ACLU Helps Los Altos Community Reverse Gay Proclamation Ban (7/26/2006)
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IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
LOS ALTOS, CA -- The American Civil Liberties Union cheered a unanimous
decision by the Los Altos city council rescinding a ban on proclamations having
anything to do with sexual orientation that had passed in
February. The reversal came after more than 50 local business
owners petitioned the council to end the “embarrassing” rule, which they said
was bad for business and the city’s reputation. The city council’s
decision also followed the implied threat of a lawsuit when the ACLU of Northern
California filed a Public Records Act request with the help of Wilson Sonsini
Goodrich & Rosati attorneys Amy Todd and Tami Fisher. “We were
happy to assist a diverse coalition of residents who sought to have the city
council change its discriminatory rule,” said Sanjeev Bery, director of the ACLU
San Jose office. “A combination of public education, business owner
participation and heartfelt stories from citizens affected by the ban helped the
council realize its mistake. All the work the residents put into reaching this
political solution really paid off.” After students at the Gay
Straight Alliance (GSA) at the Los Altos High School asked the council to
proclaim Gay Pride Day in Lost Altos, the city council enacted a rule last
February baring proclamations pertaining to sexual orientation. In
response to this rule, the ACLU helped to organize students and other concerned
residents to oppose the ban. At the July 11 and July 25 city council
meetings, about 40 Los Altos citizens – students, parents, business owners, and
longtime residents both gay and straight – sat in the audience wearing red
T-shirts that said: “Proclaim Equality Los Altos.” At the July 25
meeting, Los Altos High School senior Ellen Lathrop, 17, asked council members
to recall their own high school years. “The loneliness, feeling different – now
multiply it by 1,000. That is what it must be like for a gay student in Los
Altos,” Lathrop said. “High school is hard enough when you are straight, which
is why I think the courage of the gay students should be commended – not
reprimanded with a discriminatory rule.” Los Altos High School
junior Tony Zhukovskiy, 15, said joining the school’s Gay/Straight Alliance was
important to him because nothing like it existed in his home country of Russia.
He told the council how proud he was that in the United States, he could have
the hope of finding acceptance and tolerance. But, he said he was “crestfallen”
when the Los Altos city council treated gay people in the same way he would have
expected in Russia. “Here, I thought everyone was supposed to be equal under the
law.” Jackie Roux, a 1999 graduate of Los Altos High School, told
the council that she moved back to Los Altos after finishing college to work in
the city she was raised. But, she said the city council’s discriminatory
attitude “gives me pause whether this is the kind of city I want to raise a
family and continue my career.” The new rule simply says the mayor
can issue any proclamation to a local resident, organization or event without
formal action of the council, though proclamation requests can be referred to
the council for vote at the mayor’s discretion. The Los Altos
Gay/Straight Alliance expects to ask for a Gay Pride Day proclamation again next
year, and under the new rules, they are free to do so. But the students realize
an application does not guarantee the mayor will sign it, or that the council
will pass it if referred by the mayor for a vote. That is why an energized
community will continue to raise awareness in Los Altos and be advocates for
acceptance and tolerance for its gay citizens. Los Altos physician
Robert Frascino told the council: “This anti-gay rule may have passed when a lot
of us weren’t paying attention. But I just want to let you all know – you’ve got
our attention now.” Tamara Lange, a Staff Attorney with the ACLU of
Northern California, added, “We are pleased with the council’s decision.
But we’re going to be watching to make sure the new rule is applied
equally.”
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