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A L G B T I C A L

Association for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender
Issues in Counseling of Alabama

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CURRENT COMMENTS

Thoughtful Observations

 

 


LEGISLATIVE ALERT

Opposition to New Senate Bill

 

May 2011

 

Senate Bill 46

Health Care Rights of Conscience Act

 

Alabama counselors are being alerted to Senate Bill 46, called the Health Care Rights of Conscience Act. Section 5 and 6 lines 14 and 24 clearly include counselors, faculty and students in this bill, which allows providers to refuse services to individuals when the provider’s values or beliefs conflict with client needs. 

 

Jeanell Norvell (2011/2012 ALGBTICAL President) sent a letter to Senator Ross in montgomery opposing Senate Bill 46 and she is asking ALGBTICAL members and ALCA counselors statewide to do the same (by May 24).

 

Jenell states, "As a Licensed Professional Counselor and counselor educator in the state of Alabama, I can tell you, this bill is not in line with the American Counseling Association’s Code of Ethics which specifically states counselors may not discriminate against clients on the basis of age, culture, disability, ethnicity, race, religion/spirituality, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, marital status/partnership, language preference, socioeconomic status or any basis proscribed by law.  In short counselors do not discriminate against clients on the basis of client characteristics.  As a profession we are charged with putting our clients needs ahead of our own values and beliefs."

 

LINKS:

 

ACA Article: Legal Findings
Senate Bill 46
Letter to Senator Ross
Contact Your Senator 

 

Jenell further states, "I am asking you to contact your Senator directly by May 24th when the session reconvenes and ask him or her to oppose this bill.  I have attached both a copy of the bill for you and a copy of the letter I personally sent to my senator.  Please do not use the same letter I sent. Make your language personal.  Yes, we will be addressing the issue as an organization and working with ALCA and other divisions. However, your personal involvement by contacting your senator is extremely important."

 


COVER STORY

Working With LGBT Clients

 

May 2011

 

Counseling Today Magazine Features Cover Story on LGBT Issues
 

The May 2011 Issue (Vol 53, No. 11) of the American Counseling Association publication, Counseling Today, featured a cover story on working with LGBT clients.

 

Senior writer Lynne Shallcross's article (pages 24-32), entitled, "Come and be who you are," asserts that counselors in all arenas can provide a safe, accepting place for LGBT clients to work through diverse issues.  Among others, Shallcross interviews ALGBTIC President Michael Chaney.

 

Also, in the April 2011 edition of Counseling Today, Michael Chaney (along with co-authors Filmore and Goodrich) wrote an article entitled, "No More Sitting on the Sidelines," in which he confronts the growing discussion within our profession about the need for competent counselors to work with LGBTQQI clients in an affirming manner. He says, "Largely, the discussion has focused on the inadequate training many counselors receive related to counseling these populations."  In the article he offers practical strategies for working with LGBTQQI clients on issues of heterosexism and transphobia, coming out and bullying.

 

LINKS:
 

Counseling Today Article: No More Sitting on the Sidelines
 

 


FOCUS ON FAMILY CONFERENCE

Protest Against Birmingham Event

 

November 2009

 

Successful Demonstration by Local LGBT Activists!
ALGBTICAL Members Joined Colleagues to Protest FOF Event!

 

Several gay rights organizations in Alabama announced that they planned to protest the Focus on the Family "Love Won Out" conference on homosexuality that was held November 7, 2009, at Metropolitan Church of God.

"They're telling you to hate your child unless he lives the way you tell him to live," said Johnathan Quinn, president of Central Alabama Pride, one of the protesting organizations. "Their literature tells the parents to abandon their children unless they go this route: forcing them to be straight."

 




A peaceful protest was conducted on public right of way near the entrance of the church, facing Interstate 459 near the Acton Road exit. Central Alabama Pride, Equality Alabama, Parents and Friends of Lesbians & Gays of Birmingham, Human Rights Campaign, Integrity, and Covenant Community Church are among those who took part in the protest. Some ALGBTICAL members were also on hand to support the protest.  Wayne Besen of Truth Wins Out joined the group and lent his support.  Participants described the event as a demonstration in support of LGBT people and to publicly acknowledge disagreement for the anti-lgbt message promoted by this conference. 

LINKS:

 

Read the Birmingham News Article
Learn More About LGBT Issues and Religion
Visit the Love Won Out Conference Website
Visit the Focus on the Family Website
Visit the Exodus International Website
 



The conference teaches that those with same-sex attractions can change, said Melissa Fryrear, director of gender issues for Focus on the Family and one of the speakers. "We're offering a Christian perspective on the many issues surrounding homosexuality," Fryrear said. "The majority attending are moms and dads who have a son or daughter living in homosexuality. We're here to help parents who don't condone their child's behavior but still love them."

In a recent quarter-page advertisement in the Birmingham News, Focus on the Family promoted their Birmingham-bound conference with these words:

When we heard the words, "Mom and Dad, I'm gay," we didn't know what to say.  In the midst of your questions, confusion and grief, Focus on the Family is here to help...  Our Love Won Out conference offers biblical responses to the sensitive issues of homosexuality... Aid to parents who want to better love their sons and daughters without compromising their faith...  understand the factors that might lead to someone adopting a homosexual identity...  assist those who struggle with unwanted same-sex attractions and overcoming those desires...
 



Fryrear said Focus on the Family does not want parents to shun homosexual children.  "One of our messages is helping parents stay in a relationship with their gay-identified child," Fryrear said. "Moms and dads shouldn't have to relinquish their religious convictions."

Quinn said homosexuality is not a choice.   "Their terminology is 'ex-gay,'" Quinn said. "If it were a choice, I would not choose to live this way; it's so difficult. We're born this way."

Fryrear said she understands that sentiment.  "As to not choosing, we would agree," Fryrear said. "We don't think people choose these feelings. It's an extremely complicated struggle." But Focus on the Family asserts that science has not proved homosexuality to be a genetic condition. "Science hasn't proved people are born gay," Fryrear said. "It's absolutely an open question. Part of the message is to read the studies that have been done. They'll see there's no evidence proving homosexuality is genetic. It's a multi-causal struggle, and there are a number of factors that may make one vulnerable."

 

ALTERNATE VIEWPOINTS

LINKS:

 

Equality Alabama
Central Alabama Pride
Human Rights Campaign
Parents & Friends of Lesbians & Gays
Gay Lesbian Straight Education Network
Gay Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation
National Gay Lesbian Task Force
SoulForce

 



Several of the speakers at the conference consider themselves "ex-gay," she said. "A number of us have come out of homosexuality in our lives," Fryrear said. "It's certainly a personal issue for us. Many of us for years identified as gay or lesbian. Our stories can vary on different levels. We came to a point where living homosexually was incompatible with our Christian faith."

People have a right to change, Fryrear said.  "People who are dissatisfied with living homosexually have a right to steward their sexuality according to their personal and religious beliefs," she said. "We're advocates for parents and for people who want to pursue another option, other than living in homosexuality."

 




LINKS
:

 

Truth Wins Out Press Release
Denver Post: Focus on Family Giving Up Its Gay Workshops
Wayne Besen Article: Anything But Straight, Silence in the Face of Scandal
Straight Not Narrow Blog Spot
Wayne Besen's Website
Videos: Wayne Besen on YouTube

 


ALGBTICAL PRESIDENT RESPONDS
Commentary by Michael Lebeau


In the wake of reaction to the upcoming Focus on the Family conference on homosexuality, scheduled for November 7, 2009 in Birmingham, local gay advocacy groups are compelled to offer protest against efforts that would seek to demean lesbian and gay people.  Moreover, in the interest of airing an alternate perspective, these gay advocacy groups would like to provide further information on the much misunderstood subject of sexual orientation and gender identity.

 

Professional advocacy organizations like the Association of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Issues in Counseling of Alabama would like to suggest that supportive and respectful approaches to dealing with issues of sexual orientation and gender identity are more helpful and less harmful than the judgmental and demeaning approaches offered by groups intent on promoting their own narrow ideological agenda.

 

Young people, and indeed people of all ages, who are confused about or questioning their sexual orientation or gender identity often feel alienated and marginalized by the systematic demonization sponsored by groups whose ignorance of and insensitivity to the complexities of sexual orientation and gender identity foster an atmosphere of oppression and hatred.  Heterosexism, homophobia, and other forms of oppression lead to discrimination, prejudice, bigotry, harassment, and violence.

 

Local gay advocacy groups have been working diligently for some time now to address the critical issues of bullying in the schools, harassment on the college campuses, intolerance in the communities, and discrimination in the workplace.  Various Safe Zone programs and Gay Straight Student Alliances throughout the area provide much needed support.  Such organizations as Equality Alabama, the Alabama Safe Schools Coalition, and PFLAG, and indeed many local churches and religious organizations, have been providing intervention programs, critical resources, and accurate information to students, adults, workers, parents, and teachers seeking support regarding lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues. 

 

While research on the subject is not complete, it certainly is extensive.  Many scientific and medical professionals agree that sexual orientation is not a choice.  Nor is it a disease, illness, dysfunction, or disability.  It is not abnormal or unnatural.  It is not an ailment or condition that requires therapy, repair, healing, or conversion.  Such professional groups as the American Medical Association, the American Psychiatric Association, and the American Counseling Association, along with countless others, support a more enlightened understanding of the sensitive issues related to sexual orientation and gender identity.

 



We would want the Focus on the Family organization to know that ALGBTICAL is committed to facilitating and promoting the fullest, possible development of each individual and works to reduce the barriers of misinformation, myth, ignorance, hatred, and discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression.  

 

Many internal and external obstacles exist in society that inhibit individuals from accurately understanding and developing a healthy view of their sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression. ALGBTICAL  is opposed to harm perpetrated against lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender individuals through language, stereotypes, myths, misinformation, threat of expulsion from social and institutional structures and other entities, and from beliefs contrary to their identity.

 

ALGBTICAL is committed to the inclusion of and respect for individuals of all sexual orientations, gender identities, and gender expressions.  AGLBICAL supports the raising of awareness of all individuals regarding issues related to sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression as well as the increased modeling of inclusive language, advocacy and equal opportunity for all people.  AGLBTICAL seeks to lessen if not eliminate individual, social, and institutional behaviors and expectations limiting the full development of human potential in all populations.

 


SOUL FOOD

Story From Lesbian Feminist Yankee

How UAB Nourished the Life & Work of a Lesbian Feminist Yankee
Dr. Mischelle Stone


The decision my partner and I made in 2004 to leave our home and jobs in Michigan so that I could take a job at UAB was not an easy one to make.  I had lived in Michigan all of my life, and Jean, my partner of nearly twenty years, had lived there for eighteen.  Just a month before making the decision to move, I had interviewed over two days with the faculty and staff in the Department of Justice Sciences for a faculty position teaching criminal justice courses.  Though I thought the interview went well, I never in my wildest dreams thought I would be living and working in the heartland of the South at age fifty-one.

If there was a single factor that drew me to the UAB campus, it was the warm welcome I received from the members of the Department of Justice Sciences.  Though I traveled to the interview by myself, it was clear from my initial interactions with department members that I was a lesbian and, if offered the position, would be moving to the Birmingham area with my partner.  If there was objection or resistance to this, I had no inclination of it either during or after the interview.   In fact, department members were quick to inquire about my partner, asking what she did for work and what her other interests were.  Nearly everyone shared information about where they lived, and why they thought their particular neighborhood would be a good place for Jean and me to live.  I came away from the interview feeling welcomed and wanting to know more about UAB and the Birmingham area.

When I returned to Michigan following my interview, I began to explore the UAB website for indications that the broader University would be as welcoming as I knew the people of Justice Sciences to be.  This was an important issue for me and my partner, as we had long-established relationships in Michigan that supported us in many aspects of our lives.  Coming to UAB would mean leaving the day-to-day support of those relationships behind in favor of living and working in a different culture.  I cannot overstate the challenge we felt moving to an area of the country that was so culturally different from our own, where we knew virtually no one, and where the differences in regional dialects were evident in each and every interaction we had.

In our search of the UAB website, we discovered the spouse/partner relocation program within Human Resources.  Jean made e-mail contact with the program, and was provided with a substantial amount of information and guidance regarding potential employment opportunities at UAB, as well as at a variety of hospitals in the surrounding area (Jean is an R.N.).  Utilizing this information, Jean was able to secure an interview and subsequent employment within weeks of my being offered the position at UAB.  When she was asked by the human resources manager at the hospital where she works what brought her to Alabama, she reported that her partner had taken a job teaching at UAB, and that “she” would be teaching criminal justice.

In addition to finding the spouse/partner relocation program on the UAB website, we also found the Safe Zone program.  This program, along with the “mandatory” diversity training for all employees were important symbols of UAB’s commitment to creating a diverse environment for all students, faculty and staff.  We also found reference to the Gay/Straight Student Alliance (of which I am currently a co-advisor), and we were both encouraged to see a formal student organization addressing the needs of the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender (GLBT) students on campus.  In addition we found reference (albeit somewhat remote) to the Faculty/Staff Alliance, an organization that addresses concerns of GLBT faculty and staff.  Early participation in all of these organizations at UAB served to provide me with a “home” that other organizations on campus could not, and each, in their own way, has nurtured my body, soul, and mind.  All three of these organizations have served to connect me to diverse individuals who share similar concerns about living and working as a lesbian in the south, where the GLBT population has been slow to gain the same rights afforded other minority populations.

Despite being nourished by my involvement in Safe Zone, GSSA, and the Faculty/Staff Alliance, I remain struck by what isn’t present at UAB, despite consistent reference by the University administration to the importance of a diverse campus.  Noticeably absent from the menu of benefits available to me as a faculty member is the availability of insurance coverage for my partner.  Even though we have been in a committed relationship as long as or longer than anyone else in our department, we are still denied the right to have her covered as an Other Eligible Individual under my health insurance policy.  Since Alabama is a state that fails to recognize the legality of our relationship by not allowing us to wed, she cannot be considered a “spouse” and is therefore denied eligibility for coverage that other faculty spouses are provided. While some may believe that this is simply an example of indifference on the part of UAB administrators, I believe it sends a clear message of inequality.  Thus, no matter that employees are required to attend mandatory diversity training; we are either committed to treat all people with the respect and dignity they deserve, or we are not.

Similar to the lack of equal access to benefits, I am concerned about the lack of a Center for GLBT students.  Recognizing the unique challenges faced by GLBT students, many other tier one research universities provide a central location that serves as an educational and referral source for the University.  It also serves as a safe space where GLBT students are free to gather and express themselves as they attempt to reach their full potential as students, and in a broader sense, as human beings.  Given the discrimination and prejudice GLBT students experience simply because of who they are, the importance of such a space cannot be overstated.

Three years have now passed since I first came to UAB.  Maybe it is I who has made the adjustments that make living in the south not just bearable but enjoyable.  For example, when I first arrived in Birmingham, it was always a mystery what I would end up with in my order at the drive through at Taco Bell.  No matter how clearly I said “Two soft tacos deluxe, no meat, extra tomato”, I always came away with something different each time I ordered.  Ordering at the counter inside made no difference.  It has taken me three years and maybe just the hint of an Alabama accent, but I can finally get the order the way I prefer it.  And although I still haven’t developed my ear well enough to understand what it is going to cost me, I am confident that, in the end, it will be without meat, just the way I ordered it.  I say if the staff at Taco Bell and I can come to some middle ground on how to get fed, surely UAB administrators and I can continue to work toward a solution to the hunger I feel for equitable treatment for all GLBT faculty, staff and students.

(Article reprinted by permission of the author.  Mischelle Stone is a Professor in the UAB Justice Sciences Dept.)

 


GAY SCHOOL DISCUSSION
School Wants Lawsuit Dismissed


February 8
, 2007 / The Associated Press
 

Officials from a suburban Massachusetts school district asked a federal judge Wednesday to dismiss a lawsuit filed by two couples who claim their parental rights were violated when homosexuality was discussed in their children's classrooms.


U.S. District Judge Mark Wolf did not immediately issue a decision in the case from Lexington, but peppered lawyers on both sides with questions and said he understood the importance of the case to both parents and school administrators.


Tonia and David Parker sued after their 5-year-old son brought home a book from kindergarten that depicted a gay family. David Parker was later arrested for refusing to leave his son's school after officials would not agree to notify him when homosexuality was discussed in his son's class.


Another Lexington couple, Joseph and Robin Wirthlin, joined the Parkers in the suit after a second-grade teacher read "King and King" to her class. The fairy tale tells the story of two princes falling in love.

 

Both couples claim Lexington school officials violated their parental rights to teach their own morals to their children.


The case has attracted a great deal of attention in Massachusetts, the only U.S. state that allows same-sex marriage.


John Davis, an attorney for Lexington school officials, argued in court Wednesday that teaching diversity is a "legitimate state interest." He said that it would be "an administrative nightmare" for schools in Massachusetts to try to predict when the topic of gay marriage will come up and to inform parents ahead of time.


"The parents do have rights ... but they don't have the right to dictate to the public school system what their children can be exposed to in the way of ideas," Davis said.


Robert Sinsheimer, an attorney for the parents who filed the lawsuit, called the homosexual discussions and materials "a form of propaganda" that goes against the parents' religious beliefs. He said the parents do not want to dictate curriculum, but do want to be able to remove their young children from classrooms when homosexuality or gay marriage is being discussed.


"What they fear is that their children are being brainwashed," he said.


About 30 people on both sides of the issue demonstrated outside the courthouse.

 


REV. AL SHARPTON SPEAKS OUT
Opposes Gay Intolerance


By JONATHAN LANDRUM Jr. /
January 21, 2006 / The Associated Press

 

Churches have an obligation to help end the "poisoned atmosphere" surrounding the acceptance of homosexuals, the Rev. Al Sharpton said at a weekend summit organized by a national black gay rights group.


The group invited religious leaders to brainstorm ways to get their message of tolerance across to church leaders, who are some of the most influential figures in black communities. Several portrayed it as a civil rights issue.


"Our dialogue is the possibility of being acknowledged, loved and accepted. It can happen," said Donna Payne, vice president of the National Black Justice Coalition, composed of black lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender activists.


Sharpton, a former Democratic presidential candidate who headlined Friday's start to the summit, said black church leaders need to acknowledge that homophobia affects everyone's civil rights.

"You cannot talk about civil rights and limit who's included in the civil movement," Sharpton told about 150 people at First Iconium Baptist Church.


He said it is every church's obligation to help end the "poisoned atmosphere" of acceptance of homosexuals. "The church should have a front seat in the car leading toward dialogue, leading toward tolerance," he said.

In 2004, a predominantly black Atlanta-area church where Martin Luther King Jr.'s daughter Bernice serves as an elder held a march calling for a national ban on gay marriage. The march's organizer, Bishop Eddie Long, said his followers "did not come in a march of hatred," but the event did not sit well with gay rights groups.


King's widow, Coretta Scott King, has called gay marriage a civil rights issue and denounced proposed amendments to ban it.


"History has shown that every time a church has gone on the side of exclusion, they have been wrong," said Pat Hussein, an activist and summit participant. "Hopefully there can be things made right."

The Rev. Kenneth Samuel, pastor of Victory Baptist Church in the Atlanta suburb of Stone Mountain, received a standing ovation when he called for equality for all people and an end to hate crimes targeting homosexuals.


"These are heart-wrenching issues," Samuel said. "Anytime we talk to people about identity or sense of values, we have to address them with passion and intellect along with their spirituality."

 


SELECTIVE USE OF BIBLE IN CAMPUS INCIDENT
Open Letter to High School Teacher in Miami

 

Selective Use of The Bible Shifts Focus Off Faith...
An Open Letter From Leonard Pitts to Donna Reddick (Teacher at High School in Miami)

I'm writing this for Desiree.  She's a student at Miami Sunset Senior High, where you teach business technology.  She sent me an e-mail recounting an incident that happened on campus recently.

It seems on three successive days, the morning announcements, which are televised throughout the school, featured student-produced segments on the subject of gay rights.  On the first day came comments from students who took the pro position.  On the second day came remarks from a counselor who spoke of the need for students to respect one another.  On the third day came you.

You and a few students, actually.  One told classmates homosexuality was "unacceptable in the eyesight of God."  Another said gays were "unrighteous."  The coup de grace, though, was you, invoking Sodom and Gomorrah and telling students homosexuality was "wrong according to the Bible" because God ordered humanity to multiply, which gay couples cannot do.

Desiree was, to put it mildly, upset.  In the e-mail, she accused you of bigotry and wondered how a gay student could ever again feel assured of fair treatment in your class.  I tend to agree.  She also suggested that you crossed the line between church and state, an accusation about which I am more conflicted.  It seems to me there's a difference between proselytizing for a religion and explaining how one's faith has influenced one's opinion. You're entitled to think what you think, no matter how stupid it might be.

But I'll leave those questions for others to parse.  My biggest frustration lies elsewhere.  Put simply, I've had it up to here with the moral hypocrisy and intellectual constipation of Bible literalists.

By which I mean people like you, who dress their homophobia up in Scripture, insisting with sanctimonious sincerity that it's not homophobia at all, but just a pious determination to live according to what the Bible says.  And never mind the Bible also says it is "disgraceful" for a woman to speak out in church (I Corinthians 14:34-36) and that if she has any questions, she should wait till she gets home and ask her husband.  Never mind the Bible says the penalty for going to work on Sunday (Exodus 35:1-3) is death.  Never mind the Bible says the man who rapes a virgin should buy her from her father (Deuteronomy 22:28-29) and marry her.

I'm going to speculate you don't observe or support those commands.  Which says to me yours is a literalism of convenience, a literalism that is literal only so long as it allows you to condemn what you'd be condemning anyway and takes no skin off your personal backside.

You resemble many of your and my co-religionists, whose faith so often expresses itself in an obsessive focus on one or two hot-button issues -- and seemingly nowhere else.  They're so panicked at the thought that somebody might accidentally treat gay people like people.  Meantime, people are ignorant in Appalachia, strung out in Miami, starving in Niger, sex slaves in India, mass murdered in Darfur.  Where is the Christian outrage about that?

Just once, I'd like to read a headline that said a Christian group was boycotting to feed the hungry.  Or marching to house the homeless.  Or pushing Congress to provide the poor with healthcare worthy of the name.

Instead, they fixate on keeping the gays in their place.  Which makes me question their priorities.  And their compassion.  And their faith.

If you love me, feed my sheep.  For the record, Ms. Reddick, the Bible says that, too.

(Leonard Pitts is a Pulitzer Prize winning columnist for The Miami Herald)

 

 

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