Equality in New York!

June 27, 2011 | by

Late last Friday, New York became the sixth state to legalize same-sex marriage. Massachusetts, Connecticut, Iowa, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Washington, D.C., have already secured marriage equality. Only 44 more states to go.

This is truly a moment to celebrate. New York is the most populous state to extend equal marriage rights to same-sex couples. Once the law is in effect, the number of LGBTQ people with the right to marry in the U.S. will double. As one of the early participants in the Civil Marriage Collaborative, a donor collective aimed at securing marriage equality in all 50 states, the Open Society Foundations has played an important role in the fight for marriage equality. Freedom to Marry and the Empire State Pride Agenda, both grantees of the Civil Marriage Collaborative, were instrumental in  public education campaigns in New York.

As we celebrate, we should also remember those who brought us the LGBTQ movement—people who showed us that to be queer was not to be less human or objects of scorn and ridicule. Let’s not forget that Stonewall was brought to us not by wealthy political fundraisers and horse trading, but by creativity, longing to be treated with basic dignity, and the absolute fabulousness of drag queens and transgender people in New York City.

While the NY legislature embraced marriage equality this session, it shelved GENDA, an act which would prohibit discrimination based on gender identity in employment, housing, health care, public accommodations, and education. We should continue to support our transgender communities in the quest to be free from violence and discrimination based on gender identity.

Finally, in the post-campaign, armchair quarterbacking of the political strategy that finally garnered bipartisan support for marriage equality, we should remember that in this same session public funds for health and human services were severely cut. There’s also now a cap on property taxes—ask any Californian how that’s worked out for education and health and human services. LGBTQ youth still comprise 40 percent of homeless young people and remain daily targets of violence and harassment in schools. And, if the tenor of the debate in the chambers and in the halls of Albany were any indication, we need to do so much more to foster civil and informed dialogue about policies affecting LGBTQ people.

Still, I want to be clear that this moment is one I celebrated. It also made me happy and proud to be part of the Open Society Equality and Opportunity Fund. We support the marriage equality movement and also remain committed to the most vilified and shunned members of the LGBTQ community. We support marriage as one small step towards equality—not the end game.

Onward!

State requires chicken pox vaccine

The Pantagraph Bloomington, IL April 11, 2002 | Karen Blatter SPRINGFIELD - Children will be required to have a chicken pox vaccination before they enter school this fall.

On Wednesday, a panel of state lawmakers approved a proposal by the Illinois Department of Public Health to require about 200,000 children to get a vaccine for chicken pox. The measure affects children entering preschool, kindergarten and day care.

The highly infectious disease results in an itchy red rash. It is common in children younger than 15 and, once contracted, the victim becomes immune. Chicken pox rarely is fatal. go to site chicken pox vaccine

Children with chicken pox generally miss a week of school.

Health officials hope the vaccinations will render the disease nonexistent. But some people oppose forced vaccinations for religious and medical reasons.

Two members of a legislative rules committee voted against the requirement.

"Philosophically, I am opposed to children having to be vaccinated for chicken pox. You can't equate it the same as polio or some other deadly diseases," said state Sen. Doris Karpiel, R-Carol Stream, who voted "no." "There is mixed research on the vaccine," Karpiel said. "I didn't want to tell the mothers and fathers of Illinois that they had to get this vaccine if they didn't want to." State public health director Dr. John Lumpkin recommended the law because he believes the benefits of vaccination far outweigh any risks, said department spokesman Tom Schafer, who noted that Illinois averaged five deaths a year due to chicken pox in the 1990s. in our site chicken pox vaccine

"(Lumpkin) felt that five deaths a year, plus the number of hospitalizations for a vaccine-preventable disease, was too many," Schafer said.

McLean County Health Department Director Robert Keller said the plan is a good one.

"It is a very positive step," he said. "We know there are complications that are involved in chicken pox. We hope it will end up saving lives and improving health." The vaccine was approved for voluntary use in 1995. Cases have decreased since then. The Department of Public Health has been trying to require the vaccine since October.

The requirement will be in place by July 1. The vaccine will join eight other state-mandated immunizations, including those for measles, mumps, diphtheria and hepatitis B.

Illinois is the 33rd state to require the chicken pox vaccine.

---------------- The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Karen Blatter

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Luna Yasui

Luna Yasui is Program Officer, Equality and Opportunity Fund, Open Society Foundations.

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The Open Society Foundations work to improve the lives of the world's most vulnerable people and to promote human rights, justice, and accountability. This blog aims to bring that work a little closer by giving our experts and grantees a platform to reflect on their issues, sharpen their thinking, and engage in a conversation on how to advance open society values around the globe.

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