Showing posts with label service project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label service project. Show all posts

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Our GSA Invitation to State Capitol for SB:100 Rally

Our GSA members were asked to speak at the State Capitol, again, and our representative was one of a handful of speakers supporting Senate Bill 100 which would extend housing and employment protection to LGBT citizens and those merely perceived to be LGBT. Four GSA members were able to attend this mid-day event. (Thank you!)










Links to media coverage:
Fox 13 News - video and short article
4Utah - video and article
Deseret News - article and 27 photos
Times Union - article and 6 photos

Our rep's speech:

I'm [     ] and I am a part - perhaps a small part - of the Gay-Straight Alliance club in [    ]. I'm sort-of like the unofficial bouncer, due to my height; and the unofficial LGBT+ historian, due to my fascination with everything historical. Though, most of the credit for starting the GSA should go to the notable students who fought fiercely for the club's institution: students like [   ], [   ], [   ], and [   ], among others; the faculty advisers: [   ] and [   ]; and the official club mom: [   ]; I like to think that I am a small but important part in our small but growing club.

When our GSA first was coalescing little more than a year ago, [historically] we faced an uphill battle against the ingrained prejudices at the heart of Utah county. Prior to our current club’s foundation there were many attempts at establishing a GSA. Though their teachers supported them, multiple times were the requisite signatures and club constitutions obtained in order to be approved as an official club. Multiple times were these very signatures and constitutions lost, misplaced, or invalidated on a technicality. And multiple times were the GSA member hopefuls forced to wait yet another year to start anew, as the deadline for club registration had passed in our school district.

When the efforts to start the GSA succeeded last year partially due to a change in administration and the changing tides of history, we knew there would be a tough time gaining the favor of our classmates. Indeed, when we put up signs and posters throughout our school to try and spread the word of our new club, many were torn down, drawn on, or otherwise vandalized by prejudiced individuals, as what might be expected coming from Utah county.

But, after our first wave of posters, and progressing thereafter exponentially, most who once possessed a hate within their hearts for our club became more and more ambivalent and apathetic towards our club's existence. And those who were once on-the-fence regarding the GSA, became more and more accepting and promoting of the club. Though we are still a long way away from the goal of complete equality for all and the elimination of all forms of hate and discrimination, we have nevertheless made significant strides toward fighting inequality in our school and neighborhood.

Despite the local success of our GSA, we impact only a small area in Utah, let alone the U.S. or the World. Which is why larger-scale, affirmative, juridical actions desperately need to be taken to end discrimination of all kinds. Just as our club of no more than twenty people influence the culture of a school of two thousand, so-too will Utah's population of two million be influenced by a couple thousand determined volunteers.

The suffix "anti" is from the Greek for "against." Which is why anyone who is against the unjust discrimination of people - people just like everyone else, ought to be for the "Anti"-discrimination bill. I want to live in a country - and a world for that matter - in which everyone is "Anti"-discrimination. I want to live in a world where everyone can safely enjoy the comforts and security of indoors; where everyone is judged in their workplace by the quality of their work, and the content of their character; and everyone is equal under the gaze of the law. In order to accomplish this noble and worthy goal, all of us need to let all our voices be heard. Only then can we end discrimination.

The Capitol 13 invite you to return to the Utah State Capitol, “Louder Than a Lion!” Wednesday March 5th, at 12:30pm in the Rotunda. 


72 percent of Utahns support a statewide nondiscrimination bill, yet Senate leadership has decided that they will not hear SB100. We’ve posted notes, we’ve emailed, we’ve lobbied, we’ve had town halls, heck, some of us have even been arrested! 



They remain unmoved. 

How do we win equal protection for all LGBT Utahns? We joyfully raise our voice and shake loose the dome! Join us on March 5th as we send a message to the Legislature that Utah’s indefatigable LGBT family is here to stay! 

“You hear my voice, you hear that sound
Like thunder gonna shake the ground!” 

Speakers will include members of The Capitol 13, Equality Utah, the American Fork GSA and Senator Jim Dabakis. 

Bring your love, bring your family, bring your voice. 

ROAR! 

We stand as One Utah, indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for ALL.

Image Credit: abstract dot desktopnexus dot com

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Our GSA Invitation to Equality Utah's Freedom Brunch


February 15, 2014, Equality Utah hosted a Freedom Brunch in the State Capitol Rotunda. Senator Dabakis was impressed with the letters from our GSA students regarding SB100 and invited them to sit with him and speak at the brunch. The students and faculty advisor had a wonderful time. They reported during the following GSA meeting that audience members were crying during their talks and gave them a standing ovation. I'm so proud of them!
Senator Steve Urquhart & Senator Jim Dabakis request the pleasure of your company at Equality Utah's 1st Annual Freedom Brunch & Silent Auction.

Housing and Workplace discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender Utahns is a real and pervasive problem in our state. It robs hardworking, law abiding Utahns of the basic opportunity and freedom to earn a living, shelter their families, and contribute to society.

The Utah Legislature decided in a closed door meeting NOT to consider SB100 this session. This bill would have ended unfair workplace & housing discrimination in our state. The reason given for stifling debate on the Senate floor is concern that legislators might make comments that would show "animus" toward gay and transgender Utahns. We can't think of a better reason why a non-discrimination bill is so critically needed in our state. We will not continue to ask legislators for their permission or their consent. 2014 must be the year to change the face of the Utah legislature and elect pro-equality candidates who are willing to represent the true heart of our state. Join us NEXT Saturday for our inaugural Freedom Brunch. All proceeds directly fund Equality Utah PAC efforts to elect pro-equality candidates.

We will not rest until all Utahns have the freedom to work, the freedom to live and the freedom to marry.

Come witness the inner workings of the local movement towards full equality and meet the people making the headlines this legislative session. We invite you to join us for this history making event happening right in the heat of the 2014 legislative session.

Join us for this landmark inaugural event as we bring together both sides of the aisle in the name of Equality and Opportunity for all Utahns. Enjoy a decadent brunch in the spectacular Utah State Capitol Rotunda, and take this opportunity to get to know your equality endorsed elected officials in-person.

Your ticket gets you a five star brunch & silent auction, as well as a behind the scenes look into this year's legislative session and strategy. 
Image Credit: Zazzle dot com

Thursday, January 30, 2014

GSA Students Worry About Their Future in Utah and Support SB 100

Update: These letters have generated invitations from Senator Dabakis and Equality Utah: Freedom Brunch post and Compassionate Conversations post.

Currently in Utah, it is okay to fire or evict someone merely for being LGBTQ or just perceived as being LGBTQ. They could be model employees or residents but lose their home and right to make a living based on orientation and identity. SB 100 will change the anti-discrimination amendments to include LGBT protection. Religious institutions, small businesses with less-than 15 employees, and landlords with less than 5 units are exempt from the bill; they may continue discriminating. Link to bill at end of post.

GSA students concerned with their futures write to our local senator:

1/26/14

Senator Valentine,

I am [a member] of the Gay-Straight Alliance at American Fork High School, and I just wanted to write a letter showing my support of SB 100. This bill is so important for me and other people like me.

School has always been a top priority for me, and I've worked really hard. I graduate this year, and I look forward to going to college, moving out, getting a job, but the thought that I could be fired because I'm bisexual is very worrisome.

Like I said, this bill is important, and I really think it needs to be passed. Thank you for taking the time to read this.

Sincerely,

(name)

_______________________________________________________________

To whom it may concern:

I am writing this letter in support of SB 100. Utah law already prohibits workplace and housing discrimination based on race, color, religion, gender, pregnancy/childbirth, age, national origin, or disability, and I feel that it is completely fair that sexual-orientation and gender identity are added to this list. There is no reason to discriminate against anyone, and especially not through housing and in the workplace. I do not feel that there is any reason to oppose this addition to the anti-discrimination amendments. If anything, it is a completely necessary addition.  The amendments themselves are there to prevent any sort of discrimination and because there is now a very present need for an addition, it is completely reasonable to update these amendments so that they can further protect all Utah citizens from discrimination in the workplace and housing.

As a student of American fork High School, a straight ally, and [member] of the first ever Gay-Straight Alliance of AFHS, I would love to see this addition be added for all of my friends who in the very near future have to face theses challenges. It's discouraging to think that these people I know and love can be fired and evicted merely on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identification. They are all wonderful people who deserve to have their rights protected, too. I would love to see the day when the LGBTQ+ community is truly given the equal rights that the rest of us US citizens are given, and here, an addition to the anti-discrimination amendments in the state of Utah is definitely a step in the right direction.

Thank you for taking the time to read this and thank you for everything that you are doing to better our state. God bless.

Sincerely,
(name), Senior

______________________________________________________________

Senator Valentine,

My name is {   }, I'm a senior in high school, I have a solid 3.0 GPA, I'm {a member} of the first official GSA (gay - straight alliance) in the Alpine School District, and I've been openly identified as "gay" for the past three and a half years. I always knew that I was gay, no one influenced my decision, because it wasn't a decision. Now you have a decision; you have the biggest influence on passing the SB-100 bill. It's a very scary thought that if this bill isn't passed, I could lose my apartment when I get one, if I get one, and that I could potentially lose my job solely because I am gay.

Being 18, openly gay, and a very proud resident of Utah, I say, "Hear me," as well as all the others out there who fear the same thing I do. In all respect and in the best way possible, please, sign the SB-100 bill. Time will heal a bigoted heart, love for all will heal the wounds inflicted by the many years of struggle, but a decision to make it okay for employers to turn away an LGBT+ human being from a job or a place to live will never be forgotten.

All WE can hope for is that you sign the bill. Either way, you'll end up with upset people, and for that I apologize, but at the end of the day people -- whether straight, gay, or bi, lesbian, transgendered, or questioning -- are people. As I always say: When we're all dead, what's it gonna matter what our sexuality was? We're all essentially just flesh with brains and feelings. No human should fear for their future. Thank you for hearing what I have to say and have a wonderful day.

______________________________________________________________________

To read SB 100, click >> HERE.
To read State Senator Urquhart's short follow-up blog post re this bill, click >> HERE.




Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Service Project Totals

We began our club year with a service project by collecting needed items for OUTreach Resource Center, an organization who helps the homeless youth in Utah. (The article below explains more.) The students did a great job working together to set up collection boxes and flyers.

Donation Totals

New Socks: 140 pairs
New underwear:  45 pairs
Knit hats: 5
mittens/knit gloves: 18 pairs
Hand/toe warmers: 39
Coats: 3
Sleeping bags: 5 new
Back Packs: 5
Smaller bags: 8
Deodorant sticks: 18
Soap: 10
Body butter: 1
Toothpaste: 2
Toiletry Kits: 11
bar of soap
toothbrush
toothpaste
washcloth
pancho
Combs: 12-pk
Condoms box
Mini notebooks: 5
mechanical pencils: 10
#2 pencils: 32
Glue sticks: 2
Crayons: 1 box
Pop-top cans of food: 25
Other cans of food: 14
Energy or Protein bars: 72
Chocolate bars: 12
Single-serve powdered drink mixes: 43
Jack Chan DVD, "Twin Dragons": 1*

Below is the accompanying article to this link HERE:


You know the kind of holiday gifts that make teens yawn? New socks, new underwear, gloves, deodorant. At A.F. High School, they make up the perfect list for a compassionate service project.
In one of its first actions, a high-school club is collecting supplies for the homeless youth. The Gay Straight Alliance, an American Fork High School club that aims to promote a respectful environment for all students, has recently set up a number of collection boxes for its winter service project.
The benefactors will be any of the 5,000 youth who experience homelessness each year in the Beehive State. Youth who are homeless have become a new focus nationally and in Utah because they fall easy prey to exploitation. Over a third of the youth will experience abuse after becoming homeless.
"Homeless youth experience an immense amount of dehumanization on a daily basis," said Cai Noble, who has lived on the streets as a youth and is now the founding director of Operation Shine America, an outreach organization that raises awareness of the homeless youth epidemic in America. "When we reach out to homeless youth with donations it not only saves lives; it shows homeless youth that others value them as a part of their community."
Rachel Peterson, a graduate student researcher at Utah State University, said that parental rejection is often the cause for youth homelessness. She once met a homeless 12-year-old boy who had told his family that he didn't fit into their belief system. The family told him to leave and to come back when he had his act together.
"Half of the youth report being kicked out of the family home because of their orientation or gender identity," said Peterson. They end up in squats, abandoned buildings or camp in canyons.
Now as the cold weather is fast approaching, the GSA high-school club is asking for help from the community. It is looking to collect new socks, new underwear, backpacks, sleeping bags, hand warmers, deodorant and pop-top cans of meat such as chili, single-serving powdered drink mix, chocolate bars and energy bars.
For the project, drop-off boxes have recently been placed in the school's main office, library, counseling office, room 104 and in several teachers' classrooms. Donations can be dropped off until Tuesday, Dec. 10. Then they will be delivered to a non-profit organization in Utah that works directly with homeless youth, OUTreach Resource Centers.
So, you thought you could never make a teen smile with a gift of just socks or underwear? The GSA of American Fork High School would like to convince you otherwise.
You can make a tax-deductible contribution to OUTreach Resource Centers instead:  Donate Online 

If You Can Donate...

Bring donations to A.F.H.S. Main Office until Dec. 10. 
  • New socks
  • New underwear
  • Backpacks
  • Sleeping bags
  • Hand warmers
  • Deodorant
  • Pop-top cans of meat
  • Single-serving powdered drink mix
  • Chocolate bars
  • Energy bars
*{That's strange. It doesn't say anything about a Jackie Chan dvd.}

Salt Lake City
Image Credit: Lennie Mahler | The Salt Lake Tribune