September 27, 2011

ITL Fellow in the News!

"Positive OUTLook" with Sara Luby
OUTtvPittsburgh/www.outonline.com
September 22nd, 2011



Sara stepped in to host Positive OUTLook this week as Nayck Feliz was out of town. Nayck's show is tagged: Health and Wellness in the LGBT Community in Pittsburgh and Beyond.

Sara works at the Positive Health Clinic at Allegheny General Hospital. We talked about ITL, my current projects, the Pittsburgh queer community 5-year plan, how great the acronym QUILTBAG is, and the recent rally in response to anti-gay violence in Boomfield. Great show! Thanks Sara & Nayck!

Thanks to the show's sponsors: Pitt Men's Study and Pittsburgh's OUT!

"Helping Transgender People Find a Voice" by Erika Beras
Essential Public Radio
September 21st, 2011


This radio piece is about voice coaches for transgender women. I make an appearance around 4:40 to talk about transgender voices. Erika and I had a great chat during the interview and we talked about Purchase College, where we both went to school.

Link: http://www.essentialpublicradio.org/story/2011-09-21/helping-transgendered-people-find-voice-7237

"Transgender Community Tries to Enlighten" by Tony Norman
Post-Gazette.com
September 16th, 2011


Tony Norman met Mad and I for dinner to talk through this piece about the ITL and the Stories on the Square event. We ended up talking even more about trans etiquette, trans representations and the trans community. Really a great opportunity to have an in depth conversation with Tony, who was so refreshingly up front about not knowing this or that about trans people. I've gotten a lot of good feedback about this article and I appreciate Tony for putting himself out there and spreading some good press about trans folks, and thanks to Mad for setting this up!

Link: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11259/1175033-153-0.stm

September 21, 2011

A thousand times - Thank You!

Last Friday's Stories on the Square event raised over $3100! What an amazing feat of teamwork and enthusiasm. Thanks to the Square Cafe for being exemplary hosts. Thanks to all of the performers--Madeleine Hershey, Vanessa German, Brian Broome, Phat Man Dee, and Christina Springer. And thanks to Wendy Bell for hosting. Thanks to everyone who donated raffle items, to everyone who attended and to everyone who got the word out. We had every seat filled, some tears were shed, lots of hugs, lots of laughs, and many pictures were taken. Speaking of which, post your pictures from the event and share them with ITL on Facebook!

Yesterday, Mad and Bobby and I were talking about how tough it is to track the kind of progress we are making, because so much of it is in face-to-face conversations, genuine enthusiasm, little shared moments, and personal triumphs. How do you put that on a grant application? That's not the point. We all know how we feel when we are working together on something bigger than all of us. But certainly, being able to say we raised this much and had that many attendees at such-and-such event will help us prove our worth when it comes to major fundraising efforts.

Thinking ahead (only 2 months!) to my final presentation. Hope you all are there and thanks again, really.

With love,
Ray

September 14, 2011

Building Change: A Convergence for Social Justice

Registration now open for October conference
Building Change: A Convergence for Social Justice

Registration is open for Three Rivers Community Foundation’s exciting social change conference, Building Change: A Convergence for Social Justice. This three-day conference will address several key issues, including Disability rights, Economic Justice, Environmental Justice, LGBT rights, Peace and Human rights, Racial Justice, and Women, Youth, and Families.

There will be skill building workshops, panel discussions, community dialogues on core issues, an art show, a film festival, round table discussions, and inspiring speakers, including our key-note speaker, Winona LaDuke.

Building Change isn’t only a convergence of ideas and core issues. It’s also a convergence of grass roots organizers, activists, and participants from 10 Southwestern PA counties, including: Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Fayette, Green, Indiana, Lawrence, Washington, and Westmoreland.

Building Change will run from October 13-15 at the Heinz History Center (1212 Smallman St, Strip District).

Ticket Prices:
Daily Tickets (Thurs-Sat): Sliding scale of $5-$10
Three-Day Convergence Pass (does not include nights): Sliding scale of $20 to $25
Thursday Evening Reception with Winona LaDuke: $25
Thursday and Friday Evening General Admission: $10
Film Festival Screening: Suggested donation of $5
All-Access Pass: $80

To learn more about the event mission and schedule, and how you can get involved visit:  www.buildingchangewpa.org

September 13, 2011

Pittsburgh's QUILTBAG Community 5 year Plan Meeting PART II


Summary of Findings
In regards to the question posed to participants: What is the Pittsburgh-area QUILTBAG community to you? Participants defined our community is a subculture, it is fractured, it is welcoming, it is different groups coming together, it is united by challenges and oppression, it is loosely connected, it is transient, it is Pride, it is our organizations & their programming, it is family/friends, it lacks a geographic center. There was hesitance to even say “community” as there are many communities and they don’t always come together.  Generally, participants expressed dismay and frustration about the extent of divisions within the QUILTBAG community. Divisions that came up: generational, racial, religious, queer men vs. queer women, ally vs. LGBTQ, political, regional, HIV status, economic.
In regards to where we want to see our community in 5 years, participants responded overwhelmingly with more. We want more resources (health, legal, emergency, housing) for youth, older adults, transpeople, sex workers, prison populations, etc. We want those resources to be accessible and up-to-date. We want more collaboration with allies, with a variety of organizations. We want more communication and more support for each other’s events and causes. More organizing around issues that affect some of us so they affect all of us—broadening what it means to be a QUILTBAG issue. For example, why isn’t Jordan Miles a queer issue? Why isn’t Marcellus Shale a queer issue? We want more discussion of, working on and unlearning racism within the community, and we want white people to take the lead more often on making that happen. We want events that are not in bars, substance-free, and welcoming to many different kinds of people within our community. We want Pittsburgh to become a queer destination, especially for young people and artists. We want to see the same enthusiasm about QUILTBAG issues year round and not just during Pride. We want more visibility and more people coming out. We want our allies to be educated. We want service providers, health care providers, and emergency responders to understand our issues. We want a space (preferably a building) that is self-sustaining and stands as a hub for the QUILTBAG community and provides event space, health care, a place to sleep, and youth services. Overall, intersectionality is huge and taking care of our own is huge. We can enact power to create change by unifying and bridging the gaps that divide us.
The Issues Gallery Crawl activity allowed participants to move around and record ideas about various issues apparent in our community. For each issue, there were two columns with something like the following: What is already happening? What needs to happen? That way, we have a space to focus on assets/the current state of things as well as generate ideas for change.

What a Pittsburgh-area QUILTBAG Community 5-Year Plan might look like
  • Mission statement (i.e. what the 5-year plan is what it stands for)
  • Vision (i.e. our ultimate goal for our community/communities)
  • Background and history (i.e. previous plans, progress made, where we go from here)
  • Structure of the plan (i.e. continuations committee, how to share the information)
  • Themes of change (i.e. intersectionality, collective organizing, expansion of resources)
  • Specific goals, steps to get there and timelines to measure success
[All information would be informed by ideas generated by this and future 5-year plan meetings]

September 12, 2011

Pittsburgh's QUILTBAG Community 5 year Plan Meeting PART I


QUILTBAG: queer/questioning, unsure/undecided/unisex, intersex, lesbian, transgender/transsexual, bisexual, asexual/ally, gay/genderqueer

Event Background and Planning
So where did the idea to hold a 5-year-plan meeting come from anyway? The Initiative for Transgender Leadership was created to enable leadership and professional development for transgender youth in Pittsburgh.One of the goals of the fellowship is to create positive change in the community.
Furthermore, this October 13-15th the Three Rivers Community Foundation will put on the first-ever Building Change: A Convergence on Social Justice conference [Registration is now open!], which will bring together community members to begin building a regional, cross-issue movement. One of the goals of the conference is to generate a community-generated Action Plan to build social justice movements in the region.
Additionally, on June 22nd, representatives from organizations that serve the QUILTBAG community were invited to attend a workshop on “Creating a Successful Internship Program” with the Regional Internship Center (a program of Coro Pittsburgh). I led a discussion following the workshop on community assets and challenges, and how to create a better community through the use of successful internship programs. This conversation sparked interest for more group discussion on community issues.
Why not get started on creating an action plan for the QUILTBAG community? That way, our community can have something more complete to bring to the table at the conference. Generating these discussions also has a positive impact within the community: building coalitions, bringing community members into the same space to share ideas, creating a more comprehensive image of the community, etc.
More than 130 people were invited to the meeting to begin creating a 5 year plan for the QUILTBAG community. Invitees were encouraged to fill out a registration form that would give them an opportunity to RSVP as well as contribute ideas, even if they could not attend. Responses to “Top 3 Community Challenges” were added to a list that was available for attendees to draw ideas from.
Fifty-seven people attended the meeting at United Cerebral Palsy. Originally the meeting was to be held at the GLCC, but because of difficulties with the handicapped accessibility, it was decided to change the location.

Structure of the Meeting
            There was time for a mixer between 6:30 and 7pm and attendees could talk, schmooze, peruse fliers and resources, sign in, and eat snacks. The meeting itself ran from 7-9pm. Eight tables were set up with eight chairs for each. Markers and note-taking paper were provided.
            Etta C., Lizzie A. and I co-facilitated. Jessica M. provided ASL interpretation. Anne L. provided vegan/gluten-free/soy-free desserts. The meeting begun with introductions, a quick background, and setting the meeting ground rules (for example: speak from your own experience, notice who is talking and who isn’t). Attendees were asked to introduce themselves to the rest of their own tables to cut down on go-around time. Two shorter brainstorming activities generated ideas about what the QUILTBAG community is to us and where would we like it to be in 5 years. Participants were encouraged to think big. The longer activity asked participants to walk around and write down ideas on large paper based on central themes (generated by the registration forms). This was called a “Gallery Crawl”. After each activity, participants reported back to the group. At the end, we evaluated the meeting.

September 8, 2011

What happens when queers speak out against violence

On Wednesday, August 24th I got 5 text messages within 2 minutes about a friend of mine who had been held at gunpoint for walking hand-in-hand with her girlfriend in Bloomfield. Would I come to a rally in front of the Pleasure Bar that night and show some solidarity with my queer brothers and sisters? Of course. In the meanwhile I wept in my cube thinking about the futility of community organizing while people I care about are getting guns shoved in their faces for being queer.

I got word on the way to the rally that the cops had told people to move and everyone was moving to Friendship Park. I showed up around 7:30, half an hour after the official start. Some people had gone to the park already when I arrived, some remained. I wanted to stay in front of the bar too. In front of the Pleasure Bar is where another community member was hit in the face by a homophobe a year ago. We had a huge rally when that happened. Over a hundred of us probably stood on the sidewalk in front of the bar and got a lot of attention. Some media crews showed up, people spoke and cheered and we took up SPACE. It was amazing. Cops showed up mostly to keep us safe and stayed out of our way.

This time around it was clear things were different. When everyone got to the park, all the energy left us. It was downright boring. We weren't doing anything! We could have all just been hanging out and no one passing by would know that we were angry about something very specific that happened just over there, if only we could stand there and protest in peace like it is our right to do so.

Word got around that the cops said we couldn't block the sidewalk in front of Pleasure Bar but we could rally in the park or march, as long as we kept moving. So people started to move again. We wanted to take the streets! Show that anti-gay violence is not to be tolerated in our community! We wanted people to see us and wonder what happened and join us. But we got less than 2 blocks when cops started showing up. By the time I got in front of Nico's the cops already had one of us in cuffs held against a car! What did they do? I had no idea. I started filming. There was a round of "Let them go!" but now that they had one of us they weren't gonna back down. What did the cops do next? Called in more backup - a few scary K9 teams and a paddy wagon. Everyone froze. Why were they arresting people? Someone was arrested for asking. Scared and defeated, we made our way back to the park. Some kid yelled "fuck you!" to a cop. Yeah, like that helps AT ALL.

Once back at the park, anger and tension hit a peak. People shared information, hugged, felt like crying, uploaded pictures of the arrests, watched more and more police vehicles take over the church parking lot, watched our toes to make sure we stayed off the sidewalks and heaven forbid incur more wrath from the police. Where were the police the other night when my friend had a gun pulled on her?

I stood dazed and watched it all. The sun was setting. Channel 4 finally showed up and took some interviews. By that time, half the group had left. I was introduced to a man who was beaten so badly in Wilkinsburg a couple of weeks ago that his jaw was still broken. Why didn't we show up for him? I heard story after story about cops being unhelpful or downright abusive to queers for reporting incidents.

I know police reports could have been filed sooner. Yeah, we could write up a report for the Citizens Review Board or whatever. Yeah, we could wait 5 years for some inadequate cultural competency trainings for the city police. But we were angry NOW. We had something to say NOW. We were fearless together and we wanted to make the homophobes so scared by our love for each other that they would never show their faces again in Bloomfield or anywhere in the city that we love. We wanted to be SEEN. Not as "violent protesters", not as a rag-tag bunch of weirdos, but as a group of people who may not all know each other but could damn well show up (with posters, too!) at short notice to say "Pick on one of us and you pick on all of us!" (to steal a phrase from Ocean's sign :)

We clearly have the energy and the passion. Let's clarify our message, get it organized and keep showing up -- cops or no!

[Afterword: It recently came to my attention that the first time the cops heard about the rally was when a neighbor called the cops in earnest--not wanting this sort of thing to happen--and the cop said he couldn't do anything about us being there cause that is allowed. No one called the cops to give them a heads up about the rally which is what happened at the last one and gave us some credibility. We need to spread to the word about this kind of info. What are our rights when it comes to police interaction? How do we interact with the media to get the best possible representation? Workshops anyone? --R.S. 9/9]

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More coverage of this event, some clearly better than others:

Missing the Point: Protest arrests highlight disconnect between cops, LGBT community by Lauren Daley
Bloomfield Queer Rally: LGBT or was it an anarchist event? by Thomas C. Waters
Bloomfield Queer Rally: at the hearings by Thomas C. Waters
Only on 4: Gay Rights Demonstrators Taken Into Custody After Protest by "Crap Here, Crap Now" WTAE
Man arrested in gay rally on probation for G-20 by Pittsburgh "I Missed the Point" Tribune-Review
Protesters arrested at Bloomfield anti-homophobia rally by Pittsburgh "What's a rally?" Post-Gazette
YouTube: Arrests in Bloomfield at Anti-Violence Rally