQ+ parents, and gamete donors.

This event is co-hosted by 科拉奇, 高兴的, 和 The Sperm Bank of California.

Automatic captions will be available.

REGISTER TODAY

Visit the Zoom registration page or fill out the form below.

https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/1716687818096/WN_SwyEyMpJQmyVlJBJ0UNYHA

Questions? Contact Qwin Mbabazi at qmbabazi@glad.org.

博客

Celebrating Historic LGBTQ+ Representation in the 2022 Elections

While we don’t know the full results from Tuesday’s midterm elections yet, we know there are many things to celebrate, including the historic representation of LGBTQ+ elected officials. We are celebrating:

  • Maura Healey was elected the first out lesbian governor in the country, as well as the first woman governor in Massachusetts.
  • Oregon’s Tina Kotek was voted in as the nation’s second openly lesbian governor.
  • Andrea Campbell won a historic victory as the first Black woman Attorney General in Massachusetts.
  • Vermont has elected its first LGBTQ+ legislator – and first woman – to Congress in Representative-Elect Becca Balint.
  • California Representative-Elect Robert Garcia became the first openly gay immigrant elected to Congress. He is the third openly gay representative elected to Congress from California.
  • Montana and Minnesota elected their first transgender state representatives:  Zooey Zephyr in Montana and Leigh Finke in Minnesota.
  • New Hampshire Representative-Elect James Roesener became the first transgender man ever elected to a state legislature.
  • Minnesota elected Alicia Kozlowski, the first nonbinary member in the state legislature.

Along with so many firsts, voters supported a number of positive ballot measures:

  • Five states voted to protect access to abortion: California, Michigan, Vermont, Kentucky, and Montana.
  • Vermont, along with Alabama, Oregon, and Tennessee, passed constitutional amendments banning slavery and involuntary servitude as a punishment for crime.
  • In a crucial win for voting rights, Michigan and Connecticut expanded early voting.
  • In Massachusetts, voters upheld a law that protects access to driver’s licenses for all people who live in the Commonwealth, regardless of immigration status.

Celebrating our victories fuels our hope, and our hope will sustain us in our work for justice.

The path to protecting democracy and truly fulfilling the promise of freedom, equality, and justice for all is long. It extends beyond any one election cycle. This election held some good news and some setbacks, but we must all stay engaged every day for the long term. With you by our side, GLAD will be here to keep fighting every day and every step of the way.

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Thank you to everyone who made our 23rd Annual Spirit of Justice Award Dinner such a success!

GLAD’s biggest event of the year brought together supporters of LGBTQ+ equality for an opportunity to unite in resistance, look toward a future of true justice, and support GLAD’s life-changing mission.

This year, we were thrilled to honor Nadine Smith with the Spirit of Justice Award. Nadine is the Executive Director of Equality Florida and a lifelong advocate for human rights and LGBTQ+ equality.

Nadine called for us all to carry on through this moment – not by out-hating or out-destroying, but with community:

“The way you stand up to terror is not to be terrorized. Love, hope, and joy…is the thing that has gotten us through over and over and over again… Love makes you brave. Joy makes you clever. And hope makes you strong… In this moment, it is the antidote to what they are coming at us with. It is the antidote to fear. And so, let us continue, as we always have, to be resilient, to sing in our grief, to laugh in our pain, to look out for one another, and to hold on to love, hope, and joy.”

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The event was an incredible night of advocacy, connection, and hope.

It was also an opportunity for GLAD to announce a new strategic agenda – one that recognizes the profound challenges our community and our country are facing.

Read more about GLAD’s commitment to meeting these challenges and sustaining our fight for justice for all.

Thanks to supporters like you, we were able to raise over a quarter of a million dollars at the Spirit of Justice to support our work to protect the rights of LGBTQ+ people and pursue the promise of freedom and justice for all.

You can still support this critical work by making a gift to our Rise the Challenge match today!

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Find more events and opportunities to connect with the GLAD community.

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在全国各地,各社区正面临越来越多的审查,包括审查美国历史和种族课程、压制课堂上关于LGBTQ+人士及其家庭的讨论,以及禁止学校和公共图书馆出版LGBTQ+书籍。这些行为加剧了教师的教育难度,并剥夺了学生获得必要支持、信息和技能的机会。

观看这场精彩的对话,了解这些危险法律对学生和学校造成的影响,以及挑战这些法律和推进支持性政策的策略。携手共进,我们就能守护公共教育的重要使命:为所有学生提供在学校茁壮成长所需的技能、知识和支持性环境。

小组成员包括:

  • 纳丁·史密斯 (Nadine Smith),佛罗里达平等组织执行董事
  • Chris Erchull,GLBTQ 法律倡导者和捍卫者 (GLAD) 律师
  • Nikole Parker,佛罗里达平等组织跨性别平等事务主任
  • 曼彻斯特学区首席公平官蒂娜·菲利博特
  • 埃克塞特地区合作学区多元化、公平、包容和公正部门主任 Andres Mejia
  • 阿尔贝托·开罗 (Alberto Cairo),记者,佛罗里达州公立学校一名跨性别儿童的家长

由 GLAD 首席法律策略师 Michael Johnson 主持。

Tina Philibotte 和 Andres Mejia 也是 GLAD 的诉讼 挑战新罕布什尔州的学校审查法。

本次活动由 高兴的, 佛罗里达平等组织, 新罕布什尔州美国公民自由联盟, 和 亲友会.

观看视频:

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如果您对自己在新英格兰的权利有任何疑问,可以联系 GLAD 的免费、保密法律信息热线, GLAD 答案


喜欢这次活动吗?加入我们的邮件列表, 查看我们的活动页面 寻找像这样的未来对话!

Treatment Not Imprisonment: A Conversation About Trauma and Incarceration in the LGBTQ+ Community

This event will be held in-person at Georgetown Law School in Washington, DC, and streaming virtually.

LGBTQ+ people are overrepresented in U.S. jails and prisons and often face brutal treatment, experience a lack of appropriate resources or are denied necessary medical care when incarcerated. Experiences of discrimination and untreated trauma increase the likelihood of interactions with the criminal justice system. LGBTQ+ people are often then subject to further trauma in prison facilities, with few to no treatment options available.

Hosted by Dee Deidre Farmer, the first transgender plaintiff to bring a case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Her precedent-setting case, Farmer v. Brennan (1994), set the standard that prison officials can be held liable under the Eighth Amendment for deliberate disregard for the health and safety of incarcerated people. Dee currently leads the Fight4Justice Project and consults with legal organizations like NCLR and GLAD.

This roundtable conversation will present evidence about trauma experienced by LGBTQ+ people prior to and during incarceration and will make the case for prioritizing treatment in the community before and as an alternative to imprisonment.

特色:

  • Michael Cox, Executive Director, Black and Pink Massachusetts
  • Jennifer Levi, Senior Director of Transgender and Queer Rights, GLAD
  • Cynthia Totten, Deputy Executive Director, Just Detention International
  • Taylar Nuevelle, Founder, Who Speaks For Me

Hosted by Dee Deidre Farmer, Founder and Executive Director of the Fight4Justice Project, and Shannon Minter, Legal Director for the National Center for Lesbian Rights.

For parking information, visit Parkopedia.

PLEASE NOTE: Proof of COVID vaccine or proof of medical or religious exemption are required. Here’s what you need to do.

RSVP TODAY:

 

From Georgetown University:
COVID Safety Instructions for Visiting Campus

To help protect the health and safety of the Georgetown community, including our guests, all visitors ages 12 and older to University-owned or operated buildings must be up to date on COVID-19 vaccination (i.e., primary series and, when eligible, an additional dose), or attest to having a medical or religious exemption from being vaccinated.

Please follow the steps below that are required before your visit.

  • Step #1: Anytime between now and the day before your visit, please submit documentation showing you are up to date on COVID-19 vaccination with a vaccine authorized for emergency use or granted approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or the World Health Organization (WHO). Acceptable proof of vaccination includes, but is not limited to:
    • CDC COVID-19 Vaccine Card
    • WHO Vaccine Booklet
    • Documentation provided by a healthcare organization or country

Note: If you are not up to date on COVID-19 vaccination but attest to having an appropriate medical or religious reason for not being vaccinated, you will be able to indicate this as part of Step #1 and proceed with the process required to visit our campus. You will be required to submit to the University proof of a negative PCR test taken within 48 hours prior to your arrival time on our campus when you submit your health attestation on the day of the event.

  • Step #2: Assuming successful completion of Step 1, you will receive a short health attestation form via email on the morning of the event date. Please complete this form, attesting that you are symptom-free before coming to campus. If you indicate any symptoms consistent with COVID-19, you will not be permitted to visit a Georgetown-owned or managed campus or building until you are symptom-free.

Click to Complete Step #1

Your Georgetown University host will be able to monitor your progress on Step #1 above, and they may contact you if they see that you have not yet completed this step ahead of your scheduled time on campus. While event hosts are not provided information about your COVID-19 vaccination or your religious or medical exemption from vaccination, they are notified of the outcome of any COVID-19 test required by the University in connection with a claimed exemption and whether you have reported having COVID-19 symptoms or being in close contact with anyone who has tested positive.


Questions about the event? Contact Ivory King at iking@glad.org.

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