Date: Tue, 11 Jan 2000 16:26:49 -0800
From: Jean Richter <richter@eecs.berkeley.edu>
Subject: 1/11/2000 P.E.R.S.O.N. Project news

1. CA: Protest discrimination against student with gay parents;
        Students sound off about allowing gay-straight alliances;
        Letter on banning Boy Scouts from recruiting in schools
2. AK: School district amends nondiscrimination policy

=====================================================================

Date: Sat, 8 Jan 2000 07:39:17 -0800
From: Jessea NR Greenman <jessea@uclink4.berkeley.edu>
Subject: CA ACTION ALERT

 >From GLSEN-SFBA... 
CA ACTION ALERT:  DISCRIMINATION ALLOWED 

On November 24, 1999, the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing 
voted not to take any action against Stephen Farren, a Califonria 
credentialed teacher and administrator at the St. Philip School, a private 
Catholic elementary school in San Francisco.  Farren disenrolled a 
ten-year-old African-American honor student from the school because her two 
fathers objected, in writing, to Farren refusing to accept them as her gay 
adoptive parents.  Farren repeatedly notified the gay dads, both in public 
and in writing, that they were only the child's caretakers, instead of her 
parents, as provided by a Superior Court Judge's joint adoption decree. 

The California Commission on Teacher Credentialing has set an unfortunate 
precedent that allows for all those with state-issued teaching and or 
administrative credentials to deny the parental rights of gay and lesbian 
adoptive parents with impunity. 

Please send letters, phone calls, and emails requesting that the California 
Commission on Teacher Credentialing reverse their anti-gay decision not to 
take action against Stephen Farren and suspend his credentials. Send letters 
to: 

Sam Swofford 
Director, California Commission on Teacher Credentialing 
1900 Capital Avenue 
Sacramento, CA 95814 
tel. (916)322-6253 
email: credentials@ctc.ca.gov 

Torrie Norton 
Chair, Califonria Commission on Teacher Credentialing 
San Dieguito Union High School District 
710 Encinitas Blvd., Suite 105 
Encinitas, CA 92024 
tel. (760)753-6491 
email tnorton@sduhsd.k12.ca.us 

Governor Gray Davis 
Attn: Madison 
State Capital 
Sacramento, CA 95814 
tel. (916)445-2814 
fax (916)445-4633 
Note: The Governor has no email 

Assemblywoman Carol Migden 
Attn: Alan LoFaso 
State Calital Room 2114 
Sacramento, CA 94249. 

Please send copies of protests to 
Protest Farren 
P.O. Box 14189 
San Francisco, CA 94114 
email bafofam@aol.com 

=============================================================

Los Angeles Times, January 8, 2000
Should Gay Clubs Meet on Campus? 
By HELEN KIM
      A group of students at El Modena High School in Orange County recently 
attempted to form a gay-themed club on their campus.  The Orange Unified 
School District board barred the club, but the members have not given up.  
HELEN KIM spoke with students about this national debate. 


[Deleted article.  filemanager@qrd.org]


=================================================================================

Contra Costa Times, January 7, 2000
Box 5088, Walnut Creek, CA, 94596 
(Fax 925-933-0239 ) 
(Online mailer:  http://www.hotcoco.com/contact_us/letters.htm )
( http://www.hotcoco.com )
Letter:  Christ didn't exclude gays from humanity
     In his letter, Steven Leininger denounces the so-called "gay agenda" 
while trying to convince readers that discrimination is good and moral.  He 
feels that "God and decency" are "bad words" in Davis, because the school 
board will no longer allow the Boy Scouts to recruit in schools there.
     Leininger angrily refers to "deviancy."  He forgets that many Americans 
feel that intolerance and prejudice are deviant.

[Deleted article.  filemanager@qrd.org]


=================================================================================

Date: Sat, 08 Jan 2000 20:25:03 -0900
From: Frederick Hillman <fhillman@alaska.net>
Subject: Victory in Alaska





This is PFLAG news, not GLSEN’s, but I thought you would be interested in it.
Last Wed. eve the school board of the Matanuska-Susitna School District voted 4-3 to add the terms
“sexual orientation” and “ethnicity” to the non-discrimination section of the district’s policy
manual.  The district is second only to the Anchorage School District in size in Alaska.
(Incidentally, the news has not appeared in the Anchorage Daily News, as of today--Saturday.  It was
aired on KSKA from  the Alaska Public Radio News on Thursday morning.)

  To appreciate the significance of this, a bit of history will help.  The Matanuska valley lies 35
miles north of Anchorage and includes the cities of Palmer & Wasilla, several hamlets, and many
homesteaders, for a total population of perhaps 40,00 (a guess).  It was settled originally in the
30s by
refugees from the midwest ‘Dust Bowl’ under FDR’s administration, but traditionally has been very
conservative, as many small towns & rural areas are.

  For example, Colony High School, lying between Palmer & Wasilla, was the scene last May of an
incident in which the mural of an art student, Frank Asay, was defaced by students because Asay was
openly gay and his mural was interpreted as having a gay theme.  At a state-wide conference of
prinicipals held at Colony during the summer, the principal refused to post a GLSEN poster as being
‘too controversial,’ so I’m told.

  Rev. Howard Bess, a Baptist minister who is the author of the book “Pastor, I’m Gay,” has been the
driving force behind the PFLAG chapter in the valley, and it was the driving force in persuading the

school board to vote as they did.  Rev. Bess is one of the persons in Dan Woog’s new book “Friends &

Family:  True Stories of Gay America’s Straight Allies.”  The e-mail that Rev. Bess sent to his
friends here follows.  (His address is hdbss@mtaonline.net)
(Parenthetically, I think that he is mistaken in saying that the action is the first in Alaska.
Fairbanks, Juneau, & several small communities in the bush have already added sexual orientation to
their anti-discrimination policies.)
Fred Hillman
======================================================
Sent: Saturday, January 05, 1980 02:48 AM
Subject: Victory in Alaska

 > Dear PFLAG friends:  1/5/00  10:30 p.m.
 >     This evening a marvelous victory was won for the good of gay and
 > lesbian teenagers who attend public schools in the Matanuska-Susitna
 > School District.  On a 4-3 vote the non-discrimination section of the
 > school district policy book was amended to include sexual orientation.
 > As the key paragraph was amended it now reads
 >
 > District programs and activities shall be free from discrimination with
 > respect to sex, race, color, religion, national origin, SEXUAL
 > ORIENTATION, ethnicity, marital or parental status, and physical or
 > mental disability.  The school board shall ensure equal opportunities
 > for all students in admission and access to academic courses, guidance
 > and counseling programs, athletic programs, testing procedures,
 > vocational education and other activities.
 >
 >     The policy is binding on school board members, administrators, all
 > employees including teachers, and all students.
 >     PFLAG Matanuska Susitna chapter has been working behind the scenes
 > for several weeks.  Chapter president Joel Carter has worked with
 > specific board members who were known to be supportive.  Joel had
 > furnished board members with copies of the November, 1999, American
 > School Board Journal, which carried an extensive and comprehensive
 > article on the responsibilities of school boards to protect gay and
 > lesbian students.  He  had gathered materials from Lamda Defense Fund
 > which he shared with board members..  He also directed them to PFLAG's
 > web site.  It was clear to everyone that PFLAG was the driving force
 > behind the move to amend the district's policy statement.
 >     This action is the first of its kind in Alaska.  The CBS outlet in
 > Anchorage had given the action lead coverage.  Their coverage is
 > statewide.  The press was generous in their presence at the meeting.
 > Debate was vigorous.  President Joel Carter was an eloquent spokesperson
 > for PFLAG.  (He is a retired United Methodist minister and a long time
 > friend of Jimmy Creech.)  Those who opposed the action argued that the
 > present non-discrimination statement was sufficient to protect all
 > children.
 >     PFLAG Mat-Su Valley knew they had four solid votes going into the
 > meeting and had hoped that more would vote "yes."  But that was not to
 > be.  The crowd was large.  It was clear that the crowd was
 > overwhelmingly negative.  The four positive board members could not be
 > intimidated.
 >     The victory is a textbook case of a group doing its homework,
 > working with people behind the scenes, and maintaining the high ground
 > of reason and compassion.
 > We believe the action in the Matanuka Susitna Valley will be an
 > encouragement for action in other school districts in Alaska.  The
 > Matanuska Susitna School District is the second largest school district
 > in Alaska.  It has a total of about l5,000 students.
 >     PFLAG Mat-Su Valley is my home chapter.  Needless to say, I am very
 > proud of what they accomplished tonight.
 >     Howard Bess

===============================================================================

Jean Richter -- richter@eecs.berkeley.edu
The P.E.R.S.O.N. Project (Public Education Regarding Sexual Orientation Nationally)
These messages are archived by state on our information-loaded free web site:
         http://www.youth.org/loco/PERSONProject/
