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Firms showing respect for GLBT workers

May 10th, 2006 by Babe

Survey: More Firms show gay workers equal respect

 

IBM, Borders, Ford and Goldman Sachs are among top-rated U.S. companies based on policies that affect gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT)employees, the Human Rights Campaign Foundation said in its annual survey.

The Foundation, the largest national lesbian and gay political organization, gave 101 U.S. companies perfect scores on its fourth Corporate Equality Index, up from 56 companies receiving a perfect score.

“IBM made a strategic decision that diversity of all kinds is imperative to its future success and has been a leader in this area for many years,” said Daryl Herrschaft, director of the Human Rights Campaign Foundation’s Workplace Project and lead author of the report.

“Companies are responding to a competitive environment where potential employees and consumers value workplaces free from discrimination of any kind,” he said.

Corporations are rated in seven categories that include implementing sexual-orientation discrimination policies, offering health-insurance coverage for same-sex partners of employees, offering diversity training and engaging in appropriate marketing to the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities.

In 2002, when the Corporate Equality Index was first published, about 690,000 people were employed by the 13 companies that scored 100 percent. In the current survey, 5.6 million people work at the 101 companies that reached 100 percent.

Posted in Articles, GBLT, Issues

Coming Out Letters

May 10th, 2006 by Babe

Coming Out Letters

Here you’ll find a resource of letters, written by real people, to either come out or explain the coming out of a transgendered loved one.

Letter One

How Grandma told her 5 1/2 year old granddaughter

Letter Two

From A Mother, To Family And Friends

Letter Three

A Sister Learns To Accept Her New Sister
Letter Four

A Brother Learns To Accept His New Brother
Letter Five

A Friend Apologizes to the Webmistress
Letter Six
(Letters are from Transfamily.org)


Compliments of Transfamily.org

Letters and Stories for the transgender community

Transvestite Story Transexual Story Transgender Story Crossdressing Story

Posted in Coming Out, Cross Dressing, Making A Difference, Transvestites

Coming Out For GLBT and Transgender

May 10th, 2006 by Babe

Coming out: A domino game

Polls show that the biggest supporters of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights are those who know GLBT people. So do your part on this National Coming Out Day. By Joe Solmonese, president Human Rights Campaign

Having flown on more than 60 planes in the last six months, I’ve had my share of conversations with strangers. You’ve been there too. Even if you have an aversion to flying, you’ve faced this situation in the doctor’s office or on a train.

You’re sitting next to a woman who reminds you of your grandmother, and you’re chatting about the best Italian restaurants in Boston. She says you’re cute, seeming to restrain herself from pinching your cheek, and remarks about your “lucky wife.” All of a sudden you go from friendly chitchat to a serious personal conversation.

That is, if you decide to be honest. Too often we aren’t. We tell half-truths, “Oh, I’m not married.” We’re human. We worry about being liked. We don’t want the grandmotherly conversation to take a turn to a lecture. But here’s why we should risk it.

Talking about our lives lays the foundation for equality.

Imagine that woman next to you on the plane to Boston. In the fall of 2008, Massachusetts voters could be asked whether they want to put marriage discrimination in the state constitution. She’s one of those voters. She doesn’t know anybody gay (or know that she knows anybody gay). Sure, she’s seen gay people on TV, and she thinks her neighbor’s son is gay. But she’s never had a conversation about gay issues with anybody gay, much less someone with whom she’s already struck up a friendly conversation.

You’re starting on good ground. And even if you never see the payoff down the road, it will happen. Polls show that the biggest supporters of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights are those who know LGBT people.

Coming out isn’t just for GLBT people either. Take one of our staff members, Jay. He’s transgender and out to his family. Still, Jay hasn’t seen his great-aunt in years and hasn’t had the chance to talk to her yet. But his grandmother talks to her. The other day, Jay’s mom called. His great-aunt had sent her an article about a transgender woman in Houston whom the Human Rights Campaign helped. The article included a note from the great-aunt about her support for Jay and for the great work the organization is doing.

Sure, it made him feel great, but it also proves an important point: Coming out has a domino effect that doesn’t stop with straight people.

Coming out can go all the way from the chat between airplane passengers to the inside of the voting booth on Election Day. On this National Coming Out Day, make a commitment to yourself to talk about it, every day. And before the year is out, talk about it to one friend, one family member, one coworker, and one neighbor on the plane before National Coming Out Day 2006. Just think of where the last domino could fall.

Posted in Articles, Coming Out, GBLT, Issues