SGN October 5, 2018 - Section 1

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Celebrating 44 Years! Issue 40 Volume 46

FRIDAY October 5, 2018 FREE!

25¢ in bookstores & newsstands

Seattle Women’s Chorus “Hear Me Roar” concert Oct. 12, 13 & 20 SEC 2 PG 1

Elegantly sumptuous Colette a marvelous showcase for Knightley SEC 2 PG 1

Seattle Gay News S E AT T L E ’ S L G B T Q N E W S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T W E E K LY

HRC responds to Trump-Pence attack on LGBTQ foreign diplomats

Out & Equal Workplace Summit brought Rippon, DiMarco and more to the Washington State Convention Center

Photo by Spencer Platt / Getty Images

WASHINGTON, D.C. – [On Tuesday, October 2], the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), the nation’s largest lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) civil rights organization, responded to a new policy by the Trump-Pence administration that denies visas to same-sex partners

of U.N. employees and foreign diplomats. It also requires those currently in the U.S. to get married by the end of the year or be forced to leave the country. First reported on by the Washington Blade in August, the new policy went into effect on Monday.

see DIPLOMATS page 13

New study shows who is impacted by Florida’s HIV criminalization laws

Adam Rippon – Photo courtesy of Out & Equal

by MK Scott SGN Contributing Writer With over 6,000 attendees, the Out & Equal Workplace Summit was the place to be to celebrate equality and diversity. The four-day conference spanned from

Oct. 1-4. Out & Equal Workplace Advocates is the largest conference dedicated to LGBTQ Workplace Equality in the world, attended annually by LGBTQ & ally professionals.

see WORKPLACE SUMMIT page 6

North Carolina law does not ban Trans people from restrooms, federal judge says Lawsuit against state preemption may go forward

Photo by Jacob Lund / Getty Images

LOS ANGELES (October 2, 2018) – Florida laws that criminalize people living with HIV directly affected 614 people from 1986 to 2017, according to a new report by the Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law. Researchers found that women were disproportionately affected

by HIV criminalization. White women were disproportionately arrested for HIV offenses in Florida, and black women were most likely to be convicted for HIV offenses related to sex work.

see HIV CRIMINALIZATION page 12

Photo by Sara D. Davis / Getty Images

by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer A federal judge has ruled that North Carolina state law does not forbid Transgender residents from using restrooms and other public accommodations. The judge also

cleared the way for a lawsuit aimed at striking down provisions barring municipalities in the state from passing nondiscrimination ordinances that cover public accommodations or private business practices.

see NORTH CAROLINA page 13


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