4 2 ▼ ju n e 6 , 1 9 9 7 ▼ j u s t o u t V IE W F R O M H E R E Volunteering for our youth Providing support and economic safety nets for young people can be done creatively—and it needs to be done v by Patricia Nell Warren resident Clinton thinks that more o f us nies are selective about whom they pick. In short— should volunteer to do good things. for the non-straight student, the transition from high school to college is far rockier than it used to More time, energy, money and TLC is needed, he says. I agree. It’s a nonpar­ be. The economic load can be just as crushing as tisan message that should galvanize those bigoted attitudes in high school. everyone in the country, no m atter what their The arithmetic is simple and brutal. A gay/ politics. Hillary Clinton will probably add that it lesbian/bi/trans senior out in high school + family takes a village to volunteer. hostility + rising tuitions = no support for college from Mom and Dad. Or try it another way: A high- In the gay village, this message should give a school student out + leaving home because o f little lift to people who are feeling burned out. family hostility + living independently + jobs Volunteers are the people who make things hap­ hard to get = a hair-raising economic challenge. Is pen. Yet activist dem ands on our time and money it any wonder that some kids turn to the street or are spiraling, as legislative attacks on the com m u­ nity increase. I could spend my whole day faxing the sugar-daddy system to make ends meet? letters to legislators in support or protest o f this or Indeed, some suicides among sexual minority that bill. Nonprofit AIDS organizations tell me youth can surely be traced to that donations are down. Ellen or no Ellen, we econom ic d esp eratio n . The have a ways to go. trend has already been reported among heterosexual youth, as In my opinion, one effective way to do the most with volunteering is to do it for our young in Boston recently, where a high- school youth co alitio n d e ­ people. A fter all, they are our future. More specifi­ cally, we can help provide legitimate economic manded jobs and job training safety nets for our needier kids, because some of from the city government as a them aren’t going to make it otherwise. I’m talk­ remedy for the spike in suicides ing about scholarships, for those bright students among them. If straight kids are who are going to be our future, our year 2001 in seeing the c o n n ectio n this law, politics, the media, medical research, social clearly, it’s time for the gay work, history, etc. community as a whole to see it, too. As a com m issioner o f education in the Los Angeles Unified School District, and as a speaker We constantly hear hetero­ who travels the country, I have seen the danger sexual parents complain that a signs among the kids that I know. W hile many gay college education can cost well adults are consumed with anxiety about partner over $ 100,(XX) these days. Some states are thinking benefits, while some adults are consumed with of starting tax-free investment programs for the anxiety about whether kids are having safer sex, benefit o f straight parents. Time for us homosexuals the fact is, our young people are consum ed with to start thinking along these lines. It is very much in anxiety about just getting through school and into our interests, even for those of us who have no the job market. children, to start thinking like parents of our next More and more, I am seeing the bright lesbian, generation. If the government won’t help us, forget gay, bisexual and transgender students from low- the government. We can bootstrap it ourselves, just income families, or families who have thrown as people did in the Chinese American community them out, who are going into debt for large amounts for a long time, when they knew they couldn’t count o f financial aid. O ne East L.A. girl I know is on the “outside world” for startup capital. entering her junior year o f college (m ajor in Why don’t our kids just apply for scholar­ political science) $20,(XX) in debt. ships? Terrific idea. But it’s debatable how many Working your way through school is a good o f those thousands o f mainstream scholarships American tradition. Many of us older folks did it. might be given to openly gay students. Sexual But today the game is different— more dangerous, minority scholarships do exist, but information more stressful. Many more kids come out in high about them is not widely available, and there school. How many jobs are available toopenly gay aren’t enough o f them. In Los Angeles, where kids? I’ve already seen the students who dye their perhaps 65,000 o f our 650,000 students are gay, hair back to normal, get rid of their lip bead, cover lesbian, bisexual or transgendered, we have half a their tattoo, and act super straight so they can pass dozen local scholarships, and I am working to at M cDonald’s or a computer-training program. fund raise for one more. Several— out of even Today’s job training isn’t always free, and com pa­ 10,000— is a small drop in a very big bucket. We P PEACE OF MIND WITH MfcWMiniblind M A R K H U C K IN S FREE M EA SU R IN G FREE IN STA LLA TIO N $50 OFF On purchase over $500 Not valid with any other offer could probably burn up the national total o f sexual minority scholarships in Los Angeles alone. Scholarships can be rainbowed in variety. For people who have died of AIDS, there could be more memorial scholarships like the Peter Kaufman Memorial Scholarship, given by the Kaufmans, two parents who are commissioner colleagues of mine. There could be more diversity-minded big companies like AT&T, whose gay, lesbian, bi­ sexual and transgender employees persuaded their management to give scholarships to openly gay kids. Or PG&E in California, who partners with the Bay Area Network o f Gay and Lesbian Educa­ tors on scholarships. More local organizations like the Atlanta FrontRunners andtheM innesotaG LBT Education Fund, whooffertheir own scholarships to local stu­ dents. More national organiza­ tions like Parents, Families and Friends o f Lesbians and Gays, Gay and Lesbian Parents Coa- ^ lition International and Chil- V dren of Lesbians and Gays Ev- 0 erywhere, and more business organizations like the Greater Seattle Business Association, who all sponsor scholarships. More foundations like Uncom­ mon Cause, who gives scholar- ships to lesb ian s, because women are more often in an economic shadow. Fund-raising possibilities abound, to tweak the imaginations o f our most financially creative citizens. The Gay and Lesbian Issues Committee o f the United Teachers o f Los Angeles did “ Bowl­ ing for Dollars” for their Stonewall Scholarship. The Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Education C om ­ mission got money the hard way— selling candy, holding bake sales and yard sales. Students them ­ selves are banding together to create scholar­ ships— for example, the Liberty Foundation group at Middle Tennessee State University. At O cci­ dental College, the Lam bda Emergency Scholar­ ship Fund, given by the Bisexual Gay and Lesbian Alliance, is a model o f student-based financial aid. In Oregon, the outdoor variety show Peacock in the Park raises thousands o f dollars each year to benefit the Audria M. Edwards Youth Scholar­ ship Fund. At the graduate level, the National Scholar­ ship Fund for Gay and Lesbian Students needs to be vastly supported if it is going to sweep all our needy students through a masters in any subject. On the side, we also need more community businesses and more national organizations like Gay, Lesbian, Straight Teachers Network, who will volunteer job training, low-interest loans and paid internships to sexual minority students. Many kids badly need volunteers who will show them the ropes about job interviews, resumes, personal appearance, etc. Some scholarship prospects also need doctors and clinics to volunteer free medical help— and I don’t even include treatment for sexually trans­ mitted diseases here. AIDS is far from being the only health problem that these kids face. I’ve seen an astonishing amount o f stress-related problems among the kids I know— from thyroid problems to ulcers. There’s Celia, an 18-year-old who landed a scholarship in spite of her ulcers, but has a ton of medical bills to pay on top of her financial aid. There’s Alberto, a straight-A high-school senior, who may be developing diabetes and has no access to his family’s medical insurance. I’ve seen kids whose teeth are falling out because they’ve been out since age 14 and their families refused to foot their dentist bills. What are these students to do? Succeed in reaching college, only to falter there because o f mounting health problems? Last but not least, we need professional, re­ sponsible tutoring for kids driven out of their home high schools by bias— students who are struggling to pass their GED test and get college-bound. To a kid who has nothing, even $500 is a lot of money. $500 buys books. It buys some applica­ tion fees for college. The kids we help today will be our achievers o f the millennium. The ones we d on’t help— even the bright ones— may end up am ong the homeless or chronically jobless of 2001. O r they may provide still more heart-wrench- ing suicide statistics. As Hillary Clinton says, it takes a village to raise a child. But it also takes a village— ours— to put that kid through school, and launch him or her into economic independence and a proud self- fulfilling career. Note: Infoseek and other search engines are a good start on locating LGBT scholarship information on the Internet. Search under "Gay and Lesbian Scholarships" and “Financial Aid. ” One good Web site is Web Resources fo r Lesbigay Teens at http://alexia.lis.uiuc.edu/ ~chapman/index.html. For a more general search, try Fast Web, which offers personalized scholarship search on the Net. A good printed source is The Com plete Scholarship Book, published by Student Services Inc., available through most bookstores. 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