Community
The Oregonian editorial board thinks Oregon shouldn't wait until 2014
for a vote on gay marriage. On November 10 the board suggested that
2014 is too long of a wait, writing the legislature should take the cause
up pronto, undoing the Oregon constitutional amendment that defines
marriage as "one man, one woman." Since that amendment passed
Oregon has changed, The O. claims, and is ready for, gay marriage. But
newly named Speaker of the House, Tina Kotek, told The O. that she
thinks this is an issue for the community and not the legislature. The O.
team believes the misdirected amendment shouldn't be on the books a
day longer than it has to be and calls for the legislature to get the issue
on the ballot in 2013.
(POLITICS)
Go Washington!
NOT ONLY DID OUR NEIGHBORS TO THE NORTH, WASHINGTON
STATE, PASS A HISTORIC MEASURE ALLOWING SAME SEX MAR-
RIAGE, THEY WERE AMONG THE FIRST STATES TO DO SO BY VOTE
RATHER THAN THE COURT SYSTEM OR LEGISLATURE. MAINE AND
MARYLAND ALSO PASSED LAWS FOR CIVIL MARRIAGE RIGHTS AT
THE BALLOT BOX. THIS ELECTION BRINGS THE TOTAL NUMBER OF
STATES THAT ALLOW GAY MARRIAGE TO NINE, IN ADDITION TO
THE THREE STATES THAT RECOGNIZE MARRIAGES BETWEEN TWO
MEN OR TWO WOMEN PERFORMED OUTSIDE STATE LINES. AT
THE SAME TIME, MINNESOTA VOTERS REJECTED A BALLOT MEA-
SURE THAT WOULD HAVE ENSHRINED AN ANTI-GAY MARRIAGE
LAW IN THEIR CONSTITUTION, AND NEIGHBORING WISCONSIN
ELECTED TAMMY BALDWIN AS THE COUNTRY'S FIRST OPENLY GAY
U.S. SENATOR.
(FILM)
Da' Bears
The independent film Bearcity2: The Proposal is having its Port-
land premiere December 7 - 9 at the Clinton St. Theatre. Director
Doug Langway is flying in (all the way from a previous premier in
Germany) and will be at all screenings. Portland is home to one of
the biggest bear communities in the world — the Oregon Bears.
bearcity2.com
(NORTHWEST)
World AIDS Day
On December 1, around the world and throughout the United
States, communities will come together to mark the 24th annual
World AIDS Day. To commemorate the day and raise awareness
throughout Oregon and SW Washington, local and global HIV/AIDS
service organizations have collaborated to launch the World AIDS
Day Northwest campaign with a message of “Getting to Zero – One
Person at a Time.” With 33 million people infected world-wide with
HIV and 1.1 million in the U.S., the goal of the campaign is to mobilize
schools, faith-based organizations, businesses and community-based
organizations to become involved in raising awareness, bolstering
HIV prevention efforts and ensuring hope for those already infected.
Local area AIDS organizations have come together to create a web-
site to serve as a hub of information for World AIDS Day in Oregon
and SW Washington. worldaidsdaynw.org
20
JustOut.com
Rep. TIna Kotek
(POLITICS)
Speaker Kotek
Oregon State Representative Tina Kotek will be the first open-
ly lesbian politician to lead a state legislative chamber in the
United States. Kotek, featured in Just Out last September, was
selected by her Democratic peers November 15 to be the
Oregon Legislature's Speaker of the House during the 2013
session. The decision will become final in January. Gay leaders
also will control the House or Senate in four other states: Wash-
ington, California, Colorado and Rhode Island, according to
The Huffington Post. Senator Ed Murray was elected majority
leader in Washington. Kotek represents District 44 in Portland.
Cascade AIDS Project Executive Director Michael Kaplan left
November 15 to accept the position of President and CEO of
AIDS United, a national nonprofit headquartered in Washington
DC committed to ending the AIDS epidemic in the U.S. Jackie
Yerby, CAP's Board Chair said, "…the Board feels well-positioned
to guide CAP through the next transition as we begin an Execu-
tive Search. CAP is a very strong organization. We have a top-
notch team of Directors as well as a group of staff and volunteers
who are deeply committed to CAP's mission." cascadeaids.com
(VIDEO)
BRO Videos
Basic Rights Oregon has just put out two video campaigns celebrating
two-spirit families and trans justice. The trans justice video was a first-
of-its-kind, discussing trans experiences of health care discrimination;
eight incredible community members are joined by two allies to share
struggles, joys, and triumphs regarding trans-inclusive care.
Our Families is a community-based education project that raises the
visibility of LGBT families of color in our communities. As part of BRO’s
ongoing education campaign, this video highlights the unique trials
and triumphs of Native American Two-Spirit LGBT families. A special
screening was held on November 12th at the Native American Rehabil-
itation Association of the Northwest (NARA ). It included a panel with
the courageous families who shared their stories and a fun social hour.
basicrights.org
December 2012