| Community Challenge-Promote Fairness, support HB 117 |
| Thursday, February 18, 2010, 9:54 am | |
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This Op-Ed was originally published in the February 15th edition of the Courier-Journal. In January of 1966, with Governor Edward T. Breathitt’s signing of a law Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. called “the strongest and most comprehensive civil rights bill passed by a Southern state,” the Commonwealth of Kentucky became the first state in the South to adopt a Civil Rights Act with enforceable repercussions for acts of discrimination. Two years later, Kentucky was again first in the South, this time in the passage of a statewide fair housing law, which cemented our commonwealth’s legacy as the nation’s Southern civil rights leader.
At its core, the purpose of the Civil Rights Act is to ensure equality for everyone. It ensures all Kentuckians have the same opportunities to earn a living, be safe in their communities, serve their country, and care for the ones they love. When there has been a history of a particular groups’ lack of access to these fundamentals of the American dream, the just and appropriate response has been to add that particular group to existing antidiscrimination laws. Twenty-one states and the District of Columbia currently enforce similar Fairness protections, and of the twenty-nine states that do not, more than 70 of their cities and counties extend protections to their gay and transgender citizens. Approximately 25% of our state’s population resides in the three communities with existing Fairness laws, and Census data indicates that large numbers of individuals also commute into these communities during the workweek. Consequently, only approximately 30% of Kentuckians are protected from this type of discrimination, yet this simple bill of equality has never even come to a committee vote in our state’s legislature. This year marks more than a decade since Lexington and Louisville passed their Fairness Ordinances—the same year a Decision Research Poll documented 73% of Kentuckians supported statewide Fairness protections. This law is long overdue in our commonwealth, and if we do not act quickly, we will surely lose our place in history as the nation’s Southern leader of equality. On June 2, 2008, Governor Steve Beshear adopted an Executive Order stating a broad and inclusive policy of nondiscrimination in state government employment. Our governor recognizes the time has come for Kentucky to join the 21 other states that have already enacted laws protecting gay and transgender people, and we must too. Just as Kentucky led the South in 1966 by becoming the first southern state to pass a civil rights law applicable to employment and places of public accommodation, and led the southern region in 1968 by becoming the first southern state to pass protections in housing, we must now boldly, resolutely take up the challenge to lead the South into a new era of equality for everyone. We must affirm our commonwealth’s legacy as the first southern state to recognize the need to stand united for Fairness.
Join us in Frankfort Wednesday, February 24, for the Statewide
Fairness Day and rally in the Capitol Rotunda. If you cherish
Kentucky’s rich history as the southern civil rights leader, then look
not only to our past, but also to our fair and equal future by
contacting your state representative today at 1-800-372-7181 to support
the statewide Fairness law, and by scheduling a meeting with them on
February 24. |