SGN November 6, 2015 - Section 1

Page 1

Celebrating 41 Years! Issue 45 Volume 43

SEC 2 PG 1

Seattle Gay News

FRIDAY November 6, 2015 FREE!

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Prop 8 redux: Houston rejects civil rights ordinance

SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

SPD Safe Place program rolls out to Starbucks stores in the Seattle area

Proponents of Prop #1 in Houston – huffingtonpost.com

by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer Houston voters have decisively rejected the city’s civil rights ordinance passed in May 2014. The vote was not even close, with 61% of voters in the No column. The Houston Equal Rights Ordinance (HERO) would have established legal protections for 14 protected classes: sexual orientation and gender identity, race, religion,

sex, color, age, ethnicity, disability, national origin, marital status, military status, genetic information, pregnancy, and family status. The Pride Flag flying high over Starbucks Corporation – Courtesy of Starbucks Co. In a nakedly political July ruling, the Texas Supreme Court ordered the City of Special to SGN the Seattle Police Department earlier this Houston either to put the ordinance up for a from Starbucks Corporation year was to page through reports of hate vote or repeal it outright. crimes. The numbers indicated a possible Opponents of the measure successfully modest uptick in attacks and menacing bedemonized the city’s Transgender commuOne of the first things Jim Ritter did havior aimed at the gay community. Anecsee prop 8 page 13 when he became LGBTQ liaison officer for see spd safe place page 3

Seattle HIV/AIDS Election wrap-up: Seattle City Council will be majority women memorial planners seek Incumbents heading for re-election support by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor Seattle City Councilmember Tom Rasmussen may be leaving City Hall early next year, but he’s made it very clear that that does not mean he is leaving Seattle – or the LGBTQ community for that matter – one bit. In fact, as a part of his recommendations for the last city of Seattle budget he will work on in his current capacity as a councilmember, Rasmussen is asking for the council to include, and for city of Seattle residents to support, the building of an HIV/AIDS memorial project, which, according to Rasmussen, could include a garden, monument, or online interactive website or maybe even all three. Seattle Gay News met with Rasmussen on Wednesday to discuss the need for such a project, how much is being budgeted for the project and from whom the money and ideas will come from. “This is a community investment in planning for an AIDS Legacy Memorial Project in Seattle – and diverse stakeholder groups will be closely involved,” he said.

As it stands, this proposed planning project would identify the scale, scope and content of an AIDS Legacy/Memorial Project – identifying possible options including physical space or location, and/or creating an online presence or an exhibition. In the first two decades of the AIDS epidemic, Seattle experienced a tragic loss of nearly 4,000 persons. “The epidemic was met by a cross-section of our community who worked creatively and tirelessly in the face of fear and discrimination to help those diagnosed with the HIV virus,” Rasmussen told SGN. “The history of the early days of the AIDS epidemic and how Seattle responded has not been comprehensively collected or recorded or presented,” he added, saying that this important work needs to be done because many from that generation are aging or have moved away as examples of why the time has come to get started. “It is important that the experience of those who were first on the front lines of the battle against AIDS and the stories of the lives that were lost be chronicled,” he said. see hiv/aids memorial page 5

Kshama Sawant, candidate for Seattle City Council, District 3, celebrates an early majority at her election party at the Melrose Market Studios on Election Day, Tuesday November 3, 2015 – Photo by Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times

by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer The Seattle City Council will be the same, but different, as a result of the November 3 election. For the first time in more than 20 years, the majority of City Council members will be women. On the other hand, all the City Council incumbents who made it to through the primary appear to be heading

for re-election. The retirement of veteran City Council members Sally Clark, Nick Licata, and Tom Rasmussen, as well as the defeat of incumbent Jean Godden in the primary, opened the way for Shannon Braddock, Debora Juarez, and Lorena Gonzalez to join the Council. Juarez will be the first Native American to be elected to the Council, and Gonzalez see election wrap page 4


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