|
Greetings,

The following message was just released
from our partners at the National
Center for Transgender Equality.
(October
22, 2009, Washington, DC) In an historic move, the United States
Senate, by a vote of 68 to 29, joined the House of
Representatives in passing The Matthew Shepard and James Byrd,
Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which will be the first federal law to include
gender identity and transgender people. Once signed by
the President, this law will add sexual orientation, gender
identity, gender and disability to the categories included in
existing federal hate crimes law and will allow local
governments who are unable or unwilling to address hate crimes
to receive assistance from the federal government. President
Obama has indicated that he will sign the bill into law.
"Transgender people have been waiting so many
years for assistance from the federal government in addressing
the rampant and disproportional violence that we face," noted
Mara Keisling, Executive Director of the National Center for
Transgender Equality. "Today we
move one step closer to our goal of ending violence motivated by
hatred. Everyone in America deserves to live free
of fear and of violence. We know that the dedicated leadership
and hard work of Senator Kennedy and Representative Conyers and
many other legislators made the passage of this bill possible.
Words can't really express our gratitude for their commitment to
equality for all people."
In the past, federal law has only mentioned gender
identity in a negative context, such as explicitly excluding
transgender people from the Americans with Disabilities Act. The
passage of the hate crimes bill marks a significant
turning point
from the days in which the federal government contributed to the
oppression of transgender people to today when federal law takes action to protect our
lives. The Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate
Crimes Prevention Act will have a number of positive impacts.
First, it will help educate law enforcement about the frequent
hate violence against transgender people and the need to prevent
and appropriately address it. Second, it will help provide
federal expertise and resources when it is needed to overcome a
lack of resources or the willful inaction on the part of local
and/or state law enforcement. Third, it will help educate
the public that violence against anyone is unacceptable and
illegal. Transgender people continue to be
disproportionately targeted for bias motivated violence.
Thirteen states and Washington, DC have laws which include
transgender people in state hate crimes laws.
To learn
more about hate crimes please visit Equality Arizona's - Arizona
Education and Research Project.

|