Celebrating 44 Years! Issue 47 Volume 46
FRIDAY November 23, 2018 FREE!
25¢ in bookstores & newsstands
Outstanding peformances helps Green Book stay on the road SEC 2 PG 1
ArtsWest’s Jane Eyre The Musical and impressive production 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
THANK YOU FROM GSBA! Betsy DeVos issues new Title IX 2018 EQUALUX: TASTE OF GSBA guidelines It will be harder to punish sexual harassment a huge success
Photo courtesy of GSBA
by Louise Chernin President & CEO Greater Seattle Business Association The courage to tell your story of hardship, with grace and inspiration, is not easy, but multi-year past scholar, Alejandra Silva Hernandez did just that at this year’s 2018 EQUALUX: TASTE of GSBA. If ever we question the power of what it means to an
Betsy Devos – Photo by Brendan Smialowski / Getty Images
LGBTQ student to receive a GSBA scholarship, it was clear from listening to Alejandra’s story of how the support of one’s community can have a ripple effect; Not only providing hope to one student but a cascading effect of change that will touch generations. You, our generous donors, did that and more as you raised your paddle again and again at EQUALUX [Saturday evening, November 17].
see EQUALUX page 4
Trans* Day of Remembrance commemorated at Seattle Central College
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer The Trump administration’s Education Secretary, Betsy DeVos, issued new Title IX rules and guidelines on November 16 that will make it more difficult for schools to punish sexual harassment. Title IX bars sex discrimination at schools that receive federal funding. Under previous administrations, the law was held
to require schools to intervene against sexual harassers. The Obama administration also held that Title IX protected the rights of Transgender students. That has all changed under the Trump administration. According to the Department of Education, the newly issued guidelines seek to “produce more reliable outcomes, thereby
see TITLE IX page 6
GOP lawmakers try to strip LGBT protections from new NAFTA treaty Canadian PM insists they stay
Astro Pittman – Photo courtesy of The Seattle Collegian
November 20th is Trans* Day of Remembrance (TDOR), a day which members and allies of the LGBTQ community use to honor the lives of trans* people killed simply because they were trans*. This year, Seattle Central College student Astro Pittman organized and hosted an event on site at SCC. Pittman, who is also
editor-in-chief of the SCC student newspaper The Seattle Collegian, spoke at length about the history of TDOR and the disproportionate rates of violence experienced by trans* people, and especially trans* women of color, and the other societal obstacles trans* people can face, including but by
see SEATTLE CENTRAL page 5
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, U.S. President Donald Trump, and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto – Photos courtesy of Reuters
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer Forty Republican members of Congress have written to Donald Trump, insisting that language protecting LGBT people be stripped from the draft of a new NAFTA agreement with Canada and Mexico.
On the other hand, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, whose government will be one of the parties to the deal, is equally determined that human rights protections stay in the agreement. NAFTA, or the North American Free Trade Agreement, was first negotiated from
see NAFTA page 13