JANUARY 19. 2007 jUSt|OUt|l7 I can make your home buying or refinancing process very easy. Please call me to inquire about programs available to you. CHERYL BELL SR. MORTGAGE BROKER First Pacific Mortgage (503) 670-9515 phone cherylb@istpac.com • www.istpac.com FIRST PACIFIC tit ffl MORTGAGE mhmhmohi INTERESTED IN AUTO INSURANCE? The Baker's Dozen, a Yale University singing group that was harassed and beaten in San Francisco, is pictured during a 2006 retreat in Southampton, N.Y. to all noncurricular clubs, along with other civil rights violations. In July 2006 a federal judge issued a permanent injunction against the schixil, requir­ ing it to allow the GSA and other jchool clubs to meet. “Throughout the course of this lawsuit I’ve only wanted what every parent wants—for my children to be able to go to school in an environment that’s safe,” said Savannah Pacer, whose daughter Kerry, who has since graduated from high school, was the founding president of PRIDE. Her daughter Lindsay is also a member of the club. Federal courts have repeatedly ruled in favor of GSAs where schools tried to block their formation, upholding students’ right to form the groups in Salt Lake City; Orange County, Calif.; Franklin Township, Ind.; Boyd County, Ky.; and Osseo, Minn. MASSACHUSETTS Lawmakers Advance Anti-Equality Ballot Measure Massachusetts legislators, in their last session of the state’s 2006 constitutional convention Jan. 2, approved a citizen-initiated proposed ballot meas­ ure to end marriage equality for same-sex couples as a first step toward putting the measure on the 2008 ballot. The vote was 134 opposed and 62 in favor. Although a significant majority of legislators voted against the proposed measure, only 50 votes are required to move a citizen-initiated proposal forward. The measure must be similarly approved in the constitutional convention in 2007 in order to be on the ballot in 2008. “A minority of Massachusetts legislators approved sending to the voters a mean-spirited constitutional amendment seeking to end marriage equality for same-sex couples in the Bay State,” said Matt Foreman, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. “It is always wrong to put the rights of a minority up for a popular vote, and we are gratified that a strong majority of the Legislature voted against doing just that.” Since the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that the state’s constitution required that same- sex couples be permitted to marry and those mar­ riages began May 17, 2004, approximately 8,500 same-sex couples have married. Opponents of mar­ riage equality have sought a statewide ballot meas­ ure that would amend the constitution to prohibit same-sex marriage. A legislator-proposed amend­ ment to that effect was rejected in 2005. In 2006 a citizen-initiated proposal to that effect came before the Legislature sitting as a constitutional conven­ tion. Citizen-initiated proposals to amend the state constitution require approval of 25 percent of the legislators, or 50 votes, in two consecutive constitu­ tional conventions. CALL ME!!! DOUG MENELY 8606 SE 17th Ave • Portland, Or 97202 Phone: 503-238-1903 www.dougmenely.com DHARMA RAIN ZEN CENTER NEW YORK Trans Youth Compensated A lawsuit was settled Dec. 20 on behalf of a transgender youth who was denied appropriate medical treatment and punished for her gender expression in New York juvenile facilities. Alyssa Rodríguez, now 20 years old, is a trans­ gender woman who was deprived of her prescrip­ tion hormone medication and punished for her feminine hairstyle and other aspects of her gender expression by the Office of Children and Family Services (OCFS) while at the Red Hook Residential Center and other New York facilities from 2002 to 2003. She had been on hormone therapy from a young age and experienced both severe health consequences and emotional distress because of withdrawal symptoms after being forced to go without hormone treatment. “Alyssa is thrilled that OCFS is committed to ensuring that no other transgender youth in its care will have to endure the suffering she did,” said Rudy Estrada, staff attorney in Lambda Legal’s Youth in Out-of-Home Care Project. “We look forward to working with OCFS moving forward to give it all the information it needs to care for the transgender youth in its custody.” A complaint was filed against OCFS on Rodriguez’s behalf Jan. 11, 2006. As part of the settlement agreement, the ageycy has agreed to work with Lambda Legal over the next five years to evaluate its policies about transgender youth and to distribute information about advocacy groups to transgender and gender-nonconforming youth in its care. Rodriguez also received $25,000 through the settlement. 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