Showing posts with label Washington DC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Washington DC. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 07, 2012

DC Office Of Human Rights Launching Anti-Trans Discrimination Campaign

Was pleased to see this wonderful news coming of of Washington DC in term of the Office of Human Rights  creating the first government funded campaign to battle anti-trans discrimination.

The groundbreaking OHR campaign will feature two trans women, two trans men and a self-identified genderqueer person appearing in one of the five separate ads that the agency will place throughout the city in the fall.

The OHR campaign was developed with the help of D.C.-based Transgender Health Empowerment; the National Gay & Lesbian Task Force; the Movement Advancement Project; Jeffrey Richardson, director of Mayor’s Office of GLBT Affairs and others.   Two clients of Casa Ruby are some of the DC residents who appear in the ads.

The anti-trans discrimination ads will highlight respect, shared values and D.C.’s anti-discrimination law that includes trans-specific protections. The ads will also encourage trans Washingtonians to contact OHR if they experience discrimination based on gender identity and expression.

“LGBT organizations are telling us this is the first government-sponsored campaign in the nation to focus solely on transgender and gender non-conforming people, and the Office of Human Rights is incredibly proud of that,” OHR Director Gustavo Velasquez told the Washington Blade in a statement. “To ensure we take full-advantage of the opportunity, we identified three primary goals for the campaign: increase understanding of transgender and gender non-conforming people, reduce discriminatory incidents in the District and increase the number of community members who report discrimination. The courageous and bright D.C.-based participants appearing in the ads and the powerful accompanying messages can make this happen, although we know much more work needs to be done to eradicate discrimination towards this community.”

Longtime DC activist Ruby Corado was pleased that the District is tackling this issue. “Our city is a pioneer in lots of things,” said Corado in an interview. “Having the Office of Human Rights take some leadership on this for me is remarkable. I’m proud and I’m very happy that this city and [it’s] LGBT leaders has taken on this issue and supported us 100 percent.” 

Friday, July 27, 2012

Death Threat Aimed At Casa Ruby

I had the pleasure of meeting longtime Washington DC trans activist Ruby Corado last year while I was up there for Out On The Hill and was thrilled to hear about the recent opening of Casa Ruby  in Northwest DC

Its mission is to serve as a safe haven for the local Washington transgender community from violence and serve the Latino community. 

But I was not happy to hear that Casa Ruby  recently received a death threat that is being investigated by the DC Metro Police.

Corado explained in a WAMU-FM radio interview why she doesn't take these threats lightly:

" I have been to dozens of funerals throughout this city and I have also been hundreds of times to the hospitals to aid people who have been victims of a violent crime or death for being who they are."

Casa Ruby has continued to serve as a safe haven for the Washington DC transgender community despite the threat. It is playing host to Latino delegations attending the 2012 International AIDS Conference that started on July 22 and ends today

It is my hope that the waste of transphobic DNA who called that threat in to Casa Ruby is expeditiously caught by MPD and swiftly brought to justice.  I'm also looking forward to visiting Casa Ruby the next time I'n in the Washington DC metro area.


Thursday, July 12, 2012

Headed To Washington DC Again!

Moni's headed to Washington DC as you read this post to handle some weekend business can't really talk about until it's over.

Leaving out of Hobby (sorry IAH airline family) and traveling through the ATL to get to Washington National (I refuse to call that airport Reagan International).  Every time I connect through Atlanta I think about this old airline joke and chuckle when I arrive there.

If you're going to heaven or hell, you'll have to change planes in Atlanta.  

And yes, I wrote a few posts for you TransGriot readers to persuse and enjoy while I'm flying the friendly skies.  I'm also planning on making a beeline for Five Guys when I get to DCA. .     

But I'm going to enjoy getting out of Houston for a moment even though it's been cooler this week than it usually is in July thanks to the rain and cloudy conditions we've had for the last few days.   I submit the NAACP delegates are happy they're here in H-town while we're getting a break from our usual blast furnace heat and humidity.

I get to chill for a minute when I get to DC Thursday night before I enter the Cone of Silence Friday through Sunday about the reason for my trip.

At any rate, those of you I get to see inside I-495, looking forward to hanging out with you and I'll see you when I get there.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Big Political Day Inside I-495

In a few minutes, the Supreme (Conservafool leaning) Court will let the nation know what they have kept a secret for three months- how they ruled on the Affordable Care Act..

May wish to check SCOTUSblog.com for the breakdown on what is sure to be another 5-4 ruling.

Meanwhile, across the street from the Supreme Court building there will be more drama at the Capitol building in the Republifool controlled US House as they move to vote around 3:30 EDT to cite Attorney General Eric Holder for contempt of Congress over the faux Fast and Furious 'scandal'..

A pissed off Congressional Black Caucus is threatening to walk out of the chamber to protest the partisan vote that is coming up and word is that the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, the Congressional Asian Pacific Caucus, and The Congressional Progressive Caucus are also going to walk prior to the partisan travesty of a vote.

Will keep y'all posted about the developments inside Hollywood for Ugly People when they happen.

Monday, June 25, 2012

We Know Why You Conservafools Are Hatin' On AG Holder

Been watching the jacked up right wing shenanigans playing out this week in Hollywood for Ugly People (AKA Washington DC)  concerning the bogus Fox generated Fast and Furious kerfluffle that BTW, started under the previous occupant of the Attorney General's office Michael Mukasey

We know why y'all hate Attorney General Eric Holder.  

Besides the obvious facts that he was appointed to the job by President Obama and he's African-American,  Issa and his fellow conservafools hate Attorney General Holder because he's not defending DOMA, is vigorously enforcing the Voting Rights Act, taking down your ALEC sponsored voter suppression laws and going after your Juan Crow anti-immigration laws.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) basically said the same thing I'm saying in this post.
"It is no accident, it is no coincidence, that the attorney general of the United States is the person responsible for making sure that voter suppression does not happen in our country," Pelosi said at her weekly briefing. "These very same people who are holding him in contempt are part of a nationwide scheme to suppress the vote. They're closely allied with those who are suffocating the system: unlimited special interest secret money."

Sen John Cornyn (R-TX) let the comment slip about Holder fighting Texas' voter suppression laws during the recent Senate hearing that was held on Fast and Furious and called for Attorney General Holder's resignation .
"You still resist coming clean about what you knew and when you knew it with regard to Operation Fast and Furious," Cornyn charged. "You won’t cooperate with a legitimate congressional investigation, and you won’t hold anyone, including yourself, accountable. Your department blocks states from implementing attempts to combat voter fraud. In short, you’ve violated the public trust, in my view, by failing and refusing to perform the duties of your office."

You Fox Noise watching conservasheeple may believe the bull feces that's being fed to you by the conservamedia but reality based America knows what's up here.  Y'all think that by stirring up a replay of the Shirley Sherrod episode and stirring up all this crap, you can get him to resign.

Well, to quote a Diddy rap song, Attorney General Holder ain't going nowhere or resigning.

So keep on hatin' him conservafools.   We know why you hate him.
  .

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Kylar's US Senate ENDA Hearing Testimony

TransGriot Note: TPOCC founder Kylar Broadus made history today as the first transperson ever to testify in a US Senate hearing.  Fittingly it was concerning one of the trans community's Holy Grail pieces of federal legislation in ENDA, the Employment and Non Discrimination Act.

Here's Kylar's testimony to Sen. Harkin's (D-IA) committee and the video from the hearing.



***

Kylar W. Broadus’ Testimony before the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee

106 Dirksen Senate Office Building
June 12, 2012
10 a.m.

Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, my name is Kylar William Broadus and I’m the Executive Director of the Trans People of Color Coalition, a two-year-old national organization formed to focus on the concerns of transgender people of color in America. I reside in Columbia, Missouri and am a native mid-Missourian. I teach at a historically Black college, Lincoln University, and practice law. Today, I’m here to talk to you today about S. 811, the Employment Nondiscrimination Act (ENDA) and the need for inclusion of employment protections for transgender Americans. I am thankful to you for the opportunity to be here to speak in favor of this legislation.

I am a transgender American, a female to male transsexual that transitioned approximately twenty years ago. For those not familiar with the term “transgender,” it is used to define people whose internal identification as female or male does not match their assigned sex at birth, which includes many that undertake the medical process of changing their physical gender. The terms “trans” and “transgender” are used interchangeably. For me, the physical transition was about letting the outer world know my internal sense of self, of who really was inside this body. People always related to me as male from an early age and this continued, of course, into transition. My transition was a matter of living the truth and sharing that truth for the first time in my life.

Prior to actual medical intervention, as I indicated, I was mostly viewed as male. My gender assigned at birth was female, so my driver’s license and other documents carried the gender marker of “female” even though my appearance was masculine. In some cases, I couldn’t use female restrooms or locker rooms. When I used female restrooms security or police were called to escort me from the restrooms even after stripping to "prove" that I was female. That was humiliating and dehumanizing. After years of not being able to use the public restroom, I began to just use the men’s room, where I never had any problems. I had the same problem with the women’s locker room at the gym.

One of my favorite memories is my girlfriend first going in to tell everyone that I wasn’t a “man.” Then I would walk in and all the women would run out of the locker room screaming “it’s” a “man!” I would just change before going to the gym and remove my sweats in the gym area to avoid any problems.

I’m mainly here today to talk about my experience with workplace discrimination. First, I’ll share my personal story and then talk about the plight of thousands of transgender Americans that are just getting their stories told.

While studying business in college, I assumed, like most students, that I would not encounter any special difficulties. I was raised in a working class family with a hard work ethic. I had my first job at the age of five working for my father at his evening job. He would take me and my sister to work with him and this was how we earned our spending money. I recall very vividly cleaning the water fountains in the offices. It was during this time that I learned to take pride in my work. My father showed me how to make the water fountains clean and shiny. I then graduated to the trash cans. From that point on, I have always worked a job and since college, two jobs at a time in some form or fashion. My employers have always praised my work.

Prior to my physical transition, I began working at a major financial institution. I wore the traditional female attire at the time, which was a skirt and pantyhose. It was required and expected in the late 1980s and early 1990s. As I began to find myself, my attire gradually shifted from feminine to more masculine styles. Then I actually moved to a division of the company where the dress code was less stringent and began to wear men’s suits and ties most of the time. My hair got shorter and more masculine. My demeanor had always been masculine. Many clients already confused me for male even though my name was female. My coworkers didn’t seem to mind. It was management that seemed to have issues with it. I was called in to discuss my hair cut, and I was told that I was not allowed to go by my initials, “K.B.,” which many males did but females didn’t.

After I announced my gender transition, it only took six months before I was “constructively discharged” from my employer. While my supervisors could tolerate a somewhat masculine-appearing black woman, they were not prepared to deal with my transition to being a black man. With growing despair, I watched my professional connections, support, and goodwill evaporate, along with my prospects of remaining employed. I was harassed until I was forced to leave. I received harassing telephone calls hourly from my supervisor some days. I received assignments after hours that were due by 9 a.m. the next morning. The stress was overwhelming. I ended up taking a stress leave for several weeks. I thought upon my return perhaps things would settle down. I was back less than a week from stress leave and knew that it wasn’t going to settle down. I was forbidden from talking to certain people and my activities were heavily monitored.  I was forced out and unemployed for about a year before finally obtaining full-time employment.

Before fully accepting that new reality, however, I tried everything possible to save the career I had worked so many years to build. Once I lost my job, I thought that there MUST be laws that protect individuals when they are discriminated against. After filing a lawsuit in federal court, though, I learned quickly that transgender people weren’t covered under any discrimination laws. Like the vast majority of plaintiffs during my era, I lost. My lawsuit was summarily dismissed.

After my COBRA ran out, I had no health insurance and wasn’t able to earn a living wage. I did what I could to juggle things including using my 401K. Even once I obtained employment I wasn’t able to catch back up on everything that I had gotten behind on. I was working in positions that paid substantially less than I made. I went from financial services to part-time academia and a law practice in a region not very welcoming for a black transgender man in mid-Missouri. It has been well over fifteen years since I lost
employment and I still haven’t recovered financially. My student loans were the most impacted and more than quadrupled since I left law school. My father is deceased but I care for my infirm mother and my underemployment makes it extremely difficult to do. Emotionally, I still suffer from Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome from the discrimination I experienced.

Many transgender Americans suffer without protection and are subject to discriminatory practices. This is why it is extremely imperative that ENDA be passed. There are only 16 states and the District of Columbia that provide us protection from being discriminated against on the job just because of who we are. In the recent report “Injustice at Every Turn: A Report of the National Transgender Discrimination Survey,” there were 6,450 transgender study participants from across the United States. The results were staggering
across the board but particularly in the area of employment.

The report showed the following:

*Transgender respondents experienced unemployment at twice the rate of the general population with rates for transgender people of color up to four times the national unemployment rate.
*Ninety percent (90%) of those surveyed reported experiencing harassment or discrimination on the job or took actions like hiding who they are to avoid it.
* Forty-seven percent (47%) had experienced an adverse job outcome, such as being fired, not hired or denied a promotion because of being transgender or gender non-conforming.
* Over one-quarter (26%) had lost a job due to being transgender or gender nonconforming and 50% were harassed.
* Large majorities attempted to avoid discrimination by hiding their gender or gender transition (71%) or delaying their gender transition (57%).
* The vast majority (78%) of those who transitioned from one gender to the other reported that they felt more comfortable at work and their job performance improved, despite high levels of mistreatment.
* Overall, 16% said they had been compelled to work in the underground economy for income (such as doing sex work or selling drugs).
* Respondents who were unemployed or had lost a job due to bias also experienced ruinous consequences such as four times the rate of homelessness, 70% more current drinking or misuse of drugs to cope with mistreatment, 85% more incarceration, more than double the rate working in the underground economy,
and more than double the HIV infection rate.

These results are staggering and make the case that there needs to be clear protection for transgender Americans who deserve the same chance at earning a living and providing for themselves and the people they love. It is imperative that Congress pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act so that transgender people like me are able to live our lives and provide for our families without fear of discrimination.

I truly appreciate the opportunity to testify before you here today.
Thank you.

Kylar Broadus Makes History In DC Today

When Sen Tom Harkin (D-IA)  convenes the Senate committee hearing on ENDA later this morning, one of the five people sitting at that table will be making some trans history when that happens.

Founding Trans People of Color Coalition (TPOCC) Executive Director Kylar Broadus will become the first transperson ever to give federal testimony at a US senate hearing when the ENDA hearing before the Senate Health, Education, Labor & Pensions Committee convenes at 10 AM EDT in Room 106 of the Everett Dirksen Senate Office Building..

In 2009 there were no trans witnesses in the Senate ENDA hearing, but Vandy Beth Glenn gave testimony in the US House ENDA one.

Kylar is also a living embodiment of what I'm talking about when I say we have trans people of color who are more than capable of providing visionary leadership in the rainbow community and it's past time that fact was recognized.


Can't think of a better person to represent our community at the table and hopefully I'll get to see the hearing on C-SPAN.

I'll post the hearing video here once it archives from the committee website.  

Friday, June 01, 2012

DC Cop Kenneth Furr Going To Trial For Trans Shooting Incident

There's an update in the ongoing case of D.C. cop Kenneth D. Furr, who was involved in an ugly August 2011 shooting incident that involved two transwomen and their cis male companions in NW Washington. 

It resulted in him discharging his service revolver at the car they were riding in and causing non life threatening injuries to three of the people in that vehicle.

He was also inebriated at the time of the August 26 incident. 

The shooting incident happened in the wake of transwoman Lashai Mclean being killed in July 2011 and another transwoman being shot in the same neighborhood a week later where Mclean died but surviving the attack.

A D.C. Superior Court Grand Jury handed down a nine count indictment against Furr on March 7 which includes six counts of assault with a dangerous weapon, one count of assault with intent to kill while armed, and two counts of solicitation for prostitution.

Furr's court status hearing was held on May 24 and D.C. Superior Court Judge Ann O’Reagan Keary denied a request by attorneys representing Officer Furr that he be released or the conditions of his bond be changed. 

Furr's trial will start October 15 and I'll continue to keep you  updated on what transpires in this case as it winds to its conclusion.


Monday, May 21, 2012

Two Transwomen Nominated For DC Human Rights Commission

Was happy to hear that Washington D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray has nominated trans activists and 2010 IFGE Trinity Award winner Earline Budd and Alexandra Beninda for seats on the D.C. Commission on Human Rights.


The 15 member commission is only operating with three member at the current time, and if the two are confirmed as expected by the D.C. City Council, they would become the first trans persons ever to serve on it.

The Human Rights Commission rules on discrimination complaints brought under the D.C. Human Rights Act that was passed in 1977.   The comprehensive act bans discrimination in employment, housing, public accommodations and other areas based on an individual’s sexual orientation and gender identity and expression as well as other categories such as race, religion, national origin, and ethnicity.

“To be getting one transgender person on the commission would be great, but to be getting two is fantastic,” said Beninda to the Washington Blade.  

“I’m really excited and looking forward to serving,” said Budd while attending Saturday’s LGBT Youth Pride festival in Dupont Circle. “This is important for the entire community.”

It most certainly is 'Number 4' and Alexandra.  It's vitally important to have our perspectives and lived life experiences on boards and commissions such as this, and especially one that investigates human rights complaints.   

I have no doubt you ladies will do a wonderful job in representing the Washington D.C. trans community on the Human Rights Commission.

TransGriot Update: Here's the Washington Blade story about their swearing in




Sunday, April 29, 2012

2012 White House Correspondents Dinner

While I was attending our local Unity Dinner, in 'Hollywood For Ugly People' AKA Washington DC  the annual White house Correspondents Dinner was taking place.    I got to see it after I came home, but for those of you who missed it, here's the POTUS poking fun at himself and various people inside the bltway and the media who cover them.

Monday, March 12, 2012

DC Unanimously Approves Same Sex Divorce Bill

The DC City Council without drama on March 6 unanimously approved the Civil Marriage Dissolution Equality Amendment Act of 2011.   The measure permits same sex couples who got married in DC but reside elsewhere to dissolve those marriages without having to establish six months of residency in the District.

Yep, even Marion Barry voted for it.

Because marriage equality is not recognized in all states, couples who got married in states to do allow it find that when the relationship goes sour to the point they seek a divorce, their states of residence for fear they will undermine their anti-gay marriage amendments will not grant a same sex divorce.. 

The Act was introduced by Councilmember Phil Mendelson (D) to 'introduce dignity to the process of dissolving a marriage' according to a Metro Weekly article  Eight of the 12 DC councilmembers cosponsored it and the measure unanimously passed a February 7 preliminary vote . 


The measure goes to Washington DC Mayor Vincent Gray (D) for his signature.



Thursday, March 08, 2012

DC Officer Kenneth Furr Indicted For Shooting At Transwomen

DC police officer Kenneth Furr has been indicted for the August 26 off-duty incident in which he discharged his service weapon at a transwoman who refused his inebriated advances at a northwest DC CVS store. 

There was a report that a possible plea bargain was in the works, but looks like those negotiations broke down.

Furr was charged with nine counts that include intent to kill while armed, six counts of assault with a dangerous weapon and two counts of solicitation. 

However, I did not appreciate the Washington Post's characterization of the shooting victims in their article about this indictment as trans prostitutes. 

But back to the story.  Furr is facing 30 years in prison if he is convicted and is scheduled to appear in court Friday before Judge Ann O’Regan Keary.