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Indiana Equality
Praises South Bend Mayor for Executive Order on
Non-Discrimination
South Bend Mayor Steve Luecke issued an Executive Order on Wednesday, June 24, 2009 to
expand the city's non-discrimination policy for city employees
to include sexual orientation and gender identity. Indiana
Equality thanks Mayor Luecke for his decision and congratulates
the entire South Bend community on this step forward.
South Bend Equality, a local community
organization that advocates for equal protection under the law
for all residents regardless of sexual orientation or gender
identity, declared the executive order "an important step"
toward establishing needed civil rights protections and
applauded Mayor Luecke for his leadership and courage in
standing up against the mistreatment of any citizen.
In concert with other community organizations, South Bend
Equality has been leading efforts with the South Bend Common
Council to amend the city’s Human Rights Ordinance to
include non-discrimination protections for lesbian, gay,
bisexual, and transgender individuals in housing, employment,
and public accommodations The Mayor’s order,
affecting only city employees, does not alter the South Bend
ordinance.
Currently it is legal to fire, discriminate against, or deny
housing to someone on the basis, or the perception, of their
sexual orientation or gender identity in most of Indiana.
Only in the cities of Bloomington, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis,
Lafayette, Michigan City, and West Lafayette and in Tippecanoe
County is sexual orientation covered. Gender Identity is
included in the Bloomington and Indianapolis ordinances.
The State of Indiana has an executive order signed by the
Governor Frank O’Bannon and continued by Governors Joe
Kernan and Mitch Daniels which covers both in state employment
only.
A 2008 Indiana Equality-commissioned survey of
Hoosier residents conducted by the IU Center for Survey
Research found that respondents overwhelmingly agree (80.4%)
that gay and lesbian Hoosiers should have the same civil rights
protections as other groups, while 79.7% agree on transgender
inclusion in civil rights protections. Support for equal
treatment is also bi-partisan -- 92% of Democrats, 64.2% of
Republicans, and 85.5% of Independents support civil rights for
gays and lesbians. Clear majorities support such
protections in urban, suburban, small town, and rural areas, and
across all age and educational attainment groups.
Praising Mayor Luecke’s position, Indiana Equality
encourages the South Bend Common Council to move from this
initial-step to full inclusion. Indiana Equality Action President Walter
Botich, a South Bend native, declared, "It's time for South Bend
to move into the vanguard of progressive cities in
Indiana. All citizens deserve to be fully protected from
discrimination in their employment and housing regardless of
their identity."
The mission Indiana Equality is to end discrimination based
on sexual orientation and gender identity in Indiana. IE seeks
such equality by facilitating and coordinating the efforts of
the LGBT and allied community that are directed to research,
education, and community mobilization. For more
information regarding Indiana Equality, please visit the
organization’s website at www.indianaequality.org.
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