ACLU of Kentucky

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to defend the individual rights and liberties guaranteed to all people by the
Constitution of the United States and the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

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Berea Fairness event occurred at Historic Church Print E-mail
Tuesday, June 14, 2011, 8:52 am

This is a reprint of an article that first appeared in the Winchester Sun

 BEREA — Union Church, Berea College’s historic, nondenominational church that was founded by 19th century abolitionist John G. Fee, was the setting Thursday night for the launch of a contemporary civil rights campaign.
Faith leaders, students, business owners, teachers, artists and Berea residents joined on the steps of Union Church Thursday morning to announce the launch of Bereans for Fairness, a local campaign to win passage of a city gay and transgender anti-discrimination fairness law.

Similar to legislation that has passed in Covington, Lexington and Louisville in Kentucky, a Berean fairness law would prohibit discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodations based on someone’s perceived sexual orientation or gender identity.


If the Berea City Council passes such a law, Berea would become only the fourth city in Kentucky with fairness protections.


The Berea City Council held a community forum on May 10 to discuss passage of a local fairness law, and has scheduled the second and final public forum for Tuesday, June 14, at 6:30 p.m. at the Berea Community School New Gymnasium, 2 Pirate Parkway.   


The campaign is supported by the Kentucky Statewide Fairness Coalition, which includes the American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky, the Fairness Campaign, Kentucky Commission on Human Rights, Kentucky Fairness Alliance and Lexington Fairness.

 
A Startling Video on a Mistaken Execution Print E-mail
Friday, June 10, 2011, 5:05 pm
 
My New Kentucky Baby Print E-mail
Monday, May 23, 2011, 9:31 am

We came to Bowling Green, Ky., home of our good-humored surrogate, Gail, with a court order from California designating me and Richard — my husband in some states, though not in Kentucky — as the future baby’s legal parents. I’d been hoping to avoid Kentucky. Its laws make it seem unwelcoming to gay people and ambivalent about surrogacy. I figured that culturally it would be red-statey too, full of homophobia, guns and fatty foods. The coasts seemed safer, especially for a black man, a Jew and their black-Jewish daughter.

Read the full NYT peice here .

 
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