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July 2010

July 26, 2010

Thank you for an amazing Pride and Open House!

RU12? wants to thank the hard working group of volunteers who organized another awesome Pride this year! From the week of fun and educational events to the parade, festival and evening events on Saturday - we had an amazing time celebrating our beautifully diverse LGBTQ community and we hope you did too!

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We also want to thank everyone who attended our Open House on Sunday, especially Winooski Mayor Michael O'Brien and Winooski City Manager Deac Deccareau (seen below) who gave us a warm welcome to our new home city. Thank you to everyone who attended, brought the yummy food and gifts even! We had a great time and now the new Center is officially broken in - thank you so much for all your support!


Also check out this Burlington Free Press article about our Open House:

 http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201007260600/NEWS02/100725017

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July 21, 2010

Join us at Pride on Saturday and at our new space on Sunday!

Lots happening this weekend for Pride, hope to see you at one of these events:

Come March with us on Saturday! It's so much fun to show off the diversity of our community by marching through downtown Burlington in the Pride parade with lots of other groups, organizations and community members. We hope you can join RU12?! The Parade is at Noon, but decorating the float begins at 10:30 at the Hood Plant off S. Winooski and King.

Visit our Table at the Festival from 1-4pm at Battery Park on Saturday! Buy a cool RU12? shirt and/or water bottle, pick up a calendar, and visit with staff, board and volunteers!

Come see our new digs on Sunday from 2:30-5pm Champlain Mill, Winooski! Read the press release below for more on our new space and the press conference and open house this Sunday...

HAPPY PRIDE!

Continue reading "Join us at Pride on Saturday and at our new space on Sunday!" »

July 19, 2010

Primary Candidate Forum Tonight!

July 19, 2010

July 15, 2010

SafeSpace participates in the release of the National Hate Crime Report.....

NCAVP Logo with Tagline 2010.jpg

 

MEDIA RELEASE

                                                

July 13, 2010

 

Media contact: Roberta Sklar 917.704.6358 

*Regional Media Contacts Listed Below                           

 

Report of hate violence against Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, transgender and Queer (LGBTQ) commuinities released today

 

·         Murders at second-highest rate in a decade;

·         Spike in anti-LGBTQ violence at time of federal hate crimes law passage;

·         Economic crisis depletes resources for LGBTQ survivors of violence

 

NATIONAL— The National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs (NCAVP) today released its report on Hate Violence against the LGBTQ Communities in the United States in 2009.  Anti-LGBTQ hate violence continues to be a pervasive social problem at the same time as vital resources and support for hate violence survivors are at risk amidst economic crisis.  This year, 22 victims of hate murder were reported by NCAVP, the second-highest rate in a decade, reflecting a pattern of severe and persistent violence against LGBTQ communities.  Notably, NCAVP saw the highest spike in reported incidents of violence in October 2009, coinciding with the passage of the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act.  This statistic seems to reflect a correlation between increased visibility and increased vulnerability and targeting.  Despite these disturbing trends, financial support and much needed services for hate violence survivors have only declined due to ongoing economic conditions. 

 Of the 22 reported hate murder victims in 2009, 79% were people of color, and most were transgender women or were feminine-presenting.  As evidenced in this report, members of traditionally marginalized communities continue to be disproportionately targeted for severe violence.  “These facts are deeply disturbing as these are the same people who are more likely to face discrimination, criminalization or further violence when interacting with criminal legal and social service systems.  What we see is that they are less likely to seek and access support from these institutions,” said Maria Carolina Morales, Intervention Director of Community United Against Violence (CUAV) in San Francisco.

 During the past year, NCAVP member organizations lost crucial staff and programming in the wake of the fiscal crisis.  In a survey of members participating in this report, 50% of respondents laid off staff (at an average decrease of 56% of all positions), 70% reported budget decreases, and others could not expand positions, staff hours or programming, despite a demonstrated need for such growth.  We believe that this drastically limited the ability of LGBTQ people to report violence and access vital support and services in 2009,” said Lisa Gilmore, Director of Education and Victim Advocacy at Center on Halsted in Chicago.  “While the total number of reported incidents of hate violence declined slightly in 2009, we suspect that this represents a decrease in reporting, not in actual violence.”

 “For many people, acts of hate violence come to be an expected part of being lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or queer,” said Kelly Clark, Community Safety Director at the Gay Alliance of the Genesee Valley in Rochester, NY. “Hate violence exists in many forms, ranging from hate speech to sexual assault and murder.  All can be traumatic and have life-long impact.”

 Many of the incidents reported to NCAVP, such as intimidation, harassment and other forms of discrimination (62%), may not fall in the category of criminal acts.  Ann Atkins, Program Director of SafeSpace at the R U 1 2? Community Center in Winooski, VT, states, “Hate violence can be challenged by everyone, on all levels, by working with and reporting even what seem to be the slightest acts to local anti-violence programs.  This sort of reporting supports efforts to prevent the escalation of incidents as well as document the scope of anti-LGBTQ hate in our communities.”

 NCAVP’s report strongly recommends that the federal and state governments and criminal legal systems support anti-violence programs by ceasing cutbacks, releasing allocated funding and increasing funding for prevention, education, and data collection.  Most critically, NCAVP calls upon these institutions to end discriminatory practices that further promote anti-LGBTQ hate violence.

  “Ending anti-LGBTQ hate violence will require nothing less than a profound cultural shift supported at all levels of society,” said Crystal Middlestadt, Director of Education & Advocacy at the Colorado Anti-Violence Program.  “Educators, lawmakers, service providers and the general public must support the work of anti-violence programs and LGBTQ people to transform a culture of hate into one that is inclusive, healthy and safe for all.” 

 

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This report  is a product of the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs (NCAVP), a coalition of 40 anti-violence organizations that monitor, respond to, and work to end hate, domestic and sexual violence, HIV-related violence, and other forms of violence affecting LGBTQ communities.  As demonstrated in the above map, fifteen NCAVP member organizations from the Pacific Coast, the Southwest, the Midwest and the Northeast collected data for this report.  No programs reported from the Southeast or the South, due to a highly limited number of programs and resources.  NCAVP member organizations are found in 22 states throughout the country and many are the single resource in their entire state.

 While this report covers hate violence in 2009, NCAVP would like to acknowledge an important report published today by New York City Stands in Solidarity with the Puerto Rican Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community on more recent incidents.  This network of non-profit organizations and elected officials in New York City and State organized in the spring of 2010 to monitor and respond to recent heinous and ongoing acts of hate violence affecting the Puerto Rican LGBT communities.

 To download a complete version of the report, visit: http://www.avp.org/ncavp.htm.

 

July 09, 2010

One step closer to federal marriage equality...

From our friends at GLAD (Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders):

July 08, 2010

Today, U.S. District Court Judge Joseph L. Tauro ruled that Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) is unconstitutional with respect to claims brought by seven married same-sex couples and three widowers from Massachusetts. Under the ruling, the plaintiffs are entitled to the same federal spousal benefits and protections as every other married couple.

The ruling stems from GLAD's lawsuit Gill et al v. Office of Personnel Management et al, filed in March 2009.

"Today the Court simply affirmed that our country won't tolerate second-class marriages," says Mary Bonauto, GLAD's Civil Rights Project Director, who argued the case. "I'm pleased that Judge Tauro recognized that married same-sex couples and surviving spouses have been seriously harmed by DOMA and that the plaintiffs deserve the same opportunities to care and provide for each other and for their children that other families enjoy. This ruling will make a real difference for countless families in Massachusetts."

July 08, 2010

Primary Candidate Forum July 19th 6:30-8pm

Hello folks! As the Executive Director of RU12? and member of the planning committee for the upcoming candidate forum I wanted to share this message from the planners and also to say I am thrilled that there is so much interest in the candidate forum! Having never planned a candidate forum before our organizations weren't sure what the interest level would be, so it is great to see how many people care about electing officials who care about our community. The forum is taking place on Monday, July 19th 6:30-8pm at the Champlain Auditorium at Champlain College in Burlington. So thank you for being engaged and thank you for voting, it does make a difference, Kara

Dear Community Member,

Thank you for your interest in the gubernatorial candidate forum on July 19th.

We would like clarify that this forum is for those candidates who are facing a primary on August 24th. We apologize if there was confusion about the purpose of this event. Before the general election please look for a notice about an event to which all gubernatorial candidates will be invited.

Sincerely,

Elizabeth Batsford, Samara Foundation Deputy Director

Kara DeLeonardis, RU12? Community Center Executive Director

Melissa Murray, Outright Vermont Executive Director

Peter Jacobsen , Vermont CARES Executive Director

Sheryl Rapee Adams, Freedom to Marry Taskforce Field Director

 

July 05, 2010

Todd’s Peek at: Augusten Burroughs "Magical Thinking, True Stories"

Todd's Peek  I have never read Augusten Burroughs before now.  He is a contemporary satrical writer in America today.  Magical Thinking is a book in expose form as a cross-section to his writing.  His writing include: Running with Scissors, Dry, A Memoir and Possible Side Effects, for example.  He writes with his own biographical sketch as a literary device.  This really and truly adds to the parody on life he shares with us the reader! 

I read a cross-section of stories from Magical Thinking.  I decided to skip around through the various chapters and not read them in any particular order.  My favorites to this collection are: “Commercial Break”, “Transfixed By Transsexuals”, “Magical Thinking”, “Ass Burger”.  They speak of parody on life in America  in particular.  There is also a definitive vantage to writing from his life as  biographical sketch. It’s  the proverbial parody the reader sees, the adage we are all part of the bigger picture whether we like it or not!  His stories are vignettes with social message.  Within each short story,  multi-dimensional attitudes on life give the emotional content we see Augusten Burroughs create as discerning truth.  The satire is in the writing and the writing is so crisp and clean, so funny and well-versed! 

Hereto there are eccentric moments which span Magical Thinking.   He is deliberate in the way he writes and thinks.  Magical Thinking is a real page turner and so is Augusten Burroughs one might say, as euphemistic.  I laugh with the delivery of these eccentric stories.  They espouse life and the need to understand signifying the meaning to his own biographical sketch as a part of the writing.  Augusten Burroughs himself  is a gay man and the characterization of being gay for him is a part of the much bigger parody to life on the planet as we know it.  Therein lies the multi-dimensional awareness to the read, which the reader also sees through his clear, crisp writing as satire about Life on the Planet, imagine that!  

The notion of Augusten’s writing (to me) refers back to being human in a Doggie Dog World.  To me, it’s also the satirical weave for having the conscious of being gay, whereas the world’s culture and society itself is overripe with its own social morays and social attitudes!  Being human is an expose for us all to understand as satire! In America, we need to reflect on life more readily, to see that the reflexive principle is in each of us,  and to move forward in and out of The Parody we are all a part of, without feeling too ingrained. To live out are lives on the planet in truth to the existence of Life as is, whether we are to be gay or really smart, black or white as notion, if you will.  We innately do the best we can do, especially when our intent and actions speak to That Need!  We cannot expect what we believe in or about ourselves to be the only truth as the Soul Collective!  In the scheme of life itself, there is always the adage  to life, Life is  Parody that is!   Thus there will always be the need for the proverbial relationship, to always satirize the  nature of things, as real and funny too! The Collective Soul is then the ultimate means to end as well as ends to a mean; for the making of this doggie dog World we all live in.  That’s  funny as  prospectus to the real world and Augusten’s  Magical Thinking as the point in case to this review, imagine that!

We have a number of Augusten Burroughs books, so dare to challenge yourself by heading on over to “our new digs” and “dig in” to a worthy Augusten Burroughs read for yourself.  As always!  Ciao, Todd

July 01, 2010

Our new home!

It's official! We are Winooski residents!IMG_4419

Thank you so much to the fantastic volunteers who provided brawn and support in our move this week to our new home! The windows are open, we're listening to the falls outside, and are busy setting up networks, phone lines, and the community spaces. We can't wait to show it off to you on July 6th, when we reopen to the public!

And please join us Sunday, July 25th 3-5pm for our post-Pride Open House!

Here's how to find us... 

From the rotary in Winooski, take Winooski Falls Way to the Champlain Mill (visible from the rotary). Free two-hour parking is available directly outside the building. While facing the Mill, head up the ramp on the left side of the building. You will be on the 3rd floor. An elevator is on your left upon entering the building, or you can take the staircase down to the River level (1st floor). We are in the south-eastern corner of the first floor, and have our sign up in the window!

We're not on the directories yet, but we will be soon! Our official new address is 20 Winooski Falls Way, Suite 102, Winooski, VT 05404.

Can't wait to see you here!Ru12atMilledited

Kara, Hannah, Brenda, Mike and Ann 

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