-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- TRANSGENDERED PEOPLE AT THE MARCH ON WASHINGTON by Phyllis Randolph Frye, Transgendered At the planning meeting for the first March on Washington, I had to visibly boycott the meeting to get "transgender" recognized in the brochure. During the second march, I noticed that the transgender community was once again given a short shrift by those in charge. Now I note a third march: the transgender community was omitted one more time from the name, but we are mentioned in the literature. So, I keep asking myself, why should the transgender community attend and march alongside lesbians, gays, bisexuals, and supportive heterosexuals for equal rights under the Constitution? The answer for us is the same as the answer for supportive heterosexuals: demanding equal rights for anyone is the right thing to do! It is worthwhile to help to open any window to help any oppressed people! This March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay and Bisexual (and should also be for Transgender) Rights is the place for any freedom-loving person to be - whether recognized or not. Further, as most prejudice against transgendered people is based on homophobia, any "sexual orientation" gains made in law by lesbians, gays, and bisexuals may assist in attitude - but not necessarily legal - changes regarding transgenderals. Sexual orientation does not include transgenderals! The suspect classification term for transgenderals is Gender Identification. When this March is over, and lesbians, gays, and bisexuals are discussing legislative and lobbying strategies, push, push, and push again to ensure that the terms put forth are "sexual orientation" and "gender identification" is included. Insist that the term "transgender" is included. They used to say gay. Then they learned to say lesbian and gay. Now they are learning to say lesbian, gay, bisexual. Insist that they learn to say lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender. Insist that they learn to say sexual orientation and gender identification. Insist that the inclusion of others does not stop with the continuing exclusion of transgender community! Phyllis Randolpy Frye is an out of the closet attorney since 1981 LABOR ON THE MARCH by Michael Broder If there's one thing that most queers have in common - Lesbian, Gay, Bi, or Transgender - it's that we work for a living. In fact, like all working people, we probably spend more of our waking hours on the job than we do in any other activity. And the workplace is where we may encounter some of the greatest challenges we will ever face as sexual minorities in a pervasively heterosexist society. Wherever we work - on an assembly line, behind a desk, in a classroom, ploughing a wheatfield in Kansas, defending an oil field in Kuwait - we face daily threats to our dignity, our pride, and sometimes our physical safety. Workplace discrimination may be as subtle as a missing "and guest" on our invitation to the company dinner, or as blatant as a pink slip for failing to conform to the "traditional standards and values" espoused by our employer. Workplace harassment may come as the barely-audible whispers of meanspirited coworkers around the office, or as a brutal beating at the hands of vicious thugs in the factory parking lot. I know of one gay emergency medical service employee who was asked by his union to form a lesbian and gay issues committee, and subsequently became the target of harassment by his coworkers because of his visible gay leadership role. And I know of a lesbian construction worker who would like to be out on her job, but remains closeted because she has the very legitimate fear that her certifiably homophobic coworkers may retaliate against her. "How hard would it be," she asks, "for one of the guys on the site to `accidently' push me off a catwalk 250 feet above the pavement?" In fact, we may not even be able to get the job that we want- that we deserve-because of the anti-gay discrimination that is often "company policy" in this country; everywhere from the Cracker Barrel restaurant to the Pentagon, where our own tax dollars are spent hunting us down and destroying our careers and our lives. Remember the epitaph that the late Leonard Matlovich composed for his own tombstone: "In Vietnam, they gave me a medal for killing two men, and a court martial for loving one." That's why queers who work must come to Washington on April 25. We've got to send a message - loud and clear - that we have a right to work wherever our abilities and our ambition take us; that we have a right to the same family leave and bereavement benefits as our straight colleagues; that our domestic partners have a right to the same health insurance and survivor's benefits granted to the spouses of workers in officially sanctioned relationships. We all have a right to work without fearing that our dignity or our physical safety may be threatened by our employers, by our colleagues, or by anyone with whom we must come into contact in the faithful performance of our professional duties. Now more than ever, we have an opportunity to win the rights that we deserve. As President Clinton declared last Veterans Day in response to a reporter's question about gays in the military, "We need everyone in America that's got a contribution to make, that's willing to obey the law and work hard and play by the rules." But the winds of change are sure to swirl at times into storms of opposition, and so we must come together in unity and resolve to maintain a steady and relentless course toward our goals. The President, the legislators, the unions, and the bosses- even the best intentioned ones-can't give us better working conditions unless we clearly state our needs, our wishes, and our demands. In order to further our right to work in safety, dignity, and pride, the Organizing Committee for a National Coalition of Lesbian and Gay Labor Activists is sponsoring two events for working queers and their supporters during the March weekend. The first event is a reception on Saturday, April 24, from 2-4 pm at AFL-CIO National Headquarters, 815 16th St, NW in Washington, DC, where we can get acquainted and pick up specially-designed hats and t-shirts to identify ourselves as union members at the march on Sunday. The second event is an open planning meeting for a National Lesbian and Gay Labor Conference. The meeting will take place on Monday, April 26-the day after the March-from 9am to 4pm at a location still to be determined. The conference is scheduled for June 23-25, 1994, in New York City, to coincide with the 25th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots that marked the beginning of the modern lesbian and gay rights movement. It will build on the success of the first-every East Coast Lesbian and Gay Labor Conference, which was held in June, 1992 in New York City and organized by the Lesbian and Gay Labor Coalition. The Organizing Committee for a National Coalition of Lesbian and Gay Labor Activists comprises activists from many different unions and other labor organizations, including the Gay and Lesbian Labor Activists Network in Massachusetts, the Lesbian and Gay Labor Coalition in New York, and various locals of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, the Service Employees International Union, the Communication Workers of America, and the United Automobile Workers. For more information about the labor events in Washington in April, call (617)426-0410, ext. 307, for a continually updated recorded message and a chance to leave a message of your own. And remember, if you're queer and you work, come to the March. Michael Broder co-chairs the Queer Caucuses of the National Writers Union/New York Local. AN OPEN LETTER TO THE PEOPLE OF COLOR COMMUNITIES Dear Sisters and Brothers: As you are aware, April 25, 1993 is the date of the next March on Washington, The march in 1987 was a resounding success, and plans are underway to make this year's march an even bigger success. I am writing this letter to all of you in the hopes that you may come to a better understanding of the need for greater minority participation. I have attended many marches, demonstrations, and conferences in an attempt to be part of the driving forces to make this country more inclusive of lesbian, gay, transgendered, and bisexual persons. More often than not the absence of people of color has been a source of disappointment to me. We should all know that if we don't make our presence known, we remain invisible. It is a common misconception that black people or people of color are gay only due to some influence by a white person. This thinking implies that we (people of color) are incapable of expressing our innate sexuality unless someone else validates us. Sisters and brothers, it is time to make a change and stop accepting the leftovers after others have made a difference. This attitude that we need not make waves toward the establishment must not be allowed to prevail. A change will not come for us unless we make our existence known. What better time to make our statement than now? For the first time in history we have elected a president who has given us hope that our voices will be heard and our needs addressed at the administrative level of the federal government. Yet we must remember that those homophobic voters in Colorado are not alone in their negative thinking regarding acceptance of our diversity. Today, Colorado; tomorrow, the rest of the United States if we remain silent. I have arranged for buses to depart the Philadelphia area en route to Washington, D.C., in hopes of having a contingent of people of color to make a presence. If you are "closeted" or cannot be there physically for whatever reasons we are in need of donations to sponsor those less fortunate to attend, PWAs, or persons who are HIV-positive and willing to attend. Hope to see you in Washington on April 25! Sincerely, Constance Ratliff-Campbell Editor-Publisher The Griot Press***Philadelphia, Pa.