Showing posts with label Louisville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Louisville. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Da Ville Hosts The First Kentuckiana Gay Black Pride

One of the projects I was brainstorming from time to time while I was in Da Ville was trying to drum up support for a Black Pride event in Louisville.

I was homesick for Houston Splash when I first moved there and found it ironic that Louisville and nearby Lexington had this large Black TGLB population, but no local Black Pride event of its own.   

There were Black Pride events that happened in cities surrounding Louisville such as Nashville, Indianapolis, Chicago, St Louis and Atlanta that peeps in Da Ville would drive to and happily deposit their money to enhance the economies of, but weren't thinking about the benefits of having one of those Black pride events in Louisville.

I also noted that when I first started bringing up the idea of having a Black Pride event there in 2003, some peeps in the community were enthusiastic about it, but when it came down to getting organized to do the work to make that idea a reality, those cheerleaders suddenly became MIA.

The Kentuckiana Gay Black Pride Association group finally got organized in 2009 and I'd heard about them.  But after being involved with two groups that went nowhere on the issue, I took a wait and see attitude about it.  I wanted to find out how serious they were before committing time and effort to it.

My move back to Houston prevented me from doing so.         

Since I'm not there to enjoy the results of the conversations I and others helped get started that made this day happen, thanks to Dawn I can help them get the word out about the new event.  

I'm pleased to announce that Louisville will finally host its first annual Black Pride event on the weekend of August 4-7.

The Kentuckiana Gay Black Pride  will have an opening 8 PM EDT mixer on August 4 at the River Bend Winery.

On August 5 there will be a meet and greet with reigning 2010-11 Miss Continental Mokha Montrese that runs from 6-8 PM followed by the first Mr. and Miss Kentuckiana Gay Black Pride Pageant from 9 PM-4 AM.

On August 6 the inaugural Kentuckiana Gay Black Pride Festival will be hosted at Cole's Place starting at 12 noon-8 PM, followed by an after party at the same location starting at 10 PM

The closing event on August 7 is hosted by the Leading Ladies Association and is an Inspirational Brunch running from 11-2PM at the Shively Community Building. 

Here's hoping that peeps in Louisville support your inaugural hometown Black Pride event and you get the same love from the surrounding cities in the area that y'all gave to their events over the years. 

Hope I'm able to discuss an even bigger and better one Kentuckiana Gay Black Pride in 2012.  

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Rigney Activism Grants Awarded ForTwo U of L Student Projects


Two student-led LGBT projects were the first recipients of Diane Rigney Student Activism grants, awarded by the Office for LGBT Services this week.

Emory Williamson will use funds to start a new campus group for heterosexual allies in LGBT work, Straight Against Hate. This group will partner with others on campus and in the Louisville community to champion issues and collaborate with LGBT students.

Grace Howard and Lindsey Ferguson will create a campaign to educate the U of L community about discriminatory practices at Red Cross blood drives, especially the lifetime ban on giving blood by men who have had a male sexual partner. Ferguson is excited to be one of the first recipients of a grant. "A lot of people don't know the inequalities that exist within the FDA's laws on who is able to donate blood. By becoming recipients of the Diane Rigney Student Activism Grant, Grace and I will be able to educate the general student population; that, in itself, will be rewarding."

This is the first year for the grant program, made possible by the generous donation from social justice activist and U of L alumnus Diane Rigney.

Rigney is a lifetime civil rights activist who participated in many social justice events throughout her life, including marching for civil rights in Birmingham and Selma, Alabama in the 1960s and advocating for domestic partner benefits in the company where she served as a senior vice-president for human resources.

The program provides undergraduate students with money to implement their ideas and a mentor experienced in social justice activism. The mentor will provide valuable coaching and feedback to make the project a learning experience. Throughout the process, from developing the grant proposal to evaluating the success of the project, students will learn what it takes to be active in social justice efforts and make a lasting change in their community.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Is It Time To Execute The Louisville Option?

There has been justified  grousing over the fact the just introduced GINDA in Maryland does not have 'public accommodations language in it and our GL allies are indifferent or clueless about how that affects us.

But what are we going to do about it?

We can lobby legislators in Maryland to put that language back in, or execute the Louisville Option and kill the bad bill.

What's the Louisville Option you asked?    Grab a seat because school is now in session.

Back in 1997 a Fairness Ordinance was proposed that over their objections, cut trans people out of the measure in the 'incremental progress' groupthink prevalent at the time among GLBT rights proponents.

But in this case, far from taking that lying down, the trans community activists fought back and lobbied the Louisville Board of Aldermen to successfully flip two yes votes into abstentions that turned what was predicted to be a 7-4 loss into a 7-2 one.for the LGB only bill.    


Two years later with the message sent to the GLB community and received that the only way forward was doing so together combined with a timely and highly publicized egregious example of anti GLBT discrimination,  a fully inclusive Fairness Ordinance was proposed and passed on a 7-5 vote in January 1999.

The inclusive Louisville law was a model for the ones that passed in Lexington and Covington KY, and the one currently being considered in Richmond, KY.    The Fairness Campaign in Louisville, Lexington Fairness and the Kentucky Fairness Alliance are also award winning role models as to how to collectively work together to advance GLBT rights without leaving anyone behind.

With transpeople being cut out of legislation we sorely need at a disgusting pace, is it time for trans communities around the nation to execute the Louisville Option?

I think it's past time to send the message that we're sick and tired of being treated as civil rights stepchildren and how disgusted we are about it.   If we are equal partners in this community, then it's past time for you to live up to your own Dallas Principles and act like it.

If GL activists don't cease and desist on the negative civil rights behavior, we trans folks will not only be tough minded enough to mobilize our troops and supporters to help us kill those non-inclusive trans rights bills, but be tough minded enough to cause problems with other non inclusive gay only legislation as well.

And if you think I'm kidding, ask peeps on the Hill how much drama we caused after Barney cut us out of ENDA in 2007.

Your call, GL community.