National/Federal Know Your Rights - Page 59 of 59 - GLAD Law
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Parker v. Hurley

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit on January 31, 2008 unanimously affirmed District Court Judge Mark L. Wolf’s dismissal of a lawsuit brought by two sets of parents against the Lexington school system.

In the suit, parents David and Tonia Parker and Robert and Robin Wirthlin claimed that a Lexington elementary school violated their constitutional rights by exposing their children to books portraying many different kinds of families, including non-judgmental depictions of families headed by same-sex couples.

GLAD authored an amicus in the case.

The plaintiff parents filed a petition seeking review before the U.S. Supreme Court, which was denied in October, 2008.

In re Nancy Walsh

GLAD applied for and won compensation from the federal September 11 Victim Compensation Fund on behalf of Nancy Walsh, a lesbian whose partner of 13 years was one of the passengers on Flight 11 who died on September 11.  Nancy came up against barriers that so often face same-sex partners in times of crisis.  For example, her partner, Carol Flyzik, did not have a will, thus making Carol’s biological family the presumptive recipients of any compensation.  Nor did Nancy have an automatic right to administer Carol’s estate or continue to live in the home that she and Carol shared.

GLAD helped Nancy to secure her partner’s death certificate so that she was able to proceed with matters relating to the probate of the estate, and assisted her in applying for compensation from the federal Fund.  Nancy’s hearing was held on January 26.  After considering the facts, the Special Master awarded a favorable monetary ruling for Nancy, compensating her for losses she incurred as a result of this tragedy.

Nancy’s case tragically underscores the vulnerability of same-sex relationships, and reminds us of the comprehensive protections that marriage provides for families.

The morning of September 11, 2001, after Nancy Walsh saw the morning news, after she ran to the refrigerator to check the flight itinerary her partner Carol Flyzik had left there, after she confirmed that Carol was scheduled to be on American Airlines Flight 11, she called the airline.

Maybe Carol had missed her flight. Maybe she was okay.

But even though Nancy and Carol had been together for 12 years, the airline wouldn’t talk to Nancy. They would only give information to family members, they said, and since she and Carol weren’t married, Nancy wasn’t family.

At 6 o’clock that night, more than nine hours after Nancy first flipped on the television, Carol’s sister called the airline and confirmed that Carol was on Flight 11.

Nancy and Carol, who were raising their three children in the small New Hampshire town of Plainstow, had designated each other as domestic partners at their jobs and named each other as beneficiaries on insurance policies and retirement accounts. But Carol hadn’t left a will. As far as New Hampshire was concerned, Nancy and Carol were legal strangers.

GLAD applied for and won for Nancy compensation from the federal September 11 Victim Compensation Fund, and also helped Nancy as she sought Carol’s death certificate, and dealt with probate issues. By helping her stand up for her rights and her relationship with Carol, GLAD helped Nancy reaffirm the life they shared together.

Waddell v. Valley Forge Dental Associates

In 2001, GLAD filed a friend of the court brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to decide the case of an HIV-positive dental hygienist who was fired after his doctor revealed his HIV status to his employer. A federal appellate court in Atlanta had ruled that the hygienist was a “direct threat” to patients and therefore that his termination was not a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

In contrast to the cases in which courts have ruled against doctors who refused treatment to HIV-positive patients arguing a “direct threat” (see discussion of Bragdon v. Abbott, below), courts have reacted to cases involving discrimination against HIV-positive health care providers with irrational fear and disregard for the scientific evidence. In effect, the courts have required proof of zero threat from the health care worker, a virtually impossible standard. Although the Supreme Court declined to decide this case and clarify what “direct threat” should mean in this context, the willingness of courts around the country to uphold the termination of HIV-positive health care workers who perform invasive procedures remains one of the most pressing legal challenges ahead.

羅莎訴帕克西岸案

In a precedent-setting decision with major implications for the business community, the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit confirmed that sex discrimination laws reach situations where individuals are discriminated against because of their failure to conform to stereotypes of how men and women are supposed to look and act.  In June 2000, the federal court decided that a federal law prohibiting sex discrimination in lending protects our client, Lucas Rosa—a transgender person who appears female but was assigned the sex designation of male at birth—who was told when applying for a bank loan to go home and change to appear more traditionally masculine.

GLAD brought suit on behalf of our client under the federal Equal Credit Opportunity Act as well as under Massachusetts laws prohibiting discrimination because of sex and perceived sexual orientation in lending and public accommodations.  In a decision that took just three weeks to issue, the Federal Appeals Court overturned the ruling of a federal district judge, and ruled that our client may be able to prove a case of sex discrimination and remanded the case for trial.

This case has tremendous significance for both GLB people and those who are transgender because the root of much of our shared oppression is the enforcement of stereotypical notions of how “real men” and “real women” should look and act.  This case creates a key legal building block for arguing that discrimination because of a person’s failure to meet widely shared normative beliefs about gender—whether that person is gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender—is prohibited sex discrimination.

Doe v. Board of Registration of Cosmetology

GLAD obtained clarification from the Board of Registration of Cosmetology that an individual completing a cosmetology program does not fail the statutory requirement to be certified as free from infectious diseases simply by virtue of being HIV-positive.

布拉格登訴阿博特案

在首例涉及愛滋病毒的案件中,美國最高法院以 5 比 4 的判決裁定 布拉格登訴阿博特案 聯邦《美國殘疾人法案》(ADA)禁止歧視愛滋病毒感染者,無論他們是否出現任何明顯症狀或被診斷出患有愛滋病。法院1998年的裁決對愛滋病毒感染者來說是一個至關重要的勝利,因為《美國殘疾人法案》和類似的州殘疾歧視法規是打擊就業、住房和醫療保健領域與愛滋病毒相關的歧視的唯一法律依據。

本案中,緬因州班戈居民西德尼·阿博特(Sidney Abbott)前往蘭登·布拉格登(Randon Bragdon)牙醫診所進行補牙。布拉格登醫師以擔心病人會傳播愛滋病毒(HIV)為由,拒絕在其診所為她補牙,僅僅因為阿博特女士在一份醫療問卷中披露了自己感染了愛滋病毒。布拉格登醫師聲稱,尚未出現明顯症狀的愛滋病毒感染者不符合《美國殘疾人法案》(ADA)對「殘疾」的定義。 《美國殘疾人法案》將殘疾定義為「嚴重限制一項或多項主要生活活動」的健康狀況。

在其具有里程碑意義的裁決中,最高法院同意了同性戀者聯盟(GLAD)的觀點,即可見症狀或疾病並非《美國殘疾人法案》(ADA)承保的必要條件。安東尼·肯尼迪大法官代表法院撰寫了裁決,對「主要生活活動」的定義進行了寬泛的解釋,並特別指出,由於存在感染伴侶和孩子的風險,西德尼·阿博特在生殖這一主要生活活動方面受到了嚴重限制。

然而,法院的措辭和推理遠遠超出了西德尼·阿博特案的事實範圍,並確保所有愛滋病毒感染者都將受到《美國殘疾人法案》的保護。在一份冗長的分析中,法院認可了美國司法部和平等就業機會委員會長期以來對《美國殘疾人法案》的解釋,這些解釋認為,《美國殘疾人法案》保護有症狀和無症狀的愛滋病毒感染者免受歧視,部分原因是愛滋病毒限制了生育和性關係。最高法院指示全國下級法院遵循這些機構的解釋。最高法院對「殘疾」的廣泛定義及其對《美國殘疾人法案》這些行政解釋的認可意味著 布拉格登訴阿博特案 這是一場巨大的勝利,不僅對西德尼·阿博特來說如此,對於所有殘疾人來說也是如此。

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