Nardolillo to Raimondo: Bring LGBTQ-respecting PayPal to RI


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nardolilloRepublican Rep. Bobby Nardolillo wants Rhode Island to pick up the PayPal jobs that are fleeing North Carolina because that state passed a law discriminating against LGBTQ people, an idea also floated by some on the progressive left yesterday.

“I learned today of an excellent opportunity to draw a high profile, internationally recognized company to our state,” Nardolillo wrote in a letter to Governor Gina Raimondo that he tweeted to reporters last night. “PayPal withdrew its plans to create a global operations center in Charlotte, N.C. citing the state’s enactment of legislation that ‘invalidates the protections of the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender citizens and denies these members of our community equal rights under the law.'”

North Carolina passed a highly controversial law last week that broadly strips any legal protections for LGBTQ people and prevents transgender people from using a public bathroom that doesn’t correspond with their birth gender. Corporate America responded by rebuking the right leaning state for being behind the times.

PayPal took action, deciding to scrap its plans to bring 400 jobs to a proposed global operations center in Charlotte. “The new law perpetuates discrimination and it violates the values and principles that are at the core of PayPal’s mission and culture. As a result, PayPal will not move forward with our planned expansion in Charlotte,” according to a statement from PayPal President Dan Schulman Monday.

Nardolillo noted in his letter to Raimondo that the discriminatory attitude of North Carolina stands in stark contrast to Rhode Island’s inclusiveness. “As you know, Rhode Island has demonstrated time and again its support for all citizens,” he said in the letter.

In an interview, Nardolillo said he supports LGBTQ equality and marriage equality for same sex couples. He said the North Carolina law is discriminatory. “I don’t support anything like that,” he said. “I feel that law is totally insensitive. I believe in equality.”

Nardolillo is best known among the progressive left for his vociferous opposition to accepting foreign refugees and denying rights for undocumented workers, but he’s condemned GOP colleagues he thought showed bigotry on immigration issues. He also previously drew ire from the LGBTQ community and others for backing a bill that would criminalize the transmission of AIDS. Last night, he stood behind his support saying it is “about accountability and disclosure.” Read the bill for yourself here.

Rhode Island Republicans have a habit of being progressive on gay rights, a similar percentage of legislative Republicans as  marriage equality. Meanwhile, Pawtucket Democrat Rep. David Coughlin recently threatened to leave the Rhode Island Democratic Party if it doesn’t take a stronger stance against LGBTQ rights.

This post will be updated if the Raimondo administration responds to a request for comment. Here’s Nardolillo’s letter:

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Rep Coughlin: Democrats ‘pandering’ on marriage equality


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Representative David Coughlin, who represents District 60 in Pawtucket, ran unopposed during his first election, becoming a state rep with just 725 votes during the 2014 Democratic primary. As a first year legislator he has been a reliable vote for Speaker Nicholas Mattiello’s agenda. Coughlin voted for the truck tolls, Tiverton gambling and the subpar minimum wage increases passed last year.

So it was with some surprise that I received an email from a reader containing a screenshot of a Facebook post from Coughlin that seemed to indicate a willingness on his part to break ranks with the Democratic Party over marriage equality. Coughlin’s District 60 predecessor, Elaine Coderre, was a co-sponsor of the marriage equality legislation that ultimately became Rhode Island law.

Coughlin shared a link to a Washington Post piece entitled, “Republican National Committee reaffirms its opposition to same-sex marriage” and wrote:

My recollection is my Democratic Party barely squeezed out a majority of the popular vote last November. If the leadership keeps pandering on this issue they may find a conservative element of the party changes allegiances giving the Republicans a very solid majority next time around.”

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Coughlin’s post seems to indicate that the Democratic Party position on marriage equality is “pandering” and that conservative Democrats might bolt the party over this issue and become Republicans.

I emailed Coughlin and House Communications Director Larry Berman for clarification. I wanted to know if Coughlin considered himself part of the “conservative element” of the Democratic Party and if he supports marriage equality. One also wonders if Coughlin would be willing to change allegiances and switch to the Republican Party, as did Representative Karen MacBeth last week, over this or other conservative social issues. His Facebook post seems to indicate that he might.

Coughlin and Berman declined to respond to my emails.

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CVS supports Cicilline’s Equality Act


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cvsCVS, one of Rhode Island’s largest employer and best-known national brands, is taking a stand against LGBT discrimination.

The pharmacy/drug store chain is the latest corporate backer of Congressman David Cicilline’s Equality Act bill that would extend Civil Rights protections to gay, lesbian and transgender Americans.

“As a leading health care company, we are proud to endorse the Equality Act and stand with Congressman Cicilline in this effort,” said David Casey, a vice president at CVS Health.

“We have long supported efforts to improve the lives of LGBT Americans by advocating for equal rights and embracing the rich diversity of our colleagues, customers and suppliers,” Casey said. “It is part of our culture to make every individual feel equally valued, respected and appreciated. We will continue to advance our efforts to promote a diverse workforce and recognize that a workplace that embraces diversity and inclusion is good for business, helps attract and retain talent and enables us to fulfill our purpose of helping all people on their path to better health.”

CVS joins 60 other of America’s biggest companies in supporting the legislation. The companies include: Google, Facebook, Twitter, Airbnb, Coca-Cola, Hewlitt-Packart, IBM, Nike and Monsanto, according to a list provided by Cicilline.

“The companies backing the Equality Act have operations in all 50 states, bring in a combined $1.9 trillion in revenue, and provide 4.2 million jobs in the United States,” said Cicilline spokesman Richard Luchette. “They are providing critical leadership to help expand support for the Equality Act and build momentum to ensure that LGBT Americans can enjoy the same rights and opportunities as everyone else.”

Cicilline introduced the Equality Act in July. It’s intended to extend Civil Rights protections to LGBTQ Americans by explicitly outlawing discrimination in public accommodations, housing, employment and federal funding. In more than half of the states it is legal to discriminate against someone based on their sexual orientation, and deny them services, employment, or housing.

Nothing would change at CVS if and when the Equality Act becomes law, said company spokesman Joseph Goode.

“From a CVS Health ‘workplace’ perspective, the Equality Act wouldn’t change anything. In fact, our employee values, policies and benefits are quite ahead of the curve when it comes to supporting LGBT equality,” he said. “There is, however, a ‘community’ upside to the Equality Act for our LGBT employees as the legislation aims to extend anti-discrimination protections to LGBT individuals in public accommodations, such as housing, employment, federal funding, education, credit, etc.”

CVS made international news and won the praise of First Lady Michelle Obama when it announced in 2014 it would stop selling tobacco products. Today CVS also announced it would invest $50 million in an anti-smoking ad campaign, according to Fortune. In November, the Human Rights Campaign Foundation gave CVS a perfect score on its Equality Index for the second year in a row in 2015. CVS offers employees “health insurance coverage for the medically necessary health care services that transgender people need, including transition-related treatment,” according to a news release.

“Today, in most states, an LGBT person can get married on Saturday, post photos of their wedding on Sunday, and then get fired from their job or thrown out of their apartment on Monday just because of who they are,” said Cicilline. “This is completely wrong. Fairness and equality are core American values, and it’s time we affirm these values by passing the Equality Act into law. I want to thank CVS Health, one of Rhode Island’s leading job creators, for standing with us in this fight today.”

 

Mount Saint Charles Academy working with alumni on trans student admissions


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2016-03-05 Mt St Charles trans exclusion policy protest 005The Concerned Alumni of Mount Saint Charles Academy have been invited by school’s president, Herve Richer, to discuss possible solutions to the problem of accommodating tans students. They also report that the language regarding the non-admission of trans students has been omitted from the school’s website. Here’s the full release:

“We, the alum who have expressed concerned about the policy regarding transgender students at Mount Saint Charles, have received word from the President, Herve Richer. He has been apologetic about the impact of the policy and appreciative of our efforts as alum to find a positive solution to the accommodation problem. He has invited us to a meeting to discuss possibilities of how to do this, and we are grateful that Mount is moving forward in this direction.

“Mount has always been a home to us, and we are happy to see that they understand our concern and agree the language in the policy needs to be changed and a solution for accommodation implemented. We will be accepting an offer to go to a meeting with the administration to add our help and talent to finding a solution for all parties.

“On Mount’s website, they have posted a new handbook for 2016-17 that omits the policy regarding transgender students. While we do not know if this is the final copy, we are glad to be part of the process of moving in the correct direction on this issue.”

Patreon

Letting others speak about Nancy Reagan’s death


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NREAGANDRUGSomebody once explained to me that Rhode Island’s Future is about providing a platform to those who would otherwise be disenfranchised from the mainstream media and serving as a megaphone for the small voices in our society. I want to put that into practice here on the death of former First Lady Nancy Reagan.

There are so many millions of people who did not get to have their voices heard and should be in regards to this woman and what she represented. The history books are now being written and show incontrovertibly that she was the mover and shaker of the neoconservative behemoth that was Reaganism in this country. Her husband was really just an opportunist and an idiot who was pointed at the cameras to mumble through some ridiculous lines the people at General Electric wrote for him. Nancy was the brains of that pair and the world is a worse place because of it. I would invite our readers to leave comments below and just share their reflections on the fact that, with her passing, it is over, no longer will this ridiculous soap opera family be considered legitimate arbiters of political thought in America. The struggles against their legacy will continue and inequality will grow because of their paranoid anti-Communist la-la land fantasias that were used to destroy the social safety net, but never again will we have to hear what a Reagan has to say about anything of merit. Free at last!

I’m just going to say my bit as a queer man.

There is a little coffee shop I go to with regularity to grab a bagel and mug for alarmingly low prices. It is in Pawtuxet Village and is owned by two gay men who have taken in numerous foster kids over the years and adopted one of their own. They were young during the Reagan years. The cafe is a little bit of a queer crossroads and pulls in everyone from the gender-bending trans people looking for decent lox to the lesbians pushing a stroller packed with two snot machines screaming for cookies to the frumpy old Baby Boomer men who are worried the scones will make their butts look big. It is a cross-section of we fabulous folk.

If you talk to any of these people and they are over 45, they talk about the 1980’s like the European Jews talk about the Nazi holocaust. Every one of them knows someone who went through a really painful, ugly, lonesome death where the entirety of America the Beautiful spat on them and said they earned it for being gay. It might seem ghastly to even imagine that in a world where Anthony Kennedy, a Reagan appointee, is writing the best parts of the Supreme Court decision in favor of same sex marriage, but the President of the United States and all his wretched minions, from the Moral Majority and Jerry Falwell to Sen. Jesse Helms, were joking about people dying in the worst way humanly imaginable. There are numerous stories about how AIDS was a huge joke to all of them, that they thought it was all a barrel of monkeys while they cut the budget of the CDC, the social safety net, and the various state organs that might have been able to do something to end the death and destruction. Even Rock Hudson, their old pal from their acting days, was left begging on their doormat for help as he publicly turned into a skeleton!

If you are an LGBTQQI person with a lick of self-respect and half a brain about politics, you probably know the emotions I am feeling right now. On the one hand, I was gleeful when I first heard this awful woman had died and put on Ding Dong the Witch is Dead from THE WIZARD OF OZ (because that is the gay movie for every occasion), smiling ear to ear. But as I sit down to write this, I am overwhelmed with a huge sense of mourning, the kind of gasping-for-breath-caked-with-snot-weeping-uncontrollably feeling that happens when a grandparent dies. Few now understand how many million works of art we were deprived of by AIDS. The only thing that comes to my mind is the beautiful monologue by Harper in Tony Kushner’s Angels in America where she talks about watching the souls who died rising to heaven in this Brechtian mass of solidarity to heal a broken world.

Night flight to San Francisco. Chase the moon across America. God! It’s been years since I was on a plane. When we hit 35,000 feet we’ll have reached the tropopause, the great belt of calm air. As close as I’ll ever get to the ozone. I dreamed we were there. The plane leapt the tropopause, the safe air and attained the outer rim, the ozone which was ragged and torn, patches of it threadbare as old cheesecloth, and that was frightening. But I saw something only I could see because of my astonishing ability to see such things. Souls were rising, from the earth far below, souls of the dead of people who’d perished from famine, from war, from the plague, and they floated up like skydivers in reverse, limbs all akimbo, wheeling and spinning. And the souls of these departed joined hands, clasped ankles and formed a web, a great net of souls. And the souls were three-atom oxygen molecules of the stuff of ozone, and the outer rim absorbed them, and was repaired. Nothing’s lost forever. In this world, there is a kind of painful progress. Longing for what we’ve left behind, and dreaming ahead. At least I think that’s so.

And want to know what? There are thousands upon thousands of people with more painful stories than that of a privileged white male waxing poetic about people he never met! The Latin Americans who had their societies destroyed by our ridiculous pogrom against Liberation Theology and the Sandinistas! The women of color who watched their neighborhoods and communities destroyed by a crack epidemic Reagan fueled so to pay for the Contras! The men of color who were turned into chattel slaves in the prison-industrial complex over these drugs! The kids who had to eat garbage because this bird-brained president said ketchup was a vegetable and doled out school bus yellow cheese that would not be acceptable to rats! The people of Afghanistan who had to be caught in a crossfire that reignited the Cold War, all so we could bankrupt the Soviet Union! The numbers of people who the Reagans negatively affected is astronomical and heartbreaking.

They say speak no ill of the dead. But the lady sure set an awful example of such logic in life. Leave your comments below.

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YouthPride offers Mount Saint Charles help including transgender students


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2016-03-05 Mt St Charles trans exclusion policy protest 009YouthPride, a gay rights advocacy group for young Rhode Islanders, “strongly opposes Mount Saint Charles Academy’s policy banning transgender students from the school,” according to a statement sent Saturday night.

YouthPride reached out to the exclusive Catholic school in Woonoskcet “to offer information and professional development on best practices for supporting transgender students,” according to the release sent by Executive Director Kerri Kanelos, after GoLocalProv reported on Friday the school has a policy against accepting transgender students.

The news enraged former students and gay rights advocates all over Rhode Island.

The private school, which receives some public funding, responded to the criticism with a statement that said, in part: “Mount Saint Charles Academy deeply regrets the unintended hurt feelings at and seeming insensitivity of our policy regarding the acceptance of transgendered young people.  The policy that currently appears in the Mount Saint Charles Student Handbook is not intended to be discriminatory toward transgendered students nor is Mount Saint Charles Academy’s intent or desire to exclude transgender students.  The policy was put in place for the simple reason that Mount Saint Charles feels that its facilities do not presently provide the school with the ability to accommodate transgender students.”

YouthPride, in its statement, said this “is not an acceptable solution to being unprepared to provide a safe and supportive learning environment.”

Said Kanelos, ““I am encouraged by the passionate allies, including hundreds of MSC alumni, who are asking the school to reconsider the policy and work together towards a solution that supports students while respecting the school’s mission. “It is clear that people care deeply about the Mount Saint Charles community and want to ensure that their school is inclusive and supportive.”

Mount Saint Charles said no transgender students have been denied admission to the school based on gender identity.

Reclaiming Our Future: Queer Resistance and the Legacy of the Black Radical Tradition


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As previously reported, a historic conference at Temple University intended to guide and radicalize activists in #BlackLivesMatter was held from January 8-10, 2016 in Philadelphia. We are going to post videos from the panels that have just become available online. Tune in next week for further coverage of this historic conference.

12185581_412189982307427_5350744200294324393_oThis video features Hakim Pitts, Mani Martinez, Che Gossett, Pamela Whitney Williams, Tyrone Reed, and Meejin Richart, and was moderated by Gabe Gonzalez.

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Early morning protest against Mount Saint Charles trans-exclusion policy


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2016-03-05 Mt St Charles trans exclusion policy protest 005Perhaps the most poignant sign at the protest outside Mount Saint Charles Academy (MSCA) early Saturday morning read, “41 percent of trans individuals attempt suicide in their lifetimes. Accommodation cannot wait.”

The response from former Academy students and LGBTQ activists to MSCA’s policy of excluding transgender students, because the school does not have the facilities to accommodate them, has been swift and extremely negative. Two former students at the protest told me that when they attended MSCA they always found the staff and management to be open, accepting and willing to dialogue on difficult subjects. The sudden addition of a policy that excludes trans students blindsided them.

No one at the protest felt that the statement MSCA issued yesterday in response to the outcry over the policy was adequate. Trans students don’t need special toilets or facilities said one protester, they need the same facilities as everyone else.

The timing of the protest, on a cold and windy Saturday morning at 7:30am likely kept many interested in attending the protest away, but organizers AJ Metthe and Anthony Maselli scheduled the event to coincide with MSCA’s entrance exam for prospective students. Parents and children considering the school would be made very aware of the exclusionary policy.

Those driving past the protesters mostly kept their thoughts to themselves, but many were positive, with horn honks or thumbs up. One man felt the need to stop his car in the middle of the road and incoherently yell at the protesters about how trans people don’t exist, the ultimate refutation of their humanity, but he was a one off.

Protesters were polite and peaceful throughout the event, and more protests are being considered for the future.

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Patreon

Mount Saint Charles Academy responds


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Mount Saint Charles Academy LogoMount Saint Charles Academy released the following statement in regards to its decision to not accommodate transgender students:

“Mount Saint Charles Academy deeply regrets the unintended hurt feelings at and seeming insensitivity of our policy regarding the acceptance of transgendered young people.  The policy that currently appears in the Mount Saint Charles Student Handbook is not intended to be discriminatory toward transgendered students nor is Mount Saint Charles Academy’s intent or desire to exclude transgender students.  The policy was put in place for the simple reason that Mount Saint Charles feels that its facilities do not presently provide the school with the ability to accommodate transgender students.

“As a Catholic school, Mount Saint Charles recognizes its call to serve all children who desire a Catholic education, but it also recognizes that it is not a comprehensive high school with the ability to serve all students.  Some students may not be academically qualified.  Others may have learning plans which the school cannot accommodate.  And in some cases, our facilities may not be adequate to service some students.

“Although the school has not been approached with any requests to admit transgender students, Mount Saint Charles Academy’s administration has been exploring ways in which it might provide reasonable accommodations for transgender students and fulfill its mission.

“While Mount Saint Charles can respect that some may find our current policy somewhat inconsistent and intolerant,  please try to understand the reason for its existence. This is certainly not our intent.  Please know that we would very much like to address the issue, and your prayers and kind assistance would go a long way in allowing us achieve that goal.”

Let Mt St Charles know how you feel about their trans exclusion policy


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Love UnconditionallyIf you’re reading about the policy at Mount Saint Charles Academy that’s banning trans students from attending their school and feeling angry or sad because there’s nothing you can do to combat this bigotry, well, feel better, because I’ve got some ideas.

First, plan to get up real early tomorrow morning and head out to Mount Saint Charles Academy, 800 Logee St, Woonsocket, Rhode Island 02895 by 7:30am for a peaceful protest of the school’s policy. Mount Saint Charles Academy is holding their entrance exam for incoming students at 8:15am, so parents will be dropping off their students for the exam.

Organizers AJ Metthe and Anthony Maselli ask that people bring, “peaceful & positive signs and messaging only… Let’s show them this new policy is one that goes against their own values statement that ‘every student is known, valued, treasured.’ Let’s show them that the Gospel preaches love for ALL, not hate and exclusion.”

The event is expected to run from 7:30 – 8:30am.

Mount Saint Charles Academy LogoThe other thing you can do is sign the petition.

David Coletta has started a petition on Change.org asking Mount Saint Charles Academy President Herve Richer to, “leave the hateful rhetoric in the past” and accept Trans students. “Sign this petition to let [Mount Saint Charles Academy] know that all students with a desire to learn and excel should be allowed that opportunity, gender aside.”

As of this writing the petition has nearly 600 signatures, and this story hasn’t gone national yet. It’s poised to.

“As a transgender graduate I am both shocked and deeply disappointed,” said one signer. “I am signing this because as of today, I am ashamed to be a Mount Saint Charles Graduate,” said another.

Finally, you might consider reaching out directly to those who run the school. Here’s a link to their contact page.

RI Future will continue to cover this important story. Meanwhile:

Patreon

From the Great Eight Award to “unable to make accommodations” : A response to Mount St. Charles’ policy on transgender students


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Dante Tavolaro
Dante Tavolaro

Update: This week alumni of Mount St. Charles became aware of a policy regarding Transgender Students. Over the last 24 hours, more than 600 Mount St. Charles alumni have vocalized their frustration, disappointment, and anger regarding this policy. The passion for justice that is being expressed through social media is grounded in the lessons that were instilled in us while students at the Mount. We love Mount St. Charles and what it meant, and means, to us. We are dedicated to ensuring that future generations – that all people – are able to experiencing this amazing place in the same way that we did. We look forward to conversation with the administration in the days ahead and the opportunity to work with them to make Mount St. Charles the best place that it can be.

The psalmist writes, “I am utterly numb and crushed; I wail, because of the groaning of my heart” (Psalm 38:8).

At 3:30pm today, March 3, 2016, my world was shaken in a deep and profound way. I was sitting in the refrectory at Yale Divinity School scrolling through Facebook passing the time until my afternoon class. A message popped up on my screen. It was from a dear and beloved friend, a classmate from my time at Mount St. Charles Academy. The message contained a link to a Facebook post shared by another Mountie. I knew something bad was afoot. I clicked, read the post, and instantly felt as if I had been punched in the stomach.

The post was a screen shot of the most recent version of the “Mount St. Charles Academy Parent-Student Handbook 2015-2016.” A bold red title appeared prominently reading: “Transgender Students”. Beneath the title were two lines containing 32 words, “Mount Saint Charles Academy is unable to make accommodations for transgender students. Therefore, MSC does not accept transgender students nor is MSC able to continue to enroll students who identify as transgender” (Note: This screen shot was taken from page 40 of the handbook).   As I read these words it took every ounce of restraint and control in body not to breakdown in the middle of the dining hall. As I read, reread, and read those words yet again the words of the psalmist instantly came to mind. “I am utterly numb and crushed; I wail because of the groaning of my heart.”

Let me step back and clarify why these 32 words have dealt such a painful blow.

Up until 3:30pm today I was an incredibly proud and unabashed graduate of Mount St. Charles Academy. I have regularly boasted of the amazing education I received in junior high and high school. I have credited that institution, along with my time at Rhode Island College, for being the reason I am thriving as a graduate student at Yale University. I have already started lobbying my wife that we should send our future children to Mount St. Charles when the time comes. I have fervently defended my alma mater and encouraged others to consider sending their children there as well. You see the core of who I am rests largely on the foundation built during my six years as a student at Mount St. Charles.

It was at Mount St. Charles that I first learned that I could succeed as a student. It was at Mount St. Charles that I experienced the love and unending support from faculty and staff who sacrificed much of themselves for the wellbeing of their students. It was at Mount St. Charles that I learned to be a better person. It was Mount St. Charles that taught me how to be a better Christian. Not only did Mount St. Charles teach me to be a better Christian, it taught me how to live more fully into the promises of the Baptismal Covenant found in The Episcopal Church’s Book of Common Prayer. My six years at Mount St. Charles taught me more about living into this covenanted relationship with God than any Sunday School, Confirmation class, or Baptism workshop I have ever attended. Most importantly, it was at Mount St. Charles that my vocation to the priesthood emerged and was allowed to blossom despite the fact that I was not Roman Catholic. It is because of all this and more that two years ago on the occasion of the Solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, I wrote a blog post describing just how proud I was to be a Mountie. Sadly, I can no longer stand by the words, “I am proud to be a Mountie.”

The psalmist writes, “I am utterly numb and crushed; I wail, because of the groaning of my heart.”

Today, when I learned that Mount St. Charles no longer accepts Transgender students the foundation of who I am, the foundation built at Mount St. Charles, shattered.

It shattered because I am a Mountie, and I am Transgender.

Those two lines, those 32 words on page 40 of the Parent-Student Handbook mean that if I were to apply to Mount St. Charles today they would not accept me because of who I am – they would reject me because of my God given identity. If those shattering and painful sentences were the policy when I was a student, if they were included in the 2005-2006 or 2006-2007 Parent-Student Handbook, Mount St. Charles could have refused to continue my enrollment. I refuse to begin to contemplate what I would have done had I been kicked out of Mount St. Charles because my gender identity does not fit into a neat little box – but I can guarantee you it would not have been good.

The psalmist writes, “I am utterly numb and crushed; I wail, because of the groaning of my heart.”

Today I learned that Mount St. Charles has failed me. Today I learned that I am a second class Mountie. Today I also learned the value of a Mount education.

From the moment I saw the original Facebook post, my Facebook newsfeed has been overwhelmed with outraged alumni, I have received Facebook messages and texts letting me know how much I am loved and supported by my former classmates. What is emerging on Social Media are the fruits of the community we built at Mount St. Charles; it is a harnessing of the passion and commitment to justice that was engrained in us at Mount St. Charles. The letter writing, mobilizing, and organizing that began within moments of this news being discovered are the fruits of the education we received at Mount St. Charles. We are embodying the Mount St. Charles mission statement:

Mount Saint Charles Academy, a private, Catholic junior- senior high school in the tradition of the Brothers of the Sacred Heart, serves a co-educational community in a college preparatory environment.

We challenge our students through rigorous academic programs and through religious and co-curricular experiences to become people of faith who use their talents and intellects to serve others.

Each and every student is known, valued, treasured, and taught in partnership with the family.

The psalmist writes, “I am utterly numb and crushed; I wail, because of the groaning of my heart.”

When I was in the eighth grade, I received the biggest award for a junior high student. I received the Great Eight Award, an award given to two students in the eighth grade who exemplify what it means to be a Mountie. Since 2003, as a result of this award, my name has been inscribed on your wall of fame. My name stands as a symbol of what it truly means to embody the spirit of the Mount. It is hard, it seemingly impossible, to reconcile the fact that I could go from exemplifying what it means to be a Mountie – something I have endeavored to do since the day I received that award – to being a person my beloved alma mater refuses “to accommodate.”

And so, to the faculty, staff, and administration of Mount St. Charles who approved this policy, to you whom I put complete faith and trust it, to you whom I relied on, to you who cared for me – you have failed me. You have failed not just me, but each and every student who does, who has ever, and who will ever walk through your doors. You have outraged me, you have disappointed me, you have hurt me, but most importantly who have cut down everything you taught me to stand for. I hope you remember that each and every time you walk outside the faculty room, every time you glimpse my name on the Great Eight Award plaque, because those 32 words inscribed in your handbook discredit everything you say you stand for. I am your student: what happened to “each and every student is known, valued, treasured, and taught”?

The psalmist writes, “I am utterly numb and crushed; I wail, because of the groaning of my heart.”

In the days ahead, more will be said, letters will be written, and campaigns will begin. But, today I can only manage these words. I can only muster up the strength to share my deep and profound pain.

Today I write, “I am utterly numb and crushed; I wail, because of the groaning of my heart.”

I sign this message in anticipation of day than I can once again say, “I am proud to be a Mountie.”

[This post originally appeared here – editor]

Former students speak out against Mount St. Charles Academy’s trans-exclusive policy


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Mount St Charles AcademyFollowing a report on GoLocalProv that Mount St. Charles Academy in Woonsocket “is unable to make accommodations for transgender students” and therefore “does not accept transgender students” or “able to continue to enroll students who identify as transgender,” a group of former students, Concerned Alumni Against Mount St. Charles’s Trans-Exclusive Policy has issued the following statement:

We are deeply disappointed by the decision by the Mount Saint Charles Academy administration to include a provision in their 2015-16 Student Handbook that refuses admittance for transgender students based on a lack of undefined accommodations that has come to our attention this week. Mount Saint Charles has always been an incredible pillar of support for so many students, current and alumni alike. Actions like this seem wholly uncharacteristic of the institution.

“Furthermore, we are also confused as to what ‘accommodations’ means, as it is undefined. There are solutions to explore beyond outright expulsion and refusal of admittance. Over 600 alumni have already come together to speak out against this action.

“We love Mount Saint Charles and what it meant to us. The community that is fostered there is meant to be one of love, respect, and support. That is what we were taught.  We do not take provisions like this lightly. We want to protect and preserve the community that made every student feel safe and supported. This is an opportunity to learn, grow, and come together to push past our differences. We look forward to speaking further with administration to find a resolution to this painful decision.”

The group is comprised of former Mount St. Charles Academy students Nick Martin, Dante Tavolaro, Alicia Bissonnette, Ryan Glode, Samantha Ward and Julie McBrien.

Transgender oral history project in RI


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2000px-Transgender_Pride_flag.svgEarlier this year, Frank V. Toti, Jr. previewed his play TRANS*, based on the oral histories taken from trans* people by Steven Pennell at the Paff Auditorium at the URI Downtown Campus. That performance, featuring Pennell, Cynthia Glinick and Cody Suzuki was a fantastic showcase of some of what this community faces on a regular basis.

See a work-in-progress performance of ‘Trans’ at URI Providence

Now Pennell has put out an appeal to the community looking for more oral histories.

The plan is to gather more interviews from people in the local Trans Community. The stories shared with me will be audio recorded. The information can be open or kept anonymous (if the individual wishes it to be), they will be transcribed and become an available resource for education and understanding. I will then create a performance work…to share some of these stores at the URI Providence Campus where I curate exhibits and create performances on topics of diversity social justice. It is my hope to have members of the Trans community present the stories in performance, and potentially to tour the play into the community to increase awareness and understanding.

This is the tenth such project that the author has conducted over the past two decades, including work with survivors of the Nazi holocaust and the wider LGBTQQI community. Those who are interested in participating can reach Pennell at uri.artsandculture@gmail.com.

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LGBTQ community needs to ask, “Who else will be there?”


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A few months ago, Governor Gina Raimondo hosted a meeting for members of the “LGBTQ community” at which no People of Color were present, because no People of Color were invited. Some attendees later reflected on their discomfort sitting in that meeting which was either intentionally or unintentionally (depending on your level of cynicism) racially-exclusive.

Some amount of dialogue emerged from this experience. It was wisely suggested, and I’ll paraphrase, that, “When LGBTQ people are invited to events, we need to start asking ‘Who else will be there?’” (Thank you, Jenn Steinfeld)

Still, in the last several months, organizations within the community continue to plan event after event with no POC participation and this is an trend in mainstream LGBTQ community events and organizations throughout the country.

In her book White Women, Race Matters: The Social Construction of Whiteness, author Ruth Frankenberg sought to examine this issue within the feminist community by posing the question, “What are the social processes through which white women are created as social actors primed to reproduce racism within the feminist movement?”

What if we rework that question to address the same issue in the LGBTQ community?

What are the social processes through which white members of the LGBTQ community are created as social actors primed to reproduce racism within the LGBTQ movement?

A major social process through which the LGBTQ community interacts is performance events such as musical events, comedy reviews, drag shows, annual festivals, etc. Surely there will be instances where it is impossible to incorporate an accurate cross-section of the community.

Sometimes interest is low and organizers have to book whatever performers they can get. Sometimes the number of performers is so limited that the ideal racial representation is not possible. These things are understandable. But when we see organizers of large-scale, mainstream events continue racial exclusivity year after year, we, as writer Aaron Talley put it, “continually swallow the complexities of being black and queer in this country into their narratives of restrictively safe whiteness.”

I am often reminded of the words of long-time Rhode Island Pride President Rodney Davis, “As we look around, noticing all the people who are with us, we must also ask ourselves, ‘Who is missing?'”

We are living in a time when racial awareness and social consciousness have been elevated to levels we haven’t seen in a generation. Let’s not wait until damage is done and people are left out to ask ourselves, “Who is missing?” Instead, let’s remind ourselves and each other to start asking “Who else will be there?” and let that inform our decisions as to what events we attend.

A conversation with Sally Hay about LGBTQQI elder issues and her Communist uncle Harry Hay

sally
Sally Hay.

Recently I had the opportunity to sit down for a conversation with Sally Hay, an LGBTQQI (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans*, Queer, Questioning, Intersex) rights activist that has done a significant level of research and work regarding elder issues with Services & Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE). As the Baby Boomers continue to retire and age, a whole generation of people who came out before and immediately after Stonewall will face a variety of unique challenges their heterosexual counterparts do not.

As one example, many of these elders adamantly refuse to use the Q for queer in describing their community due to a legacy of great pain and anguish that word caused them as younger people. A younger generation in the late 1980’s and 1990’s, in the midst of the absolute catastrophe of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, re-appropriated the word and turned it into a radical pride label. In a famous leaflet, they wrote:

Ah, do we really have to use that word? It’s trouble. Every gay person has his or her own take on it. For some it means strange and eccentric and kind of mysterious […] And for others “queer” conjures up those awful memories of adolescent suffering […] Well, yes, “gay” is great. It has its place. But when a lot of lesbians and gay men wake up in the morning we feel angry and disgusted, not gay. So we’ve chosen to call ourselves queer. Using “queer” is a way of reminding us how we are perceived by the rest of the world.

These sorts of conversations are genuinely meaningful but also entail a good deal of nuance. Many of these elders do not have connections with their family of origin and as a result often will find themselves being given assistance by younger community members that use queer as an appellation of pride. This is a generation where “their safety was everybody else’s silence.” Studies have begun to show that these elders are “far more reluctant to access traditional, mainstream health services [and] senior services. They put off, they defer healthcare for fear of discrimination, for fear of being harassed, of needing to out themselves, often they don’t out themselves, and also often because they don’t have the insurance [because] that’s a cohort that has a lower income”.

“In terms of working with healthcare facilities and providers, we’ve heard stories over the years…of some discrimination and inappropriate treatment. But on the balance, I think most of the…harm that’s done is out of ignorance. What we hear…the three things are we don’t have any gay people here, we hear ‘we must be doing it right because we don’t get any complaints’ and trying to help them understand that this is a cohort that has survived by being invisible and not rocking the boat… They’re not likely to come up to the administration and say ‘I think I’m being harassed’. And the third thing is ‘we treat everybody the same’. And that comes with a good heart often but not understand that…when you an intake form…that says ‘married/widowed/divorced/separated/single’, even though I am now married, I don’t related to that and when I see that simple array, I know you don’t see me… If all your pictures and brochures are of heterosexual couples and families, you’re saying that you don’t see me.”

Throughout our conversation, we reflected on her ideas about elders, feminism, and the advancement of the struggles for liberation that she and her wife have lived through. Of particular interest was her ability to discuss whether the feminist movement, like the LGBTQQI movement, has entered into a phase of assimilation. I also afforded her the opportunity to directly address doctors and other healthcare professionals about what they should do to better care for this population.

Harry Hay
Harry Hay

One of the figures who informed some of her efforts and experiences with this elder community was working with her late uncle, Harry Hay, in his last years, who was arguably the founder of American gay men’s liberation. In 1948, Hay, a member of the Communist Party USA, used the Marxist-Leninist definition of a minority to form what became America’s first gay men’s civil rights association, the Mattachine Society. Stuart Timmons, author of The Trouble With Harry Hay: Founder of the Modern Gay Movement, writes in his 1990 biography:

Since 1941, Harry had taught Stalin’s four principles of a minority; these were a common language, a common territory, a common economy, and a common psychology and culture. “I felt we had two of the four, the language and culture, so clearly we were a social minority.” This concept of homosexuals as a minority would be the contribution of which Hay was proudest… He suggested a comparison of the political manipulation and murder of homosexuals in Nazi Germany to recent firings of gays by the State Department [during the McCarthyist Red Scare].

Hay says elsewhere in the Timmons biography:

The post-war reaction, the shutting down of open communication, was already of concern to many of us progressives. I knew the government was going to look for a new enemy, a new scapegoat. It was predictable. But Blacks were beginning to organize and the horror of the holocaust was too recent to put the Jews in this position. The natural scapegoat would be us, the Queers. They were the one group of disenfranchised people who did not even know they were a group because they had never formed as a group. They – we – had to get started. It was high time.

Throughout his life, as Sally says in the interview, Hay described himself as the Martin Luther King, Jr. of the gay movement. While I understand the logic, I would instead argue that Hay was closer to W.E.B. Du Bois for several reasons.

The Hays
Sally and Harry Hay.

troubleFirst, like Du Bois, Hay wrote a large body of work that was based on sociological and anthropological scholarly forms. Second, like Du Bois, Hay was an unrepentant atheist and Communist whereas Dr. King was a Christian and registered as first a Republican and then a Democrat. Third, both Du Bois and Hay were militant throughout their careers with issues regarding collaboration with mainstream politics and always strove for liberation as opposed to integration, whereas Dr. King learned a hard lesson about this after being disappointed by the Kennedy brothers and Lyndon Johnson. Finally, Hay and Du Bois both died as elder statesmen of their respective movements while Dr. King was killed just as he was beginning to formulate a radical critique of not just American racism but imperialism, militarism, and capitalism. Hay continues to be a revolutionary thinker because he included an essential element of class in his identity politics project and challenged not just homophobia and sexism but also capitalism, imperialism and racism.

In 1983, the late Vito Russo, who would later go on to author the classic study of cinematic representation The Celluloid Closet, produced for New York public television a program titled Our Time. The premiere episode featured an interview with Harry Hay and Barbara Gittings, the co-founder of The Daughters of Bilitis, America’s first lesbian civil rights group, along with historian John D’Emilio, whose book Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities dealt with the history of the liberation movement in America. Those interested in seeing just the Harry Hay segment can click here or they can advance the video to the 8:06 time marker.

A BRIEF ASIDE ON NAMBLA

Radically gay

There is something fundamentally sexist about turning a piece that is meant to be about cisgendered lesbian talking about elder issues into an extended one about an uncle that was not the center of the conversation. Yet this following issue is vital to parse through. When any journalist writes about Harry Hay, they can sing the praises of his work for gay liberation ad infinitum but also must confront the difficult issue of his advocacy for the North American Man Boy Love Association (NAMBLA), which he was never a member of. Indeed, in 2010, Obama education appointee Kevin Jennings was subjected to a guilt-by-association campaign by the Sean Hannity and others for his previous laudatory statements about Harry Hay. When I went to SCSU with Bella Robinson, the host, Dr. Alan Brown, who has studied LGBTQQI issues throughout his sociological career and has shelves loaded with volumes on different aspects of the topic, including the aforementioned Stuart Timmons biography, tried to talk with me about this in a conversation and after several minutes we only could come up with two words, “that’s tough”.

There are two instances in Hay’s life where he advocated on behalf of NAMBLA and both are deserving of a full discussion. The latter, in 1994, is much easier to explain. Will Roscoe says in an anthology of Hay’s writings he edited titled Radically Gay: Gay Liberation in the Words of Its Founder:

In 1994, when Senator Jesse Helms learned that the United Nations had granted consultative status to the International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA) and that one of the organizations affiliated with this body was NAMBLA…he introduced a resolution in the Senate to cut off funding for the U.N. until it could be certified that it did not recognize or grant official status to any organization that “promotes, condones, or seeks the legalization of pedophilia.” The resolution passed 99 to 0… [This] coincided with plans for a massive Lesbian/Gay convergence on New York City in June to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Stonewall uprising. At meetings held in conjunction with this event, ILGA delegates voted to expel NAMBLA. Hay was prominent in coordinating the opposition… Hay has consistently argued the same points: First and foremost, that we [LGBTQQI people] should not allow our opponents to dictate to us who is and who is not a member of our community. Second, while Hay himself has never been a member of NAMBLA, he was once a young Gay man, well under the age of consent, who sought out sexual contact with an adult man and found it. To call this “child molestation” only stigmatizes homosexuality further and makes it more difficult for young Gay people to make contact with others like them. Indeed, Hay accuses Gay leaders of abandoning youth in their eagerness to cater to Right-wing homophobes.

In a published version of a speech he gave at the time, Our Beloved Gay/Lesbian Movement at a Crossroads, Hay said the following:

When some of us “anti-exclusionists” (a more accurate term than “pro-NAMBLA-ites”) argued that Helms’s remarks were aimed at European groups as well as American ones, ILGA responded by saying, “He has no jurisdiction over Europeans.” In so saying, they exposed themselves as middle-class assimilationists with no knowledge of how ruling-class politics play out in “smoke-filled back rooms.” They were ignoring the fact that the feckless, toothless caricature of a world parliament-the U.N.-needed American money in order to keep going and would do anything to get it! Even though NAMBLA had been one of ILGA’s longest-standing member organizations, ILGA voted NAMBLA’s expulsion… Selling NAMBLA down the river was a short-sighted solution and it obscured the real issue of including and addressing the needs of our Gay and Lesbian youth… NAMBLA was never the issue. The constitutional right of Gay and Lesbian groups to first-class citizenship, of Gay and Lesbian individuals to practice political and spiritual self-determination was. It still is!… Thirty days later, Helms let the other shoe drop. He amended an education bill on its way through the Senate by denying federal funds to any public school district that teaches homosexuality is a positive lifestyle alternative through class work, textbooks, or counseling… Insofar as child molestation is concerned, the most common, yet unrecognized, form is the sexual coercion of Gay and Lesbian youth into heterosexual identities and behaviors. This is practiced daily by the whole national and international Hetero community… This outrageous coercion of Gay kids into heterosexual identities and behaviors is not only sexually abusive, it is a spiritually devastating rape because the child, unknowingly, is led into self-loathing at the same time! [Emphasis in original]

The former instance of Hay’s support for NAMBLA, as discussed in the interview, was not an organizational one, it was ideological. Hay, along with other gay men like Allen Ginsberg, were adamant that the sexual initiation and education of younger gay men by elders was a topic worthy of discussion and important. This is not an isolated instance either, throughout history, going as far back as Plato’s Symposium, there has been an undercurrent of this dynamic. In the instance of Socrates and Plato, a long section of that dialogue included an argument that the relationship between a younger man and an elder was not just admirable, it was holier than heterosexual marriage! There are two points to keep in mind when dealing with this issue.

First, it was not until the 1966 free speech ruling by the Massachusetts Supreme Court regarding the censorship of Naked Lunch by William S. Burroughs that it was fully legal for LGBTQQI writers to talk graphically and without fear about same sex relationships of any kind, before that writers had to use codes and symbols. Within three years of that ruling came the Stonewall riots in the summer of 1969. In 1980, the HIV/AIDS epidemic hit the community with a force akin to how the Shoah struck the European Jewish community. The African American movement had centuries to hash through major issues that still continue to affect their communal discourse. By contrast, LGBTQQI people had eleven years of peace before being thrown into a cataclysm that forced them to confront the military-pharmaceutical-industrial complex, sexism, racism, and so many issues they needed to overcome quickly lest they die horrible, lonesome, painful deaths. This conversation is one of the most challenging for men who have sex with men, more difficult than safe sex, HIV testing, substance abuse, or the notion of marriage as opposed to domestic partnership.

Second, there is a large level of hypocrisy around consent laws regarding same-sex relations. Men and women can and are destroyed by homophobic parents of their lovers who have them arrested for sexual misconduct and tarred as pedophiles if they have been dating someone for years and then turn 18. This happens in the same country where the age of consent to marriage in New Hampshire is 13 for women if the parents consent! There also are Romeo and Juliet laws that protect straight couples when one partner turns 18 that do not apply historically also to same sex couples. As a personal aside, my own view is that the age of consent would probably be best set at 45, in a world where we have so many children abandoned to poverty, war, a pathetic foster care system, and the school-to-prison pipeline, I have no clue why child bearing-aged adults should be allowed to have sexual congress that results in procreation, but then again I never could understand heterosexuality.

I do not deny that this is a difficult conversation for straight allies of the community. On the surface, it seems very apparent that this is a common-sense, open-and-shut case of opposing pedophilia. It is also worth reiterating that both Sally and I agreed to disagree with Harry Hay’s actions. But understanding them fully so to disagree with them properly is what any mature ally should do before passing judgment. Those who profess ignorance and pass judgment beforehand on a figure who defines the very existence of LGBTQQI liberation should perhaps reconsider whether they are actually allies of the community. I would argue not that Hay was right or wrong but that one must educate oneself before passing judgement. The reality is that homophobia has always been based around ignorance and miseducation about LGBTQQI people and their lives.

Harry Hay was ahead of his time in almost every way. His ideas about Left wing strategy in the community were proven correct when ACT-UP would use direct action anarchist tactics to fight back against the horrors of AIDS. His notions of assimilation as a threat continue to be borne out as a class-free, homogenized history of liberation is offered up by films like the recent STONEWALL film. Despite a single place where he may have erred, all LGBTQQI can continue to learn something from him.

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Updated: Pawtucket City Councilor Mercer takes a walk on LGBT vote


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Mercer leavesCity Councilor Terrence Mercer missed three minutes of the September 23 Pawtucket City Council meeting. In doing so he avoided voting for (or against) a symbolic resolution in support of LGBT rights.

On the evening in question City Councilor Sandra Cano introduced a resolution endorsing the Equality Act, (HR 3185) a bill introduced by Representative David Cicilline in the US House of Representatives.

Cicilline’s bill “amends the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to include sex, sexual orientation, and gender identity among the prohibited categories of discrimination or segregation in places of public accommodation.” Cano’s resolution, which passed the Pawtucket City Council unanimously, was a mostly symbolic gesture in support for Cicilline’s efforts, and Pawtucket was the first city council in the state to pass such a resolution.

But though the resolution passed with a 7-0 vote, there were actually eight city councilors in attendance at the council meeting that evening. One, Terrence Mercer, a Democrat, was present for every vote before and after Cano’s resolution, but can be seen in the video below getting up and leaving the council chambers when the resolution came up for discussion. He is back right after the resolution passes to vote on the rest of the evening’s agenda.

The minutes from the meeting read:

COUNCILOR MERCER LEAVES THE CHAMBERS AT 8:22 P.M.

THE FOLLOWING RESOLUTION IS READ AND PASSED ON A ROLL CALL VOTE, AS FOLLOWS:

AYES – President Moran, Councilors Bray, Cano, Hodge, Rudd, Tetreault and Wildenhain.

NOES – 0.

588   RESOLUTION IN SUPPORT OF PASSAGE IN THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS OF HR-3185 ENTITLED THE EQUALITY ACT.

COUNCILOR MERCER RETURNS TO THE CHAMBERS AT 8:25 P.M.

In the video, one can see Mercer getting up and leaving the room as the issue comes up. After a short discussion, the vote is taken, with the secretary turning in surprise to notice that Mercer has left the room. Though we don’t see Mercer re-enter the city council chambers, around one minute later Mercer can be seen and he votes on the next agenda item.

Update: In an email, Councilor Mercer stated, “If you read the minutes in their entirety, you will see the council had just voted on a very important tax resolution dealing with a housing project in my district. That resolution is a key to rehabbing a very large public housing campus with hundreds of low-income residents. I left the chamber to speak to the developers and the city’s Housing Authority director about the project.”

UPDATE: In a text message, Mercer said, “For the record I am in full support of Congressman Cicilline’s legislation. No one should be made to endure discrimination regardless of race, ethnicity, gender or orientation.”

It should not have been hard to vote for a symbolic resolution in support of a national bill protecting the rights of LGBT citizens across the country. These are the same rights currently protected by law in Rhode Island, though most states lack these protections, as can be seen in the ACLU map below.

LGBT non-dicrimination map

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Spreading the word about HIV prevention with PrEP


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2015-11-30 World AIDS Day 010 Richie DeFilippoRichie DeFilippo, the reigning Mr. Gay Rhode Island 2015, gave the following talk about the importance of PrEP, as part of World AIDS Day at the State House.

I feel honored for the opportunity to speak with you today.  After living in the city of Providence for 12 years, I began the quest for this title after having many conversations with members of our community who had not yet heard of PrEP or Truvada.  PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis, is a pill that when taken daily protects your body from contracting the HIV virus.  I saw that we needed to educate our community about the importance of protecting ourselves.  And since being crowned, I have being doing just that.  I have had many one on one conversations with friends, acquaintances and strangers who wanted to know more, but did not know who or where to go.

In my role, I have been happy to spread the word about PrEP and have been joined by many members of our community with this outreach.  At this year’s PrideFest, many organizations that are represented here today and many community volunteers all made a statement in wearing a shirt that said I take PrEP.  Creating a sea of Truvada blue tee shirts that answered questions, “like what is P.R.E.P?,” “How does it work?,” “Where can I get it?,” and most commonly asked “How much does it cost?”

So standing here today I ask all of you, our honorable legislators and leaders to think about the following issues surrounding PrEP.

While programs, including condom distribution, peer outreach, HIV and STI testing and treatment, have been effective regarding prevention efforts amongts gay and bisexual men, they have had little influence on decreasing the incidence of HIV infection amongst this population.

In addition, these efforts do not necessarily provide education about PrEP, and do not address the specific barriers these men face with respect to PrEP initiation, and subsequent adherence.

Barriers to PrEP Initiation

Numerous studies have shown that gay and bisexual men, overall, have limited knowledge of PrEP, and among those who are aware of PrEP, there remain many unanswered questions in deciding whether PrEP is right for them. This is not surprising as the diffusion of new knowledge clearly takes time, but certainly more can be done to educate gay and bisexual men about PrEP.

A few examples are targeted PrEP media campaigns, community forums at venues where gay and bisexual men congregate, and on online hookup sites, such as Grindr and Scruff.  What is most important to highlight, in my opinion, is once PrEP was described to the men in these studies, interest in the use of PrEP was very high.

Real World Issues

To date, studies of PrEP initiation have largely been limited to settings in which PrEP is provided free of charge, almost universally by Gilead Sciences, the manufacturer of the drug. Barriers to PrEP initiation in real world settings are much more complex, since payment for PrEP can be a substantial financial burden, particularly without health insurance coverage or large annual deductibles or associated prescription co-pays.

Although most health insurance programs are covering the cost of PrEP, and the Gilead Truvada for PrEP Medication Assistance Program exists to assist people who do not have health insurance, these programs require patient and clinician awareness, sufficient staff training to overcome system challenges and the ability to work through barriers that may come up while providing a reliable infrastructure for carrying out the work.

Medical Providers

As it relates to medical providers, studies have shown a misinterpretation of the results of PrEP efficacy trial data. This raises concerns about how to best educate physicians to translate the results of the PrEP studies to their patients. These concerns suggest that educational interventions designed to increase physicians’ awareness and interpretation of PrEP study data may be needed to optimize PrEP provision. Studies have also shown that generalists (primary care docs) are less familiar with PrEP efficacy results than were HIV specialists. This is particularly relevant since most persons at risk for HIV are not likely to seek care from HIV specialists.

Given that physicians are not often comfortable discussing sexual behavior with their patients, innovative provider education programs are needed for PrEP to be more widely available.

Additionally, given the well-documented links between physicians’ concerns about PrEP and their prescribing intentions, educational interventions that provide information on the safety of PrEP, and its anticipated financial impact on HIV prevention budgets, may be most effective in motivating physicians to appropriately prescribe PrEP.

Barriers to Taking PrEP Once Prescribed

In addition to some of the challenges and misinformation I just spoke about, there are additional barriers of taking PrEP once it is prescribed. The effectiveness of PrEP is closely tied to adherence, and evidence suggests that effectiveness decreases exponentially with fewer doses of PrEP per week. When 6-7 doses are taken per week, maximum effectiveness of PrEP is achieved and when at least 4 doses per week are taken, patients still have a high level of protection.

From scientific literature and my own personal ties to the gay and bisexual male community, we know that certain subgroups of gay and bisexual men face multifaceted challenges to optimal adherence, including stigma, inconsistent routines, substance use, depression and other mental health problems.

In addition, victimization, fluctuations during periods of sexual risk, and potential perception by their sexual partners that they are HIV positive can also deter individuals. Concerns and questions around insurance coverage and access to financial assistance also are significant challenges that may affect both initiation and adherence to PrEP.

In closing, I feel that the development and testing of an intervention that addresses the barriers and facilitators to PrEP uptake and adherence among gay and bisexual men is necessary to ensure maximum PrEP effectiveness.

I would like to thank Dr. Phillip Chan and Dr. Matthew Mimiaga for their support and guidance and The Rhode Island HIV Prevention Coalition for having me here today. I hope you will all join me in continuing to educate our community about the opportunity and effectiveness of PrEP as we work together to stop the spread of new infections of the HIV virus.

Providence observes Transgender Day of Remembrance, Resilience


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2015-11-19 Trans March 002“The Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDOR) is an annual day of observance to honor those who have lost their lives to anti-trans violence, bigotry and suicide,” said Monay McNeil, reading the words of August Guang, who helped organize a march down Elmwood Ave in Providence Friday night.  “Lead by people of color, the First National Trans March of Resilience… in numerous cities across the nation… [is] a way to honor the strength and resilience of trans lives, specifically the lives of trans people of color…”

Trans people and allies met at Knight Memorial Library in Providence and marched for nearly twenty minutes to PrYSM (Providence Youth Student Movement). Marchers chanted, “Black Lives Matter! Trans Lives Matter!” Traffic on Elmwood Ave was slowed and police stayed at a respectful distance.

At the end of the march participants crammed into PrYSM’s meeting space for a vigil, poetry and art.

McNeil noted the importance of this march, saying “As of 2015 there have been at least 700 [Black Lives Matter] protests across the country. Many trans people of color witness these protests in confusion and/or frustration, wondering why such national outrage is not also seen when trans women of color are brutally murdered and assaulted daily by both police and civilians.”

The night before the march, at the Beneficent Church downtown, the Transgender Day of Remembrance was celebrated with a service for trans persons who lost their lives in 2015. Candles were lit for each person who lost their lives this year, and as each name was read aloud, a candle was silently extinguished, slowly darkening the room.

This is the 16th year for the TDOR, started in 1999 in San Francisco by Gwendolyn Ann Smith in response to the 1998 murder of Rita Hester in Allston, Massachusetts, a case that remains unsolved. The full list of those who lost there lives this year can be seen here.

Mayor Jorge Elorza and Representative David Cicilline both spoke at that event, but it was the moving stories of Julián Cancino and Dominique Pistone that focused the service on what’s important: trans lives. Cancino spoke of being a Mexican immigrant to this country, having escaped persecution in his native country. America, to its shame, was not a welcoming place. Pistone spoke about a lifelong process of coming out and finding her true, authentic self. (I unfortunately don’t have Pistone’s talk on video, but I do have the short video of Alejandra Blaze, Ms. Trans Rhode Island, who spoke about trans empowerment and liberation.)

 

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Pope’s meeting with Kim Davis ‘deeply disappointing’ to LGBTQ Catholics


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Pope Francis
Pope Francis

DignityUSA, based out of Boston and “the leading organization of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Catholics,” is disappointed by the Vatican’s confirmation that Pope Francis had met with Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis while visiting Washington DC last week.

“The news that Pope Francis met with Kim Davis while failing to respond to repeated requests for dialogue with LGBT Catholics and their families will be deeply disappointing to many Catholics, gay, trans, and straight alike,” said DignityUSA Executive Director Marianne Duddy-Burke in a statement. “It may be seen as putting the weight of the Vatican behind the US Catholic bishops’ claims of victimization, and to support those who want to make it more difficult for same-sex couples to exercise their civil right to marriage. This encounter could, in many people’s minds, transform the pope’s US trip from a largely successful pastoral visit to the endorsement of an exclusionary political agenda.

“I fear that this meeting and claims that the Pope told Ms. Davis to ‘stand strong’ will embolden the many US bishops and others who continue to try to turn back support for LGBT people. It will make even more of us feel like the Pope’s message of mercy and love was not meant for LGBT people and families. It points again to the deep divide between Catholics who affirm and support their LGBT family members and friends, and the hierarchy, which is tragically out of touch.”

I was in Philadelphia during the Pope’s visit, and I can confirm the profound sense of disappointment LGBTQ Catholics and their families were feeling at being so cavalierly ignored by Pope Francis. The Pope was in town for the “World Conference of Families” but the term “family” was narrowly defined in a conservative Catholic, anti-LGBTQ fashion. Only one gay man was officially allowed to speak at the conference, and he is celibate.

Because of the Catholic church’s exclusion, a series of LGBTQ events was held in Philadelphia but outside the conference. I reported on the Transforming Love forum that featured transgendered and intersex persons describing their lives and their deep desire to be included in the Catholic church. But the issue goes deeper than how some LGBTQ people define themselves religiously. For many people, the official stance of the Catholic Church is a matter of life and death.

Nicole Santamaria

Whenever a religious leader spoke out against sexual diversity, or even against abortion, a transgendered woman is killed.

At the Transforming Love forum Nicole Santamaria, an intersex woman from El Salvador said, “I came here to the World Meeting of Families with Pope Francis, to speak for the voices that were silenced by those who will torture them, by those who will kill them. And the voices that were silenced already by people who feel they have permission and they have the obligation to murder us, to exterminate us, to persecute us, because their religion told them that it is okay to kill a person that is different.

“Whenever a religious leader spoke out against sexual diversity, or even against abortion, a transgendered woman is killed. Every time those kind of things are heard, that means death. Whenever this is reported in the media, you can read the comments from the people, and the comments are, They deserve it, they are abominations, God doesn’t love them, it is okay.”

At another event in Philadelphia that same day, that I was blocked from getting to because of the excessive security brought to bear upon the pope’s arrival, a picnic was held for 14 Catholic LGBT families. These families were not granted official status by the World Meeting of Families conference. Instead, they secured a location off site. Equally Blessed, a coalition of four Catholic LGBT groups (of which DignityUSA is a part) sent a letter to Pope Francis inviting him to their picnic.

The letter went unanswered, and of course Pope Francis declined to visit with these families.

But he did make time to visit with Kim Davis in Washington.

“We still believe that for the Pope to hear the stories of LGBT Catholics and our families would be a key step in reversing the official Church teachings that damage so many people,” said Duddy-Burke in her statement, “In fact, his meeting with Ms. Davis makes this even more urgent. We have people in Rome right now, on the eve of the Synod of the Family reconvening, who would be happy to talk with the Pope if he’s willing to take a small step towards righting this injustice.”

It is telling that Pope Francis is more interested in secret meetings with people like Kim Davis, who would subvert the very meaning of freedom of conscience, than he is in openly meeting with LGBTQ Catholics and their families who have decided to follow theirs.

Pope Francis wants to be the new face of a better brighter Catholicism, but underneath his benign mask is the leader of a bigoted, morally bankrupt institution responsible for far more harm than good in this world.

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Catholic trans* and intersex activists defy silencing, challenge church


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Arch Street United Methodist Church

Four people spoke on trans and intersex gender identities from a Catholic perspective at the Transforming Love forum held at the Arch Street United Methodist Church across the street from the World Conference of Families in Philadelphia on Saturday morning. The event was originally scheduled to take place at the St. John the Evangelist parish, but according to organizers was, “evicted from the space by Archbishop Charles Chaput of the Philadephia Archdiocese.”

Pope Francis is in Philadelphia today and will be attending events around Philadelphia in concert with the World Conference of Families. It is unknown if the pope has any knowledge of the LGBTQI counter programming. He was invited to a picnic made up of 14 families grappling with LGBTQI acceptance, but due to the blocked roads I was unable to attend that event.

New Ways Ministry, Dignity USA, Fortunate Families, and Call to Action organized the gender identity counter programming and are all groups working to gain “reconciliation” for LGBTQI Catholics “within the larger Catholic and civil communities.” The groups are trying to add depth to the official conversation about LGBTQI issues at the World Conference, which includes only “one presentation on homosexuality, led by a celibate gay man, among a long list of panels” on other subjects.

When the Catholic Church refused to host, the groups quickly lined up a space at the Methodist church. This church has a large rainbow flag on the outside, clearly visible from the convention center. On the day of the event the streets around the church and convention center were blocked off in a maze of security fences ahead of the pope’s arrival. That made navigation virtually impossible even while walking, Attendees were not deterred, however. I was pleasantly surprised to see forty people eager to engage with the speakers.

Julie Chovanes
Julie Chovanes

Sister Jeannine Grammick lead the group in prayer, then introduced Julie Chovanes, a transexual woman and patent lawyer who lives in Philadelphia. Chovanes is still married to the woman she has had four children with, her youngest child is fifteen years old. She transitioned while maintaining her legal career and her family.

Chovannes was raised in the Byzantine Catholic tradition, a very conservative tradition. Coming out and transitioning has been a challenge, but she feels she has “been accepted in the city, I feel that Philadelphia is the best city in the world for [trans persons].”

“I don’t consider myself a man or a girl,” said Chovanes, “I am a trans. My brain and my soul are a woman’s, but my body is a man’s… My life is a testament to God’s glory.”

delfine bautista
delfine bautista

delfine bautista identifies as trans*, specifically as two-spirit or gender queer. delfine prefers the pronoun “they” to “he” or “she.” They has a graduate degree in divinity and social work and serves as the director of Ohio University’s LGBT Center.

“I am a Catholic,” says delfine. “I was assigned the gender, male, at birth, but at the age of three I knew i was different.”

Growing up in a conservative, Latino household made gender questioning impossible. “Being different is not an option.” In secret, “I wore dresses and played princess. I prayed every night to wake up in a new body, but was greeted with silence.”

“When I came out I came out as gay,” said delfine, “because that’s all I knew, but even then I knew it didn’t fit me… My mom wanted to help me and sent me to therapy to be cured. I don’t hate my mother, she was trying to help me.” delfine’s mother was in the audience.

delfine’s divinity work came to the fore when he put out the following ideas, “In Genesis God made man and woman in his own image. Is God trans, intersex, queer? [What about] persons like Joan of Arc.?Her actions were gender bending, and she’s a saint… I am more than one thing. I am more than one identity. Sometimes [my identities] clash, but I am a hot mess, and I embrace the mess.”

Vima Santamaria
Vima Santamaria

Vilma Santamaria is a Salvadoran teacher, sociologist and the mother of Nicole Santamaria, an intersex woman and human rights activist. “I realized that when my daughter was really little, she was different. She said she didn’t like girls.” [Note that Santamaria’s daughter was assigned a male gender at birth.]

When her daughter came out to her, “I told her I would love you, whoever you are… My husband was the main problem.”

Nicole Santamaria elaborated. “When I was three, I realized I was a girl.” Her father hated her feminine qualities. “[I was told,] don’t talk like that, don’t move your hands like that! Oh my God, don’t breathe like that!

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Nicole Santamaria

“When I started puberty my breasts started to grow, I never grew hairy, my voice never changed.” Her father reacted brutally. “My father mentally and physically tortured me. He’d heat up coins and burn my nipples.”

Eventually Nicole Santamaria ran away, and started to live her life as a woman. She went to a doctor and told her some of what she was going through. The doctor offered to put her on testosterone so she could develop into a man. She was horrified. She wanted to be a woman.

The doctor had misunderstood. After testing the doctor determined that Nicole Santamaria was intersex. Her breasts had been virtually destroyed by her father’s brutality. After breast reconstruction surgery she found herself able to finally live her life as the woman she had always been.

Nicole Santamaria speaks out as an activist because trans persons are being tortured and murdered in El Salvador.

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New Ways Ministry, Executive Director Frank DeBeranardo

“I came here to the World Meeting of Families with Pope Francis, to speak for the voices that were silenced by those who will torture them, by those who will kill them. And the voices that were silenced already by people who feel they have permission and they have the obligation to murder us, to exterminate us, to persecute us, because their religion told them that it is okay to kill a person that is different. When every religious leader spoke out against sexual diversity, or even against abortion, a transgender woman is killed. Every time those kind of things are heard, that means death. Whenever this is reported in the media, you can read the comments from the people, and the comments are, They deserve it, they are abominations, God doesn’t love them, it is okay.

“So as an activist, I really believe that my faith has given me the strength to continue. People tell me, stop! you can live your life with all the privilege of a female, don’t say anything…” and no one would know.

“Let me tell you something, I won’t do that.”

I don’t know if Pope Francis will hear the message of Nicole Santamaria and her mother, or the message of Julie Chevanes and delfine bautista, Certainly the Roman Catholic Church did everything it could to silence and marginalize these people. What we know is that people are suffering and dying, and it is well within the power of the Church to alleviate that evil.

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