Orange County NC Website
7 <br /> c. Proclamation Recognizing June 2021 as Pride Month in Orange County <br /> The Board considered approving a proclamation recognizing June 2021 as Pride Month <br /> in Orange County, North Carolina. <br /> BACKGROUND: <br /> Each year the month of June affords the opportunity to celebrate the legacy of individuals who <br /> have fought and continue to fight for the equality of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and <br /> Queer (to include intersex and asexual groups) (collectively referred to as "LGBTQ+") residents <br /> and recall the trials they have endured. <br /> The month of June was selected as Pride Month in honor of the uprising at the Stonewall Inn in <br /> June 1969, which sparked a liberation movement. In the early morning hours of June 28, 1969, <br /> New York police raided a gay bar, the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village. Officers began <br /> shoving customers and employees into police vehicles when one lesbian, instead of going <br /> quietly, began fighting and cried to the crowd watching, "Why don't you guys do something!" <br /> Instead of dispersing as they normally did, the crowd began chanting, throwing bottles and <br /> bricks. Violent demonstrations continued over the following days. Stonewall's violent <br /> demonstrations amid the protest over the Vietnam War, civil rights and gender equality, marked <br /> a decisive break from the passive sexual-orientation politics of the day. In the wake of <br /> Stonewall, organizations flourished that were not afraid to use confrontation to push reform such <br /> as the Gay Liberation Front. <br /> The Pride marches began after young activists in 1969 at the Eastern Regional Conference of <br /> Homophile Organizations called for nationwide demonstrations each June to honor the <br /> Stonewall Uprising. In 1970, the first Pride March called, "Christopher Street Liberation Day" <br /> was held in New York City. The event attracted thousands of people. Now cities and towns <br /> around the world host Pride marches. These marches were not only the first highly visible public <br /> events for gay people to express their sexuality, but also to demonstrate their political <br /> expression. In 1987, the Washington, D.C. Pride March coincided with first showing on the <br /> AIDS Memorial Quilt on the National Mall. The Quilt covered a space larger than a football field <br /> adorned with 1,920 panels capturing the names of those who had died from the disease. Today, <br /> the AIDS Memorial Quilt is a 54-ton tapestry that includes nearly 50,000 panels dedicated to <br /> more than 105,000 individuals. <br /> The LGBTQ+ community in America has achieved remarkable progress since Stonewall. <br /> Historic Supreme Court rulings in recent years have struck down regressive laws, affirmed the <br /> right to marriage equality, and secured workplace protections for LGBTQ+ individuals in every <br /> State and Territory. The Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act <br /> broadened the definition of hate crimes to include crimes motivated by sexual orientation or <br /> gender identity. Members of the LGBTQ+ community now serve in nearly every level of public <br /> office— in city halls, State capitals, Governors' mansions, halls of the Congress, the White <br /> House and the military. <br /> For all of the progress, there are many states in which LGBTQ+ individuals still lack protections <br /> for fundamental rights and dignity in hospitals, schools, public accommodations, and other <br /> spaces. There are tragic spikes in violence against transgender women of color. LGBTQ+ <br /> individuals —especially youth who defy sex or gender norms—face bullying and harassment <br /> in educational settings and are at a disproportionate risk of self-harm and death by suicide. <br /> Some states have chosen to actively target transgender youth through discriminatory bills that <br /> defy the Nation's values of inclusivity and freedom for all. Chapel Hill-Carrboro Schools 2017 <br />