SGN February 13, 2015 - Section 1

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Celebrating 41 Years! Issue 7 Volume 43

FRIDAY February 13, 2015 FREE!

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Seattle Gay News SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

SMC and SWC Artistic Director Dennis Coleman to retire July 2016 courtesy of Flying House Productions

Dennis Coleman

In late July of 2016, after more than three decades of dedicated and tireless service to the Seattle area LGBTQ and arts communities, Dennis Coleman, artistic director of the Seattle Men’s Chorus (SMC) and Seattle Women’s Chorus (SWC) will retire. He will lead the final two SMC concerts this season (March and June), as well as all five concerts in the 2015-2016 season. Dennis’ final Seattle-area concert will be the SMC Summer concert held in conjunction with Pride Week in June of 2016 (concert title and location TBA). Immediately following that performance Dennis will travel to Denver with the Choruses to conduct at the Gay and Lesbian Association of Choruses (GALA Choruses) Festival – an international association he helped found in 1983 that is dedicated to advancing LGBTQ choral organizations and changing our world through song. It is at this Festival where Dennis will take his final bow in front of his Choruses and the nearly 200 Gay and

Lesbian choruses that have been formed since the late 1970s. During the 2015-2016 season Flying House Productions will conduct a comprehensive national search for new artistic leadership to shepherd the choruses into a new era. A large portion of the 700+ members of SMC and SWC first learned of his planned retirement at a packed Chorus Chat meeting at the Seattle First Baptist Church on Tuesday evening February 10th. It was at that chat where Dennis spoke briefly of his plans after retirement: “I am never happier than when I’m conducting the choruses. This organization has given my life meaning, joy and fulfillment. But I feel it is time to move on and savor the days when I can wake up with nothing on my ‘to do’ list. I want some free time to explore other interests, travel, entertain friends, and age gracefully.” Later that evening, chorus members reflected. “I have been privileged to sing see Coleman page 5

Marriages begin in 23 of SGN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: City Council member Alabama’s 67 counties Tom Rasmussen Same-sex plaintiffs sue all state officials to get compliance with federal court order al.com

U.S. District Judge Ginny Granade

by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer Gay and Lesbian couples are marrying in at least 23 of Alabama’s 67 counties after the U.S. Supreme Court refused to extend the stay on a federal judge’s ruling that the state’s ban on same-sex marriage was unconstitutional. In some of the remaining 44 counties all marriages have come to a halt, as local officials have suspended issuing marriage licens-

es altogether pending further court action. About 45% of the state’s population lives in counties where marriage equality is the rule. Alabama Chief Judge Roy Moore ordered county probate judges – the officials charged with issuing marriage licenses – not to comply with federal court orders, but same-sex couples have sued all the state’s public officials in an attempt to get federal courts to order them to perform Gay and Lesbian marriages. U.S. District Judge Ginny Granade – who issued the original ruling striking Alabama’s same-sex marriage ban – instructed Mobile County Probate Judge Don Davis on February 12 that he must issue licenses to same-sex couples. Granade ruled in favor of marriage equality on January 23. Two days later she stayed her ruling until February 9 to give the state time to file an appeal. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to extend the stay – over the protests of Justices Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia – and marriages began on February 9. Then Moore got into the act. “Effective immediately, no probate judge of the State of Alabama nor any agent or em-

Tom Rasmussen

by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer

Seattle City Council member Tom Rasmussen will be retiring from politics when his term expires in January, but when asked about his future plans he’s all business. Instead of talking about what he’ll do with his time off, he ticks off a list of projects he wants to accomplish before leaving office. “I still have 11 months left in my term!” Rasmussen exclaims. “I want to complete the significant work we’ve been doing on transportation. “I also have legislation to create neighborsee Alabama page 8 hood conservation districts. If neighbor-

hoods opt in – they don’t have to, but if they choose to do it – the plan will help them control development. It doesn’t prevent development, but it will guide it in a way that preserves the character of our neighborhoods that we love so much. “I also want us to think about how to preserve open space as the city becomes more dense.” These are all issues Rasmussen has left his mark on during his three terms on the City Council. Currently the chair of the City Council’s transportation committee and a leading advocate for the city’s Prop 1 transit funding measure, Rasmussen was previously chair of the parks committee and mastermind of the 2008 Prop 2 parks levy. His tenure as transportation chair has not been without controversy. In particular, the balance between busses, light rail, cars, and bikes has set mass transit activists at odds with each other and with the City Council. “Right now the work horse needs to be busses,” Rasmussen tells SGN. “I support light rail, and I think we need to build it out – to Ballard, to White Center, further out into the county. But there are challenges to that. First, it’s a regional system. It will take a long time to develop. And it’s incredibly see Rasmussen page 16


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