LGBTQ advocates fear Iowa bill targeting ‘obscenity’ would deter drag performances

*This was originally published by the Des Moines Register.

Exposing minors to an “obscene performance” would be a crime under a bill winding through the Iowa Senate that critics fear could discourage drag shows and spur lawsuits against venues offering LGBTQ pride programming.

The legislation, Senate File 116, would make knowingly exposing anyone younger than 18 to such a performance an aggravated misdemeanor, as well as knowingly selling a ticket or admitting a minor to a venue where such a performance is held.

Similar to legislation that was introduced but did not pass last year, the bill that advanced out of subcommittee Wednesday defines “obscene performance” as one that exposes genitals, invokes sexual acts or “appeals to the prurient interest and is patently offensive.”

“I brought this bill forward because I had constituents complain to me about performances that, if not meeting the definition of obscenity in our law, at least approach that definition, and concerned about this in our communities and the exposure of minors to it,” said Sen. Sandy Salmon, R-Janesville, who was part of a group of GOP lawmakers who introduced the legislation.

Critics argue the bill would encourage frivolous lawsuits

Keenan Crow, policy and advocacy director for One Iowa, a statewide LGBTQ advocacy organization, raised concerns with a provision establishing a private civil cause of action allowing parents of minor children to sue to determine whether something is obscene.

The bill states “a cause of action may be brought against any person that has knowingly disseminated or exhibited obscene material to the minor or who engaged in or caused or allowed a person to knowingly engage in an obscene performance in the presence of the minor.” It sets the minimum award of damages at $10,000.

While drag shows are not explicitly labeled in the bill as obscene performances, those opposed to the legislation fear it would target drag performances.

“What we are doing is we are allowing parents to target these venues for SLAPP suits, Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation, which are not designed to actually win the suit,” Crow said. “They are designed to make venues spend money and to reconsider hosting drag events entirely, lest they be sued on the off chance that it meets the obscenity definition, which obviously Drag Story Time does not.”

Drag Story Time events are sometimes held at libraries or other venues where drag performers read stories to children. In recent years, the events have increasingly been at the center of a larger GOP-led effort to restrict public drag events as conservative critics suggest they “sexualize” children.

Sen. Janice Weiner, D-Iowa City, said she worried the provision would incentivize frivolous lawsuits.

“This bill, as written, could encourage potential frivolous or bad actors to shake down local governments and private businesses, and that’s the taxpayer on the hook,” said Weiner, who opposed the bill.

Elizabeth Hall, a local trans woman, said bills targeting the LGBTQ population create “an aura of fear” among trans people that has pushed those she knows into psychiatric care.

“We fear for our communities,” Hall said. “We fear for our lives, and even if the particulars of how this bill would come into effect aren’t necessarily like that extreme, that fear still has a tangible effect on our lives and has caused so many people that I know to reach ends that I fear have continued to lead to detrimental effects.”

Supporters say the bill ensures performances shown to minors are ‘age appropriate’

Ryan Benn, a lobbyist for the conservative religious group The Family Leader, said the group supported the law because obscene materials that may be illegal to show children in movies or other material are not illegal to perform.

“I think it fixes that loophole,” Benn said.

Sen. Jeff Taylor, R-Sioux Center, said he would like to see a more clear definition of a “performance,” but overall obscenity is rarely prosecuted.

“In general, obscenity does not have constitutional protection in terms of freedom of speech,” Taylor said. “Something that’s obscene is, by definition, not protected by the First Amendment, and that’s regardless whether you’re sharing that with adults or with children. But to me, especially in the case of children, I feel like this is appropriate.”

Sen. Cherielynn Westrich, R-Ottumwa, said she supported the bill to protect children from obscenities.

“I think that what the one thing that we all in this room have agreed on is that we need to protect children from those sort of obscene or performances that are sexual in nature,” Westrich said.

Bill would repeal exemptions for public institutions

Melissa Peterson, with the Iowa State Education Association, said the group opposed the bill, especially a proposal to repeal an Iowa code section that allows minors to access appropriate material for educational purposes, at art exhibitions or in public libraries.

She said Senate File 496, the 2023 state law that requires school staff to remove books depicting sex acts, already sought to establish what content was age appropriate by existing obscenity standards.

“We worked closely together in a compromised fashion to come with what we thought would be considered age appropriate, and we would really like to see that exemption maintained for public institutions that are public spaces,” Peterson said.

Weiner also opposed repealing the exemption for public institutions.

“To repeal it is in some ways to admit that this bill really isn’t about obscenity,” Weiner said.

Even in States Where You’re Supposed to ‘Say Gay,’ Fear Often Outweighs the Law

Even in States Where You’re Supposed to ‘Say Gay,’ Fear Often Outweighs the Law

‘Inclusive curriculum’ laws are supposed to create welcoming school climates for LGBTQ and other marginalized students. Making it work is really hard

By

This story first appeared at The 74, a nonprofit news site covering education. Sign up for free newsletters from The 74 to get more like this in your inbox.

Lost amid headlines about hundreds of bills seeking to curtail protections for LGBTQ students over the last five years is a surprising fact: More LGBTQ teens live in states that require schools to teach LGBTQ people’s historical and cultural contributions to society than in places that ban their mention in classrooms. 

More than 1 in 4 queer 13- to 17-year-olds attend school in the seven states that now mandate this inclusive instruction, versus 20% who live in the 20 states that have passed what advocates call Don’t Say Gay laws. 

Research shows schools are safest for LGBTQ children and educators, and that students learn best, when they see themselves in classroom materials. They are far less likely to hear homophobic and transphobic slurs, to feel unsafe because of their identity or gender expression, to miss school or to be victimized. They attend school more consistently, get better grades and are more likely to say they have multiple teachers who are supportive. 

The presence of clubs known as gay-straight alliances improves school climates for all students — especially those from marginalized backgrounds. And straight, cisgender educators report feeling more confident in their ability to meet students’ needs when they themselves learn about LGBTQ people and topics. 

But the question of whether laws requiring accurate and positive portrayals of LGBTQ people, history and events make schools more welcoming is a complicated one. The first state to adopt a mandate, California, has seen only incremental change after 15 years. Other states that more recently began requiring inclusive instruction — most notably Illinois and Oregon — took note, wrote stronger laws and have seen more rapid progress. 

Policymakers and advocates are amassing research pinpointing practical reasons why the mandates succeed or fail. Perhaps a law didn’t include funding for new resources, set deadlines or require state officials to follow up to make sure schools complied. Maybe it gave few specifics about which changes to textbooks would fulfill the requirements and even less guidance to help  educators and the public understand why they are important for LGBTQ students’ well-being and academic success. Or it could be that districts found it easier to comply with policies that identified or created free, optional materials, called for training teachers and principals on their use and on incorporating students’ feedback, and issued step-by-step guidance on implementation.      

Whatever the factors involved, the fact is that during the last two decades, the number of LGBTQ students who say they are exposed to inclusive instruction has dropped nationwide, from 20% to 16%. Nearly 15% say they are taught negative depictions. And though it’s early in the implementation process in some places, the number of students who say their classes included positive lessons in the seven states that mandate them ranges from 15% to 32%, with an average of 22.5%. 

Even in communities where educators are eager to make the called-for changes, school board meetings have become contentious, as organized groups charge that allowing discussion of LGBTQ topics leads to the “grooming” of students to become gay or trans. 

The resulting fear and confusion are frequently more powerful than the letter of the law. And administrators and even district attorneys often lack clarity on what the law is, including in places with strong protections for LGBTQ kids and educators.

It’s a tough political reality that is about to get even harsher

President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened to withhold funding from “any school pushing critical race theory, transgender insanity and other inappropriate racial, sexual or political content on our children.”

Well-tested legal limits on federal involvement in what schools teach may make it difficult for Trump to starve schools that teach “woke” concepts. But the constant drumbeat of threatening headlines demonstrates that in practice, he may well get his way.

A culture of fear and intimidation

“There is a lot of talk happening now about clamping down on inclusive learning coming from the incoming administration,” says Brian Dittmeier, policy director of GLSEN, which has been monitoring school climate for LGBTQ students for 25 years. “I just want to make clear that there’s a long bipartisan record, and requirements from Congress, that the U.S. Department of Education not dictate curriculum to the states.”

But classroom materials are just one element of what makes a school welcoming, he adds. School leaders need to take a number of steps to build trust with marginalized students — which can be hard to do in the face of ideological assaults. 

“You can adopt policies, you can put books on the library shelves,” says Dittmeier, “but if there is a culture of fear and intimidation, and there’s not the follow-through of inclusion, it’s going to impact the success of those interventions when it comes to reducing adverse mental health outcomes and diminished academic performance.” 

U.S. education policy has long put local leaders in charge of many decisions, so long as school systems meet thresholds set by state and federal officials. So while states create curricular standards — guidelines spelling out what students are expected to learn in each grade and subject — for the most part, district leaders can decide how to include those required topics in classroom lessons.  

Because of this, there are countless places where things can fall apart between a governor signing a bill into law and a teacher feeling safe enough to mention, for example, that astronaut Sally Ride was a lesbian or that Pride Month recognizes the revolt at the Stonewall Inn.  

It’s long been understood that all children learn best when they see themselves in classroom materials. One popular theory describes curricula featuring people of different races, abilities and backgrounds as providing “windows and mirrors” — a mirror so a child feels connected to the material and a window for learning about other cultures. 

In the case of LGBTQ students, inclusive curriculum — instruction that includes the societal contributions of queer people — also makes schools safer. According to GLSEN, which advocates for policies making schools more welcoming, 4 in 5 queer youth ages 13 to 17 feel unsafe in school, making a third uncomfortable enough to miss at least one day a month. 

Last year, GLSEN analyzed 20 years of data comparing the experiences of LGBTQ students in schools that use inclusive curriculum and those that don’t. Researchers found dramatic differences in student mental health and academic engagement, as well as overall school climate. The positive impacts are also felt by LGBTQ students of color and gender-nonconforming students, who typically report the highest levels of victimization.   

Compared with students in schools that don’t use inclusive curriculum, they are far less likely to routinely hear homophobic and transphobic remarks. Less than half (49%) hear the word “gay” used in a negative way, compared with almost three-fourths (72%) in schools that don’t use inclusive curriculum. One in 4 (27%) hear slurs such as “fag” or “dyke,” compared with almost half (48%). 

LGBTQ students in schools that use inclusive curriculum are almost twice as likely (67% vs. 35%) to say their classmates are accepting. They are dramatically less likely to feel unsafe, half as likely to be victimized in person and less likely to miss school. Consistent attendance is particularly important in light of past GLSEN surveys that put the LGBTQ dropout rate at 35% — three times the national average.  

California’s glacial pace

Armed with early versions of this research and with stories of being bullied, in 2006 some 500 students, accompanied by friends and families, descended on the California statehouse to demand passage of a law that would require schools to use “bias-free” curriculum. Then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger ultimately vetoed the initial bill. 

In 2011, the state Assembly passed the law, the first in the country requiring schools to include the contributions of LGBTQ people in their instruction. As he signed the FAIR Education Act, which also called on educators to teach about people with disabilities, then-Gov. Jerry Brown said he expected it to take four years for textbooks and other materials reflecting the mandated changes to reach classrooms. 

In fact, that estimate was wildly optimistic. Notably, the law did not include a deadline for compliance, a mechanism for monitoring implementation or consequences if schools did not shift instruction. Fifteen years after its passage, it remains unimplemented in most of the state’s nearly 1,000 school systems.

A recent survey by the advocacy group Equality California found that fewer than a third of districts had adopted all the required changes, though 60% had taken at least one step toward compliance. In 2021, just 27% of California LGBTQ students aged 13 to 17 told GLSEN they had been exposed to positive representations of LGBTQ people in class, an increase of only 5 points since the law’s passage.

To be fair, implementation of curricular standards is never quick. Once a law calling for change is passed, state officials typically appoint a group of educators and subject-matter experts to decide which facts or skills should be taught in each grade. The potential revision is then shared with the public for feedback. 

In the case of the FAIR Act, California’s updated history and social studies standards were published in 2017, six years after the law’s passage. In deference to local control, districts were left to decide what materials to use.    

But determining whether a textbook meets standards is painstaking work that exceeds the capacity of many districts. And materials featuring diverse people are scarce.    

For example, a 2018 review by University of Wisconsin researchers of the 3,000 children’s books published the previous year found that half of characters were white, 27% were animals, 10% Black, 7% Asian or Pacific Islander, 5% Latino and 1% Native American. 

Last year, The Education Trust reviewed 300 K-8 books that are part of five curricula that received favorable ratings from EdReports, an organization that evaluates classroom materials for quality. Less than 40% of the texts reviewed featured people of color. In most of those that did, reviewers found “limited representation, such as through stereotypes or as background to the stories of others.” 

When the FAIR Act was passed in 2011, suitable resources were even harder to find. The books Education Trust reviewed included two gay men and six individuals with disabilities, for example. The law required state officials to screen and approve textbooks that districts could voluntarily adopt.

State academic standards vary widely and are often met with political opposition, making the process of approving materials contentious. Publishers are under pressure to customize materials to meet each state’s parameters. Because of their size and tendency to adopt standards at opposite ends of the ideological spectrum, California, with 6.7 million K-12 students, and Texas, with 5.8 million, have outsized influence on what publishers produce. 

A January 2020 New York Times piece contrasted textbooks printed for both markets, finding discordant recountings of the history of capitalism, Reconstruction, immigration, white flight and what one Texas volume called the “Americanization” of Native Americans. A month later, a CBS investigation found seven states did not directly mention slavery in their standards, and 16 listed states’ rights as the cause of the Civil War.      

In California, advocates and members of the state commission reviewing classroom resources scrapped over how to identify historical figures such as Emily Dickinson, James Buchanan and Ralph Waldo Emerson; how to characterize people who were not out when they were alive; and whether to include context regarding sexual orientation or gender identity in texts given to students, or only in teachers’ guides. 

At one point, for example, McGraw-Hill pushed back against the commission’s request to describe Ellen DeGeneres as “a lesbian and humanitarian,” suggesting the materials instead say DeGeneres “works hard to help people. She and her wife want all citizens to be treated fairly and equally,” according to the news site EdSource. 

Ultimately, the state rejected two sets of materials from one commercial publisher, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, and accepted 10. Examples of age-appropriate lessons the state advisory board approved include a section titled “Different Kinds of Families” in a second-grade book, an entry on the legal recognition of same-sex marriage for fourth-graders and a lesson for 11th-graders on homosexual life under Nazi rule.    

In 2018, appropriate curricula were ready for classroom use. A year later, the number of California LGBTQ students ages 13 to 17 surveyed by GLSEN who said they were exposed to positive representations of queer people had risen from 22% to 33%. 

But the next time GLSEN administered its school climate survey, in 2021, the culture wars were in full swing and the rate had fallen to 27%. Last fall, an Equality California survey found that fewer than one-third of schools had fully implemented the law’s requirements. 

Illinois, Oregon learn from California’s missteps

In 2019, New Jersey, Colorado, Illinois and Oregon adopted inclusive curricular standards. Nevada would follow in 2021, and Washington state in 2024. Like California’s, the new laws require instruction about other rarely discussed groups as well, such as Native Americans and people with disabilities. During the same time period, three other states — Vermont, Connecticut and Delaware — passed legislation requiring state officials to create model curricula and updated standards.

The new policies vary in approach, with several states taking steps to avoid problems that dogged implementation in California. Colorado lawmakers, for example, set aside money to pay for textbooks. A number of districts, including Denver Public Schools, did not wait for the state review process and instead turned to Teaching Tolerance, the Human Rights Campaign and other outside groups for model lesson plans

In Illinois, officials appointed an advisory council composed of advocates, academic subject-matter experts and health officials to come up with curricula and resources for schools and professional development programs to use. Like California’s, the law leaves the question of whether to adopt the materials up to local officials, but it mandates checks on whether the instruction is being provided as part of a process of monitoring whether districts are following a number of state requirements. So far, no Illinois district has been found to be out of compliance, according to the state Board of Education. 

Mollie McQuillan is an assistant professor of educational leadership and policy analysis at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who studies the implementation of LGBTQ school policies. Illinois has a lot of work left to do, says McQuillan, who uses they/them pronouns. “But they’ve filled some of these holes that we see in other states.” 

The same committee of advocates and experts that screened classroom materials, the Illinois Inclusive Curriculum Advisory Council, also wrote the guidance for how school systems could meet the new standards. Essentially a how-to manual, the document explains why inclusion is important, how to determine whether a lesson is age-appropriate and how to gain teacher buy-in. For example, it suggests back-to-school night is a good time to let parents know about the new law and its goal of a safe and supportive school climate, and to encourage families to ask questions.      

If inclusive standards requirements are not accompanied by anti-bullying and anti-discrimination policies — and similarly specific instructions for implementation — confusion can arise. Faced with uncertainty, McQuillan says, local leaders often default to the status quo.                  

Few principal and superintendent licensure preparation programs include training on sexual orientation or gender, they say. Because of this, school leaders may not be aware of their students’ needs, much less have a sense of urgency about meeting them. 

Far from having considered how transgender and nonbinary students may experience school, administrators and district leaders often don’t realize how strong traditional gender norms can be. They may never have questioned how their schools’ physical spaces and activities are organized. 

A member of the advisory council that has guided the implementation of the Illinois law, Julio Flores trains educators, school administrators and families on LGBTQ topics. Demand, he says, has been strong — and often, the information sought is much more basic than how to frame a lesson.

In his workshops, the mere mention of new curricular standards often triggers a much broader conversation among teachers and school leaders who, depending on the demographics of their communities, might have questions ranging from what constitutes respectful speech to how to make their classrooms safe. One of the topics most frequently raised is the difference between sexual orientation and gender.  

“One common question is, ‘How do young people know that their gender identity does not align with the sex they were assigned at birth?’ ” he says. “ ‘How can I support young people, especially if their parents are not supportive?’ That’s a huge challenge for adults, wanting to support their young people but also recognizing parents also have their own process.”

Data on how quickly school climates shift after an inclusive curriculum mandate is adopted are scant. In the four states that passed requirements in 2019, implementation was sometimes held up as school leaders scrambled to figure out how to respond to COVID-19, and the most recent school climate research from GLSEN — the most detailed data available — was published in 2021. (A new dataset is expected later this year.) 

But there are early suggestions that enacting several LGBTQ student protection policies at the same time — and being explicit about how they are to be enacted — can be effective. The second state to pass a curriculum law was New Jersey, which requires the teaching of accurate representations of queer and disabled people but leaves it to individual school boards to decide what inclusive means. Compared with 2011, the state saw a 3 percentage point drop in the number of students who said they were exposed to positive representations. 

By contrast, Oregon, where standards will not be mandatory until the 2026-27 school year, saw a 9-point gain. In its recent analysis, GLSEN noted that the degree of specificity and the  comprehensive nature of the state’s directions to school systems are likely key reasons why. In addition to the kinds of advice included in Illinois’ guidance, Oregon’s encompasses other steps educators should take to make schools more welcoming. For example, after explaining that fostering trust between students and administrators is crucial, the state’s guidance directs school leaders to create a process for youth and staff to report incidences of bias and to spell out what steps will be taken.  

Based on the data the organization has gathered over the last 25 years, GLSEN researchers say that to make the most difference in student welfare, inclusive curriculum should be accompanied by teacher training — both in colleges of education and in on-the-job professional development — by the adoption of non-discrimination and anti-bullying laws and by the creation of forums where LGBTQ youth can express their needs. 

According to GLSEN’s Dittmeier, six states now require that teachers be trained on LGBTQ inclusion, and seven have developed materials for educator professional development.

“All of these supports are really key to ensuring that LGBTQ youth feel included in their school environment and can obtain the success of their peers,” says Dittmeier. “When these interventions are available in the school, it really results in a dramatically different school experience for LGBTQ youth.”

But other research has documented an increase in ambivalence about inclusive instruction among teachers. A 2022 survey administered by Educators for Excellence found that 1 in 3 do not support including LGBTQ topics in instruction, while 11% believe their school does not enroll any queer children at all. 

Support for inclusive instruction was weakest among older educators and white ones, with 82% of teachers under age 50 expressing support and 97% of Black, Latino and Indigenous educators saying they are in favor. Educators also told the researchers they fear the wave of state legislation curtailing classroom speech and are unsure what they can say. 

Over the last two years, Oregon has trained 1,000 educators and staff at universities and nonprofits that work with schools to implement the new standards. The state has awarded grants to organizations to provide professional development, instructional materials, affirming drop-in spaces for homework help and youth summits, and it requires districts to have formal community engagement processes.

Uniquely, Oregon also recognized that discussions of LGBTQ school inclusion typically focus on bullying, suicidality and other negative experiences. So officials asked students where they feel most accepted and has helped community groups create opportunities — many of them tailored to young people of a particular race or ethnicity — for queer youth to have fun and spend time with affirming adults.   

School board pushback — and a lawsuit

In May 2023, a newly elected conservative school board majority in California’s Temecula Valley Unified School District overruled a group of teachers who had selected new, state-adopted social studies textbooks for grades 1-5. The reviewers had solicited feedback from parents, which was overwhelmingly positive or neutral.  

The three new board members — who earlier banned instruction on critical race theory, which is not taught in K-12 schools — said they opposed the curriculum because they did not want students to learn about Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man elected to public office in California. 

A tug of war with state officials ensued. The state Department of Education and California Attorney General Rob Bonta launched investigations, and Gov. Gavin Newsom threatened consequences. But the FAIR Act did not set deadlines for schools to shift their instruction, require state officials to monitor implementation or spell out what would happen in districts that ignored the mandate.

In July, the Temecula Valley board doubled down, again voting to reject the curriculum. Within a day, the governor said he planned to order the books and send the district the $1.6 million bill. Newsom also said that if the Assembly passed a bill that would create consequences for flaunting the FAIR Act and other laws requiring inclusive instruction, he would fine the district $1.5 million.      

The second law would, in fact, pass, but not until two months after the Temecula Valley board backed down and agreed to adopt most of the curriculum. A few days later, the district’s teachers union, a group of educators and parents sued the board, charging that its votes rejecting instruction required by state standards and a variety of other edicts involving race, sexuality and gender violated students’ constitutional rights. The case is wending its way through courts.         

‘Anti-LGBTQ animus is still socially acceptable’ 

Even if federal law continues to curtail Trump’s ability to force the elimination of inclusive curriculum, the culture wars may ultimately stymie implementation in many places. 

A survey released last spring by University of Southern California researchers Anna Saavedra and Morgan Polikoff found deep partisan divides in which topics Americans feel are appropriate for classroom discussions, with the biggest gulf on LGBTQ subjects. 

Unlike many polls, the survey asked about hypothetical scenarios in which students’ ages and the content of possible lessons varied from exposing elementary-aged children to stories with a variety of kinds of families to topics that include sex.   

Depending on the scenario, 4 in 5 Democrats said they support inclusive instruction in high school and half or fewer in lower grades. Republicans, by contrast, were comfortable with LGBTQ topics less than 40% of the time at the high school level and less than 10% in elementary school.     

Blue state government notwithstanding, Polikoff wrote in a commentary for CalMatters, California has the same partisan divides on inclusive curriculum as other places. The political right, he noted, had “fixed its gaze” on LGBTQ issues in schools.   

“The reason for this shift is obvious: Anti-LGBTQ animus is still socially acceptable,” Polikoff wrote. “The reality is that LGBTQ issues in schools are a thorny problem, and Californians are intensely divided on what to do about them.”
The range of responses, he told The 74, does suggest a path forward, albeit a long one: “We really do need to have a discussion about what’s age-appropriate, what parents want and kids need. And that’s probably not going to be one conversation. That’s probably going to be 50 conversations, one in each state. Or maybe 13,000 conversations, one in each district.”

US health agencies scrub HIV, other data to remove ‘gender ideology’

*This first appeared on Reuters

Jan 31 (Reuters) – The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other federal health agencies on Friday took down webpages with information on HIV statistics and other data to comply with Trump administration orders on gender identity and diversity, raising concerns among physicians and patient advocates.

CDC webpages that appear to have been removed include statistics on HIV,among transgender people and data on health disparities, among gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender youth. A database tracking behaviors,that increase health risks for youth was offline.

Earlier this month, President Donald Trump ordered the federal government to solely recognize male and female sex and eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion programs.

The Office of Personnel Management gave agencies more specific guidance on how to comply with the orders in a Jan. 29 memo,saying they were to be completed by 5 p.m. ET (2200 GMT) on Jan. 31.

It specified that agencies must end all programs that promote or reflect “gender ideology extremism” by recognizing a self-determined gender identity rather than biological sex. The measures include removing references to gender identity online.

A spokesperson for the Health and Human Services Department, which oversees the CDC, said any changes to websites follow this guidance.

“There’s a lot of work going on at the agency to comply,” said a source who was not authorized to speak publicly, adding that the CDC is “taking down anything on the website that doesn’t support this executive order.”

Deletions from the CDC’s site include pages with data on HIV in the United States in general, as well as pages with statistics on HIV in Hispanic/Latino people, women, by age, and by race and ethnicity.

The elimination of such data “creates a dangerous gap in scientific information and data to monitor and respond to disease outbreaks,” the Infectious Diseases Society of America and the HIV Medicine Association said in a joint statement.

For example, a page with information about how people can get HIV tests was offline on Friday, according to the Internet Archive, as was a page for doctors with information about testing for HIV and treating patients.

“This is very alarming,” said John Peller, head of the AIDS Foundation Chicago. “In many cases, basic health information is going dark.”

Timothy Jackson, senior director of policy and advocacy at the group, said they are going through the CDC website and printing out information used to educate people about HIV that may not be accessible after Friday.

Also missing from the CDC’s website was the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System, which tracks trends in tobacco use, teen pregnancy, unsafe sexual behavior and other aspects of teen health.

At the National Institutes of Health, a senior employee this week urged agency leaders to refuse to implement the Trump administration’s guidance in an email to acting NIH Director Matthew Memoli and other top officials that was seen by Reuters.

The employee, Nate Brought, director of the NIH executive office, said Trump’s orders ran contrary to years of NIH research and findings about sexuality and gender.

“By complying with these orders, we will be denigrating the contributions made to the NIH mission by trans and intersex members of our staff, and the contributions of trans and intersex citizens to our society,” he wrote.

“These policies will lead to mental health crises or worse for tens of thousands of Americans who contribute productively to our communities.”

Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago and Ted Hesson in Washington; Additional reporting by Jaimi Dowdell in Los Angeles and Brad Heath in Washington; Editing by Leslie Adler and Bill Berkrot.

Trump Bans Gender-Affirming Care for Minors 

*This was first published by The Hill

President Trump on Tuesday signed a sweeping executive order meant to broadly restrict access to gender-affirming care for transgender children and teenagers younger than 19, inching closer to fulfilling a key campaign promise to ban treatments that he and his administration have cast as experimental and dangerous, in conflict with major medical associations and transgender health experts. 

“Across the country today, medical professionals are maiming and sterilizing a growing number of impressionable children under the radical and false claim that adults can change a child’s sex through a series of irreversible medical interventions,” Tuesday’s order states. “This dangerous trend will be a stain on our Nation’s history, and it must end.” 

“Accordingly, it is the policy of the United States that it will not fund, sponsor, promote, assist, or support the so-called ‘transition’ of a child from one sex to another, and it will rigorously enforce all laws that prohibit or limit these destructive and life-altering procedures,” the order states. 

Every major medical organization supports gender-affirming care for transgender adults and minors, although not every trans person chooses to medically transition or has access to care. 

Trump’s executive order, titled “Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation,” tasks federal agencies with rescinding or amending policies that rely on guidance from the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH), including the organization’s latest standards of care, released in 2022. 

WPATH, a nonprofit professional organization devoted to transgender health care, did not immediately return a request for comment. 

Trump’s order tasks the incoming Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) with publishing a review of existing literature on best practices “for promoting the health of children who assert gender dysphoria, rapid-onset gender dysphoria, or other identity-based confusion.”  

Rapid-onset gender dysphoria, which claims that adolescents identify as transgender because of influence from friends or social media, is not recognized as a valid medical diagnosis by major professional medical organizations. In 2021, 61 professional health care organizations, including the American Psychological Association, signed a letter stating the condition lacks “rigorous empirical support for its existence.” 

According to Tuesday’s order, heads of executive departments and agencies that provide research and education grants to medical institutions, including medical schools and hospitals, should take immediate steps to block funding for institutions that continue providing gender-affirming care to minors. 

Meredithe McNamara, an assistant professor of pediatrics at Yale University specializing in adolescent medicine, said the provision amounts to “an immediate de facto ban on medical care” for trans youth who receive care at academic medical centers. 

“It basically defunds those medical centers if they continue to provide that care,” McNamara said of the order. 

“This is a stunning example of how all health care is tied together, and how the most effective way to attack gender-affirming care is to attack the entire health care apparatus as a whole,” she added in an interview. “They’re holding everyone hostage and saying, ‘We’re going to take away everyone’s healthcare unless you systematically deprive just these people.’” 

Trump’s executive order additionally directs the HHS Secretary — a position he wants for Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. — to bar access to gender-affirming care for transgender minors through federal programs like Medicaid and Medicare and withdraw the department’s 2022 guidance supporting gender-affirming care. The secretary should issue new guidance, in consultation with the incoming attorney general, “protecting whistleblowers who take action related to ensuring compliance with this order,” according to Tuesday’s order. 

The executive order also directs Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to draft a rule to exclude coverage for gender-affirming care for minors from TRICARE, the military’s health program. Former President Biden in December signed a $895 billion defense policy bill barring TRICARE from covering transition-related care for transgender children of active-duty service members, a provision that military families with transgender kids called a “slap in the face.” 

Tuesday’s order similarly tasks the director of the Office of Personnel Management with taking steps to remove coverage for gender-affirming care for trans youth from federal health plans. 

It also asks the attorney general to prioritize enforcement of existing federal laws against female genital mutilation, which carry a penalty of up to 10 years in prison. The attorney general should also “prioritize investigations and take appropriate action to end deception of consumers, fraud, and violations of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act” by entities that may be “misleading the public” about the long-term side effects of transition-related care. 

Republican state attorneys general have, in recent years, used consumer protection laws to investigate individuals and organizations that provide gender-affirming care to minors. A Senate Finance Committee report released in April claimed that at least four GOP attorneys general — Ken Paxton of Texas, Todd Rokita of Indiana, Jonathan Skrmetti of Tennessee and Andrew Bailey of Missouri — abused their oversight authorities to “further ideological and political goals.” 

Trump’s executive order additionally directs the attorney general to work with Congress to “draft, propose, and promote legislation” to enact a private right of action for children, as well as their parents, “whose healthy body parts have been damaged” by medical professionals practicing transgender health care. 

The attorney general should also take “appropriate action,” the order states, “to end child-abusive practices by so-called sanctuary States,” including through the potential application of the Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act, a federal law preventing one parent from interfering with another parent’s custody rights. 

Conservative organizations celebrated Trump’s executive order Tuesday evening. In a joint statement, Independent Women’s Forum and Independent Women’s Voice said the move restores the “true meaning of ‘care’ for America’s youngest generation.” 

Kristina Rasmussen, executive director of Do No Harm, a health policy group that opposes gender-affirming care for minors, said Trump’s order prioritizes “safety, scientific integrity, and family autonomy.” 

Omar Gonzalez-Pagan, senior counsel and health care strategist at the LGBTQ civil rights organization Lambda Legal, called the order “morally reprehensible and patently unlawful” and said the group would sue. 

“The federal government — particularly, this administration — has no right to insert itself into conversations and decision-making that rightly belongs only to parents, their adolescent children, and their medical providers,” he said. 

The executive order comes after Trump signed separate orders declaring that the federal government recognizes only two sexes, male and female, and barring transgender people from serving openly in the military. 

New Jersey LGBTQ Advocates from Garden State Equality Say They’ll Continue to Pushback with Facts

*This was first published by GLAAD.

LGBTQ activists in New Jersey say they’re fortunate to live in New Jersey as the new administration kicks-off its term by attacking the transgender community and diversity initiatives. Advocates at Garden State Equality say New Jersey sets a standard for legal equality that can inspire states throughout the country.

As part of its education and advocacy “Going Local” programming across the country, the GLAAD Media Institute (GMI) – GLAAD’s training, research and consulting division – convened meetings with local leaders and community advocates at Garden State Equality and throughout the nation. Attendees who complete a program or session with the GLAAD Media Institute are immediately deemed GLAAD Media Institute Alumni, who are equipped to maximize community impact by leveraging their own story for culture change.

The state is known for its tough pro-equality laws like New Jersey Law Against Discrimination (LAD), which is considered one of the most comprehensive anti-discrimination laws in the country. Yet, new laws in the state legislature help combat a rise of LGBTQ disinformation and hate speech, straight out of Project 2025. The anti-LGBTQ hate machine has affected dozens of Jersey school board’s policies on book bans, critical race theory, and sex education.

Since Garden State Equality’s founding in 2004, over “230 LGBTQ civil rights laws” have been enacted at the state, county, and local levels. According to the organization’s website, that’s “more laws in less time than in any other state in American history.”  

On a federal level, President Trump began his second term signing executive orders to dispute the fact that transgender and gender diverse people exist. On Trump’s first days in office he signed an executive order titled Defending Women From Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government. The order is used to delegitimize trans truth, history, and science, which promptly raised concerns over a federal ban of the “x” gender marker for people of nonbinary, trans or gender nonconforming experience in the United States. 

“As of today, it will henceforth be the official policy of the United States government that there are only two genders, male and female,” President Trump incorrectly said upon signing the order.

Garden State Equality says they’re ready to resist these efforts by the current administration, and continue to encourage diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs, while uplifting best practices for LGBTQ youth and adult community members as they have within their state government, says advocates. 

“We want our youth to understand that they don’t just live in a bubble here in New Jersey, that the work that they are doing to be activists here in our state is going to influence other states and other students across the nation,” Natalie Hernandez  told GLAAD. 

Natalie Hernandez, Project Manager & Trainer
Natalie Hernandez, camp director and project manager & trainer; Screenshot by Lana Leonard

Hernandez is the Camp Director of Garden State Equality’s Changemakers Youth Leadership summer program. Empowering youth leaders helps inform the work of other departments and so forth, it’s a collaborative effort to fight for legal equality for the state organization. 

Hime Sarah Thomas, project manager and trainer with the Education and Youth Development Department, grew up in a queer family who introduced Thomas to Garden State Equality through the Changemakers Youth Leadership summer program. Thomas works to encourage youth to become “changemakers” by giving them an outlet to express their frustrations, and amplify their voices.

Only a small number of youth actually transition: less than one-tenth of one percent of teenagers with private insurance in the United States are transgender and receive gender-related medicine, according to a study by JAMA Pediatrics

“These youth need a space where they can talk about all the things that are happening in the news and the world because they don’t have the autonomy to be able to vote and make those choices on who is representing them,” Thomas said.  

For Aisling MacDonald, a project manager for the organization’s Training and Trans Resiliency Program, which advocates for the wellness of transgender and gender nonconforming adults and families moving into New Jersey for their LGBTQ protections.

“Our world is ever evolving. There are some very legitimate anxieties, and also… we are really, really fortunate to live here,” MacDonald said. 

MacDonald spends much of her day building coalition relationships and legal resources for name changes and documents for trans people who have been under attack on social media, through legislation, and the news. 

Hime Sarah Thomas, project manager & trainer; Screenshot by GLAAD
Hime Sarah Thomas, project manager & trainer; Screenshot by Lana Leonard

“My experience as a woman of trans experience who is from some very particular demographics, and a very particular flavor of multiple marginalizations, is that we do not have a lot of trust for systems, institutions and legislators, especially,” MacDonald said. “And I think more than anything else in 2025 we have an opportunity to build a different kind of community.”

These insights into the LGBTQ community of Asbury Park lead into a larger narrative about community needs in New Jersey and beyond. Even still, Garden State Equality recognizes that there are hurdles that must still be overcome. 

More about the GLAAD Media Institute: The GLAAD Media Institute provides training, consultation, and actionable research to develop an army of social justice ambassadors for all marginalized communities to champion acceptance and amplify media impact. Using the best practices, tools, and techniques we’ve perfected over the past 30 years, the GLAAD Media Institute turns education into armor for today’s culture war—transforming individuals into compelling storytellers, media-savvy navigators, and mighty ambassadors whose voices break through the noise and incite real change. Activate with the GLAAD Media Institute now at glaad.org/institute

Study: LGBTQ youth, family relocate amid increasing anxiety over laws directed at them

*This was published on USA Today

More than a quarter million LGBTQ+ young people and family members in the U.S. have relocated to other states because of LGBTQ+-related politics or laws, according to estimates outlined in a new report exploring the population’s response to hostile policy environments.

According to the brief compiled by The Trevor Project and Movement Advancement Project, 9 in 10 LGBTQ+ young people say politics have impacted their well-being, while 4 in 10 say they’ve thought about moving to another state because of unfriendly LGBTQ+ politics or laws at home.

The portion was even higher for transgender and nonbinary youth, 94% of whom said politics had affected their well-being and nearly half (45%) who said they’d considered relocating.

“For many LGBTQ+ young people in the U.S., the steady stream of anti-LGBTQ+ news may feel overwhelming right now,” said Steven Hobaica, a research scientist for the Trevor Project, a national LGBTQ+ youth advocacy group focused on suicide prevention. “It’s heartbreaking to see that nearly half of transgender and nonbinary youth have considered moving due to anti-LGBTQ+ policies.”

While just 4% of LGBTQ+ young people ages 13 to 24 reported uprooting because of anti-LGBTQ+ policies, that translates to roughly 266,000 young people and family members based on LGBTQ+ youth population estimates, the groups said.

Trump administration presents new threats

The report comes as President Donald Trump returns to the White House after making gender identity issues a focal point of his campaign. On Monday, after being sworn in, Trump issued a spate of executive orders that included seeking to remove legal protections for transgender people in federal spaces, laying the groundwork to potentially bar transgender individuals from military service and declaring that the U.S. government will only recognize two sexes, male and female.

“No matter a person’s political beliefs, we know, from our research and from what LGBTQ+ young people tell us, that policies like these take a damaging toll on LGBTQ+ young people’s mental health,” said Janson Wu, The Trevor Project’s senior director of state advocacy and government affairs. 

The organization said its crisis services saw a 33% increase on Inauguration Day compared to typical volume. But that still paled, it noted, to the sevenfold increase in crisis services experienced the day after the 2024 election.

“No matter your political beliefs or how you feel about the current administration, one thing must be made clear to all of us living in the United States: Real young people’s lives are at risk,” said Trevor Project CEO Jaymes Black.

Recent years have already seen increasing numbers of state laws and proposed legislation targeting the LGBTQ+ community, especially measures aimed at curbing the rights of transgender youth.

“It’s critical that we not only call attention to the negative impact of these divisive political attacks but also highlight that this research supports the idea that more inclusive policy environments lead to better outcomes for LGBTQ young people across a range of measures,” said Logan Casey, director of policy research for Movement Advancement Project.

Hostile climates raise mental, emotional health risk

The organizations said they compiled the report given a lack of research into how LGBTQ+ young people respond to hostile policy environments, despite studies showing that those youths experience greater mental health challenges and higher suicide risk in such environments.

“By gaining more knowledge of how LGBTQ+ young people respond to their policy environment, advocates and policymakers can create or modify policy to better support LGBTQ+ young people and their families,” the report said.

Their joint report is based on data gleaned from The Trevor Project’s 2024 U.S. National Survey on the Mental Health of LGBTQ+ Young People, which collected responses from more than 18,600 LGBTQ+ individuals between the ages of 13 and 24. It also incorporates data from Movement Advancement Project, a Boulder, Colorado-based group that tracks LGBTQ+-related laws and policies throughout the U.S. and its territories and assigns each a negative or positive policy index.

More than a quarter (27%) of respondents lived in states with negative policy indexes, the report said. Those individuals were more likely than their counterparts to consider moving to other states and also likelier to travel to other states to receive health care.

The report noted that not all LGBTQ+ young people and their families desiring to relocate have the resources to do so.

“Notably, the same factors that might preclude the ability of LGBTQ+ young people and their families from moving, such as poverty, housing discrimination, and employment access, are the same ones that disproportionately affect LGBTQ+ people of color and increase their risk of mental health and suicide,” the report said.

Bob Daemmrich, USA TODAY NETWORK

Same-sex marriages will soon become legal in Thailand after historic law

*This first appeared on AP News

BANGKOK (AP) — They have been in a committed relationship for more than 13 years, and even had a wedding in 2019. Since then, Danaya Phonphayung and Sunma Piamboon, both women, have considered themselves a married couple, even if same-sex marriages were not legally recognized.

The walls of their home in suburban Bangkok are decorated with faded photos from their happy union, filled with joy and love from their families and friends. Come this Thursday, their wedded status will be recognized by the nation as well, when a law that allows members of the LGBTQ+ community in Thailand to get married and have the same legal rights as heterosexual couples takes effect.

The couple said they can’t wait to formalize their union. They plan to register their marriage at a district office near their home on the very first day that the law allows.

“I think I’ll cry,” Danaya, an office worker, said with a big smile, thinking about the moment that they will sign the paper. “I’m so happy. It’s something that was more than I could’ve dreamed of, that suddenly this day is happening.”

“We live together. We bought a house. We bought a car. But we cannot share these things together like a married couple. When this is happening, we feel that it’s our rights that we need to secure as quickly as possible,” she said.

The marriage equality bill, which sailed through both the House of Representatives and the Senate, amended the Civil and Commercial Code to change the words “men and women” and “husband and wife” to “individuals” and “marriage partners.” It would open up access to full legal, financial and medical rights for LGBTQ+ couples.

Sunma, who owns a travel agency, said that she had realized how crucial being legally married was when Danaya was hospitalized with dengue fever, as they don’t live close to her parents.

“The doctors asked me who I was, and I said I was the girlfriend, and they were like, ‘so what’?’ I couldn’t make any decision until her condition became quite serious,” she said. “I was so upset, like, if I had lost her … there would be nothing that could’ve made up for it. So, I think this is very important for both of us.”

How marriage equality became law

Thailand has a reputation for acceptance and inclusivity, but struggled for decades to pass a marriage equality law. Thai society largely holds conservative values. Members of the LGBTQ+ community say they face discrimination in everyday life, although they note that things have improved greatly in recent years.

The government led by the Pheu Thai party made marriage equality one of its main goals. It made a major effort to identify itself with the annual Bangkok Pride parade in June, in which thousands of people celebrated in one of Bangkok’s busiest commercial districts.

Last week, Government House invited dozens of LGBTQ+ couples and activists for a photo op and a meeting with Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra and several high ranking officials to celebrate the law coming into effect, making Thailand the first in Southeast Asia and the third place in Asia, after Taiwan and Nepal, to legalize same-sex marriage.

“It is almost like a dream, but it’s not. So, congratulations to all,” Paetongtarn said. “I think it’s very important that the world notice us, and know that in this small country we have this kind of thought. We have this kind of support for our people. So, we all should be proud.”

The organizers of Bangkok Pride have collaborated with relevant government agencies to hold a grand celebration in central Bangkok and facilitate couples who wish to register their marriage on the very first day. They said that more than 300 couples have registered to officially tie the knot on Thursday at the event.

“(The law) is about returning our dignity, and confirming that we also have dignity as a human being,” said Ann “Waaddao” Chumaporn, a gender equality activist and the lead organizer of Bangkok Pride. “That day is going to be meaningful to all the couples that have gone through this journey together. I’d like to thank everyone, every love, that has faithfully struggled so that today would finally happen.”

How the law will be implemented

The government and state agencies in Thailand are historically traditional in outlook. To prepare them for change, the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration said that it has organized workshops for staff of all Bangkok district offices who are in charge of handling marriage registration. They included lectures raising awareness about gender diversity and guidance on how to properly communicate with those who come for the service.

“It’s like a missing piece of the jigsaw,” Bangkok Deputy Gov. Sanon Wangsrangboon said at one of the workshops earlier this month. “Society is ready. The law is getting ready. But the last piece of the jigsaw is the understanding from officials.”

He acknowledged there that would be problems in the beginning, but said that he hoped they would gradually improve over time.

After they register their marriage, Sunma said that she’s looking forward to having a “real marriage celebration” with her and Danaya’s families.

“It’s not just the two of us that are happy, but both of our families feel it is a big deal, and it is what everyone has been waiting for. Everyone said they are waiting for Jan. 23,” she said.

(AP Photo/Jirasak jivawavatanawanit)

Trump two-gender edict would upend “X” identity on passports

This article first appeared on CNN.com

The federal government is set to only recognize two sexes, male and female, under an executive order that President Donald Trump is soon expected to sign.

The order would reverse efforts by the Biden administration to broaden gender identity designations, including on passports.

“As of today, it will henceforth be the official policy of the United States government that there are only two genders, male and female,” Trump said during his inaugural address Monday, taking an early step to fulfill one of his culture war campaign promises.

The order, a Trump administration official told reporters Monday, is aimed at “defending women from gender ideology extremism and restoring biological truths to the federal government.” Male and female “are sexes that are not changeable, and they are grounded in fundamental and incontrovertible reality,” the official said.

The federal government would also shift from using the term “gender” to “sex,” and that sex would be “an individual’s immutable biological classification,” the official said.

All government agencies would ensure that official documents, including passports and visas, “reflect sex accurately,” the official said. Also, departments running federal prisons, migrant shelters, rape shelters and other “intimate spaces” would be directed to protect single-sex spaces for privacy. And employee records would also adhere to the executive order, as would federal departments’ messaging.

“Agencies are no longer going to promote gender ideology through communication forms and other messages,” the official said, adding that grants and contracts would be reviewed to ensure that “federal funds shall not be used to promote gender ideology.”

Reversing Biden expansion

Trump’s executive order would dismantle efforts by the Biden administration to be more inclusive of Americans’ gender identification.

As of 2022, US citizens have been able to select “X” as their gender marker on passports. One’s marker does not need to match the gender on citizenship documents or photo ID, nor is medical documentation needed to change one’s gender, according to the State Department.

“We promote the freedom, dignity, and equality of all people – including LGBTQI+ individuals,” the department’s website says. “We are demonstrating this commitment to better serve all U.S. citizens, regardless of gender identity.”

Later that year, Americans were able to start changing their sex identification with the Social Security Administration without needing to provide medical certification. However, Social Security’s record systems still require a designation of male or female, though the administration said it was exploring policy and systems updates to support an “X” designation.

“The Social Security Administration’s Equity Action Plan includes a commitment to decrease administrative burdens and ensure people who identify as gender diverse or transgender have options in the Social Security number card application process,” said Kilolo Kijakazi, the administration’s acting commissioner at the time.

Republican urges Supreme Court to reject and overturn same-sex marriage

This blog is originally appeared at LGBTQ Nation

Democrats labeled it “yet another example” of GOP extremists “stirring up divisive social issues to create problems where none exist.”

Republicans in Idaho’s House of Representatives are contemplating a formal statement urging the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse its landmark 2015 ruling that legalized same-sex marriage.

The resolution, proposed by Republican state Rep. Heather Scott, characterizes the court’s decision as an “illegitimate overreach.” Scott’s proposal calls for the restoration of the “natural definition of marriage,” despite the fact that various forms of marriage, including same-sex unions, have existed throughout history.

Rep. Heather Scott stated that the purpose of her resolution is to “affirm our state authority to regulate marriage” during a Tuesday hearing.

The 2015 Supreme Court ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges legalized same-sex marriage nationwide, following decades of LGBTQ+ activism. At the time of the ruling, many states still had bans on gay marriage, despite growing public support for such unions.

The decision, made by a 5-4 vote, preceded the appointments of three conservative justices during the presidency of Donald Trump—Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett. Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito have since called for a reconsideration of the Obergefell decision.

While Scott’s resolution holds no legal authority, it will be forwarded to the Supreme Court for consideration. The state committee advanced it on Tuesday, and a public hearing will be scheduled at a later date.

State House Minority Leader Ilana Rubel (D) and Senate Minority Leader Melissa Wintrow (D) dismissed Scott’s resolution as a “sad distraction,” criticizing it as another attempt by the far-right of the Republican Party to “gin up divisive social issues to create problems where none exist.” They emphasized that “big government has no business telling consenting adults who they should love.”

They added, “This resolution may be a helpful gimmick for winning in closed GOP primaries, but it should be offensive to all Idahoans who value their individual rights and freedoms and just want to live their lives without egregious government interference.”

In 2021, Rep. Scott compared Idaho’s mask mandate to Nazi Germany’s policies. Despite a federal judge ruling that Idaho’s ban on same-sex marriage violates the U.S. Constitution, the ban remains on the books. Recent polling shows that more Idahoans support same-sex marriage than oppose it.

Police arrest suspect accused of attempting to set fire to queer bar just days after its opening

This blog is originally appeared at LGBTQ Nation

“There are many people who clearly do not want us to be here.”

Police in Santa Cruz, California, have charged 45-year-old James Eason with vandalizing The Neighbor’s, a queer bar, just days after it opened. Eason faces charges of vandalism, arson, and committing a hate crime.

The incident occurred early last Tuesday morning when a suspect set fire to a button panel outside the bar’s front door, which is used to assist disabled patrons. The vandal also attempted to push burning napkins through the door’s cracks and carved a homophobic slur into the glass, according to bar owner Frankie Farr, who spoke with Lookout.

“I was like, ‘You’ve got to be kidding, we’re not even open a week,’” Farr said. “[We are] still a bit in shock that it happened so quickly… There are clearly many people who do not want us to exist.”

They contacted the police, and detectives were able to identify the suspect after reviewing surveillance footage from nearby businesses. At the time Eason was named a suspect in the vandalism, he was already in custody at the county jail for an unrelated offense.

The bar opened in early December with a ribbon-cutting ceremony attended by Santa Cruz Mayor Fred Keeley, City Councilmember Sonja Brunner, and more than 100 patrons eager to explore the new space.

Although the city is home to LGBTQ+-inclusive businesses, Farr felt there was a lack of dedicated spaces for queer individuals to meet, socialize, and build a sense of community. In addition to offering food and serving as a performance venue for regional DJs, queer performers, and drag artists, Farr hopes the bar can also support environmental and social movements and attract LGBTQ+ tourists to Santa Cruz.

“It’s pretty depressing to think of all these people driving over the hill or all the way to San Francisco just to find [queer] community when we have it right here,” Farr said.

Months before the opening, Farr shared, “I really want [the bar] to be a place for people who aren’t out or in unsafe situations where they can’t disclose their sexuality to family or others they live with—where they can give a sly little wave and say, ‘I’m just going to hang out at The Neighbor’s.’”

Despite the attack, the bar resumed normal business hours right away. Farr expressed gratitude that the incident wasn’t worse.

“We’re very fortunate that nobody was inside,” Farr said. “However, there are apartments above, and those residents don’t deserve this either. They could have been seriously injured.”

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑