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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1998)
out » march & 199a PAU1 s Serving p p your in real c estate s CALIFORNIA CONDOS laiming Oakland is flouting a state labor commission ruling by continuing to offer domestic partner benefits only to same-sex cou ples, firefighter Allen Edwards filed a complaint against the city Feb. 13 seeking benefits for his female domestic partner. Despite last year’s ruling in a similar case by state Labor Commissioner Jose Millan that Oakland’s policy was discriminatory, the city has refused to budge— prompting the threat of a law suit by the state, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. M illan told reporters he expects to make a ruling in Edwards’ case within 60 days. ( 760 ) 833*5434 ¡fflaitoell* ■REALTORS« 211E. Palm Canyon Palm Springs, CA 92264 “M ake Y our D reams C ome T rue T oday ! ” STOCK CRASH? Pro Lab N.W. Inc. Kelati»nshi|)s?-Ht*iilth?-Work? 133 SE Madison Portland, OR 97214 C h icag o ’s domestic partnership ordinance, ■x which provides health benefits to partners of gay and lesbian city employees, withstood its first court challenge with a favorable ruling Feb. 10 from Cook County Circuit Court, the Chicago Tribune reports. The challenge was mounted by the pastor and several members of the Israel Methodist Community Church, who claimed the city had exceeded its home rule rights by offering the benefits. They also called the policy a threat to marriage. Judge Thomas Durkin ruled the city has the right to grant such benefits. T he plaintiffs plan to appeal. ( FULL SERVICE CUSTOM PHOTO LAB P S Y C H I C 1 - 9 0 0 - 7 4 0 -6 5 0 0 E X T . 8238 ' S . T . W !>*.•■- m i l l . M u s i I )i' I H V i s . S r i » - 1 I <r. l « > l ELLIPTICAL FITNESS Precor invented the concept. C ILLINOIS 503-231-1599 W hy settle for 2nd best when you can have the original? HP HTB m ibi § mJß needs for... V acation H omes H otel P roperties A partment B ldgs . C reg C ray rTÎTTTîTTTül news TRAINER Precor holds all the patents. Precor is suing all the imitators. Precor is in all the clubs. PRECOR'! O nly Precor has power elevation he state of Illinois plans to require doctors and clinics to report the names of people who test positive for HIV, according to a Feb. 12 Chicago Sun-Times report. Some public health officials say mandatory reporting, which will be implemented over the next three to four months, will ensure that those living with HIV receive proper counsel ing. Activists, however, argue that reporting will discourage people from getting tested for fear their names will be made public and they will be discriminated against. T C J The Standard by which all others are ju dged O n ly Precor lets you keep your foot flat throughout the range of motion. NO IMPACT I "you feel | l w eightless , I like you're 1 w alking on the m oon."* Walking Running StairClimbing Crosscountry Skiing PENNSYLVANIA n Feb. 10, the Roman C atholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia formally con demned three proposed city ordinances that would grant health and pension benefits to same-sex domestic partners of city employees, Reuters reports. Calling the legislation “destructive to our city’s moral and social structure,” Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua urged Mayor Ed Rendell and the city council to reject the measures when they come up for consideration later this year. T he ordinances, which were introduced in November, would add the term “life partner” to the language of existing laws governing pen sions and other benefits, hirings and promo tions, and exemptions from the city’s real estate transfer tax. Bevilacqua called the terminology coded language that is being used “to promote and protect homosexual relationships.” Rendell reportedly supports the proposals. O TEXAS he executive board of the statewide Baptist General Convention of Texas voted Feb. 24 to disassociate itself from Austin’s University Baptist Church because of that church’s support of sexual minorities. “We cannot approve of churches endorsing homosexual practice as biblically legitimate,” Fort Worth pastor Charles Davenport, head of the committee that drafted the motion, told T he Associated Press. T he church has had a tenuous relationship with the convention since it ordained an open ly gay deacon in 1994. It also drew fire for spon soring Open Circle, a ministry for gay men and lesbians. T he motion asks University Baptist to remove any claim of affiliation with the con vention from its literature and Internet site. The convention also will no longer accept money donated from the church for missionary programs. University Baptist Pastor Larry Bethune said the congregation will likely do as the conven tion asks. T NEW JER SEY E F X S .2 1 » O nly Precor is silky smooth and completely quiet. Kindinger was injured and later hospitalized. T he FBI is investigating the attack as a criminal violation of the students’ civil rights. he Boy Scouts of America’s ban on admit ting gay members violates New Jersey’s laws against discrimination, a state appeals court ruled March 2. According an Associated Press report, the court said the Scouts’ decision to dismiss Eagle Scout James Dale because he is gay should be overturned. An attorney for Dale said this is the first time any appeals court has ruled against the Boy Scouts in challenges to their exclusion of sexual minorities. T ouston Mayor Lee Brown signed an exec utive order Feb. 16 banning discrimina tion in city government on the basis of sexual orientation. H OHIO T è 9 0 0 Your Fitness Experts Available Exclusively At ojL E JU lß. 1 •800*659-0421 A 11 SC «2 n d A m . 120« M<ta Dr. 11 M l SW i M v . H IH td a U Hwy. Boovortof) T own Bouofo ith donations from area residents and a contribution from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, a reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the people responsible for a hate crime attack on two Miami University students has been increased to $6,000. According to United Press International, the January incident involved two unidentified men armed with baseball bats who shouted racist and anti-gay epithets while attacking black sophomore Christopher Kindinger, 19, and his white friend Robert Waite, 20, who attend the college in Oxford. Waite escaped and alerted authorities, but W “I have issued this order because I truly believe that the City of Houston should not dis criminate against anyone," the mayor said in a written statement. “This is the right thing to do.” According to the Houston Chronicle, Brown established the new policy through his execu tive order authority, which does not require a vote by the city council. In 1985, Houston voters overwhelmingly repealed an ordinance granting job protections to gay and lesbian city workers. Brown said Houston has changed since then. ■ Compiled by CHRISTOPHER D. CUTTONE