
07/22/2008


Golden Girl Estelle Getty Is Gone
Estelle Getty, who played meddling mother Sophia on "The Golden
Girls," died Tuesday morning. She was 84.
Getty, who suffered from advanced dementia, died around 5:30 a.m. Tuesday at her
Hollywood Boulevard home, said her son, Carl Gettleman of Santa Monica.
Getty won an Emmy Award in 1988 for her portrayal of the feisty octogenarian.
For her role as Sophia, Getty also notched a Golden Globe Award in 1986. She
also received an American Comedy Award.
More from The Hollywood Reporter
Christian Civic League Abandons
Anti-Gay Referendum Push

A citizen's initiative campaign to repeal Maine's gay
rights law and seeking roadblocks to gay marriages is being abandoned.
The Christian Civic League of Maine's Michael Heath said
the evangelical group that led the push is pulling the plug.
Heath said the group collected only a third of the number
of voters' signatures it wanted during the June 10th primaries and failed to
draw the volunteer support it had hoped for.
Besides wiping Maine's law protecting gays from discrimination off the books,
the initiative sought to bar the use of state funds by the attorney general's
office for its civil rights teams and reaffirm Maine's law that restricts
marriages to one man and one woman.
Watch this space fro reaction and more details!

Boston Cheers as Celtics Rout
Lakers
The Celtics did not just beat the Los Angeles Lakers,
they crushed them – and left no doubt that the Larry O'Brien trophy belonged
back in Boston after a 22-year hiatus.
Accompanied by chants of "Seventeen!" the
Celtics routed their longtime rivals 131-92 to close out the finals in six
games. Sixteen green-and-white banners will soon have company in the rafters.
Read More
Same-Sex Marriages Begin in California
Published: June 17, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO — With a series of simple “I dos,” gay couples across
California inaugurated the state’s court-approved and potentially
short-lived legalization of
same-sex marriage on Monday, the first of what is expected to be a crush
of such unions in coming weeks.
The weddings began in a handful of locations around the
state at exactly 5:01 p.m., the earliest time allowed by last month’s
decision by the California Supreme Court legalizing same-sex marriage. Many
more ceremonies will be held on Tuesday when all 58 counties will be issuing
marriage licenses to same-sex couples.
Read More
NBC’s Tim Russert dead at 58

Washington bureau chief, ‘Meet the Press’ moderator collapsed
on job
WASHINGTON - Tim Russert, NBC News’ Washington bureau chief and the moderator of
“Meet the Press,” died Friday after a sudden heart attack at the bureau, NBC
News said Friday. He was 58.
Russert
was recording voiceovers for Sunday’s “Meet the Press” program when he
collapsed, the network said. He and his family had recently returned from Italy,
where they celebrated the graduation of Russert’s son, Luke, from Boston
College.
Russert
was best known as host of “Meet the Press,” which he took over in December 1991.
Now in its 60th year, “Meet the Press” is the longest-running program in the
history of television.
But he
was also a vice president of NBC News and head of its overall Washington
operations, a nearly round-the-clock presence on NBC and MSNBC on election
nights.
He was
“one of the premier political journalists and analysts of his time,” Tom Brokaw,
the former longtime anchor of “NBC Nightly News,” said in announcing Russert’s
death. “This news division will not be the same without his strong, clear
voice.”
In 2008,
Time Magazine named Russert him one of the 100 most influential people in the
world.
Longtime Couple To Kick Off
Gay Marriage In Calif.
by The Associated Press

(San Francisco, California) Del Martin and
Phyllis Lyon's nuptials at City Hall ignited the gay wedding spree that thrust
San Francisco into the national spotlight in 2004.
Now the city plans a repeat of the ceremony
when gay marriage becomes legal in California on June 16.
Mayor Gavin Newsom plans to officiate at the
couple's wedding, just as he did for them in 2004. He said Monday that Martin
and Lyon will be the only gay couple married at City Hall on June 16. The
clerk's office will issue licenses for other couples beginning June 17.
Martin, 87, and Lyon, 84, are lesbian activists
who have been together for more than five decades. They were plaintiffs in the
California Supreme Court case that led to the state's legalization of gay
marriage.
Organizations Urge Couples Marrying in
California
to “Make Change, Not Lawsuits”

Four GLBT legal organizations and
five other leading national GLBT groups have issued a statement entitled “Make
Change, Not Lawsuits.” The statement explains that while couples who go to
California to marry should ask friends, neighbors and institutions to honor
their marriages, they generally shouldn’t sue. The statement says that
ill-timed lawsuits are likely to set the fight for marriage back, and that there
are other ways to fight which are more likely to win.
To read the statement,
Click
Here

Gay Marriage Ban Qualifies For Calif.
Ballot
(AP) An initiative that would again outlaw gay marriage
in California has qualified for the November ballot, the Secretary of State
announced Monday.
California Secretary of State Debra Bowen said a random
check of signatures submitted by the measure's sponsors showed that they had
gathered enough names for it to be put to voters.
The measure would amend the state constitution to
"provide that only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in
California."
If approved by a majority of voters on Nov. 4, the
amendment would overturn the recent California Supreme Court ruling that
legalized same-sex marriage in the state. It is similar to gay marriage bans
that have been adopted in 26 other states.
"This signifies the fact that California voters really
do favor and will come out to vote for the protection of historic marriage,"
said Ron Prentice, executive director of ProtectMarriage.com, a coalition of
religious and social conservative groups behind the initiative.
In response to the court's May 15 ruling, California
public health officials already have amended marriage license applications to
read "Party A" and "Party B" instead of bride and groom. Local officials have
been told to start issuing the revised licenses to same-sex couples on June 17.
Gay men and lesbians would still be able to
get married between then and the election, even with the initiative pending,
unless the court agrees to stay its decision until after Nov. 4, as the
amendment's sponsors have requested.
Read On

Students Arrested At "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"
Protest in South Portland
SOUTH PORTLAND (NEWS CENTER) -- Four students from
Harvard were arrested on criminal trespass charges Wednesday morning at a
military recruiting center in South Portland.
They staged a sit-in to protest the government's "Don't
Ask, Don't Tell" policy regarding gays in the military.
Jacob Reitan, a student at the Harvard Divinity School who is gay, visited
the recruiting center and asked to enlist. It was a request he knew would be
refused.
Protesters say it's time for Congress to repeal the law.
"The only way this bill is going to be repealed is when the stories of gay
people who want to serve get heard and when that causes people to move to
action to demand change," said Reitan. "So I think it's a very effective way
of making this point clear. Plus, as any young person who wants to serve
their country, I ought to be able to walk in there and make that attempt."
When they walked into the recruiting center, they were met by the station's
commander, Sgt. First Class Otis McMillan. McMillan calmly told the group
that they were welcome to stop by, but that they were protesting in the
wrong place.
"I think that their focus is misdirected," said McMillan. "All they're doing
is making it hectic for these recruiters who have work to do today, that's
all they're doing. I mean the place that they should be, they're not."
"That place," says Sgt. McMillan, "is Congress."
Read More

Anti-GLBT Violence Up 24%
A report released Tuesday shows that violent attacks on
members of the GLBT community nationwide grew by 24 percent in 2007 over the
previous year.
The 78-page report was prepared by the National
Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs with input from more than 30 of its members
across the U.S.
The number of incidents of anti-GLBT violence rose from
1,486 in 2006 to 1,833 in 2007, based on reporting from the exact same reporting
regions as the year prior.
Additionally, 2007 had the third highest murder rate in
the past 10 years that NCAVP has been compiling the report with murders more
than doubling from 10 in 2006 to 21 in 2007.
GLBT people also reported a 61% increase in sexual
assaults perpetrated as hate crimes.
Part of the increase is attributed to an increase in the
willingness of GLBT people to report hate crimes.
Read More

The other
Portland elects a gay mayor
Portland, Ore., City Commissioner Sam Adams on Tuesday
became the first openly gay mayor ever elected to lead one of the 30 largest
U.S. cities.
Adams, a Democrat, won 58 percent of the vote over
several opponents in the state's unique mail-only primary, eliminating the need
for a runoff in November, the Oregonian newspaper reported.
His campaign motto, "Early days of a better nation,"
referenced not only the city's progressive heritage but
his own childhood in poverty. Food stamps and public housing kept the family
afloat, he has often said.
"I will work hard with all of you, and believe me you're
going to be working hard as well," he told a crowd that included his mother,
grandmother and two sisters, the Oregonian quoted him as saying Tuesday night.
"Together we can make Portland cleaner, greener, more
sustainable, smarter, more equal, better educated... We've done it before, and
we will do it again."
Read More

New York to recognize out-of-state gay
marriage
NEW YORK (AP) — New York Gov. David Paterson has told
state agencies to start recognizing gay marriages performed where the unions are
legal.
Paterson spokeswoman Erin Duggan says the governor's
legal counsel sent a memo to all the state's agencies telling them they could be
violating state human rights law if they don't start recognizing the marriages.
The move is one of the strongest steps the state can
take short of action by the Legislature
California ban on same-sex
marriage struck down
In a much-anticipated ruling issued Thursday, the
California Supreme Court struck down the state's ban on same-sex marriage as
unconstitutional
Several gay and lesbian couples, along with the city of
San Francisco and gay rights groups, sued to overturn state laws allowing only
marriages between a man and a woman.
"There can be no doubt that extending the designation of
marriage to same-sex couples, rather than denying it to all couples, is the
equal protection remedy that is most consistent with our state's general
legislative policy and preference," said the 120-page ruling.
It said that the state law's language "limiting the
designation of marriage to a 'union between a man and a woman' is
unconstitutional, and that the remaining statutory language must be understood
as making the designation of marriage available to both opposite-sex and
same-sex couples."
With the ruling, California becomes the second state to
allow
same-sex couples to legally wed. Massachusetts adopted the practice in 2004,
and couples don't need to be state residents to wed there.
Read
More


Mainer Mitchell Named
One of
Time Magazine's "Tops"
Time Magazine's fifth annual list of the
world's most influential people: leaders, thinkers, heroes, artists, scientists
and more includes former Maine Senator George Mitchell.
Read Why

Memphis Principal Accused of "Outing" Gay Students
Attorneys for the American Civil Liberties Union say
Daphne Beasley, the principal of Hollis F. Price Middle College High School in
South Memphis, went way beyond her role as educator.
The ACLU says in September 2007, Beasley asked her staff
to give her the names of students who were couples, heterosexual and homosexual,
because she wanted to keep an eye on them to cut down on public displays of
affection.
She's accused of publicly posting the names of those
students, including two boys, Andrew and Nicholas, who had just started
dating. The ACLU says that in doing so, Beasley revealed their relationship to
other students, teachers and even their parents. Read
More

Five Years Since "Mission Accomplished"
Thursday (May 1) is the fifth anniversary
of President Bush's dramatic landing in a Navy jet on an aircraft carrier
homebound from the war.
"Major combat operations in Iraq have
ended," Bush said at the time. "The battle of Iraq is one victory in a war on
terror that began on Sept. 11, 2001, and still goes on." The "Mission
Accomplished" banner was prominently displayed above him _ a move the White
House came to regret as the display was mocked and became a source of
controversy.
Read More From The Huffington Post

Australia to remove gay
discrimination from 100 laws
Australia's new government won praise Wednesday for its plan to
eliminate discrimination against gay couples in more than 100 laws, but even
those applauding said it should go further and approve same sex marriages.
Attorney General Robert McClelland announced that the government will change
federal laws to ensure that gay couples in long-term relationships are treated
the same as married couples on issues such as taxation, pensions and welfare
payments.
"It will make a practical difference to the everyday lives of a group of our
fellow Australians who have been discriminated against for far too long,"
McClelland told reporters.
The amendments will be introduced in Parliament next month, McClelland said, but
it will take a year to complete the process.
McClelland said the Marriage Act — the law that applies nationally to ratify
marriage — would not be among the laws changed.
"The government regards marriage as being between a man and a woman and we don't
support any measures that seek to mimic that process," he said.
Rights advocates welcomed the proposed changes, but said the government should
go further.


Decorative Concrete - Where form and function come
together.
Déjà vu
All Over Again

UPDATE FROM EQUALITYMAINE
4-22-08
We just received word that Secretary of
State Matthew Dunlap's office responded to Mr. Heath late Friday. The Secretary
took steps to highlight the changes in Maine law that the referendum would
create, and pointedly asked which laws Mr. Heath seeks to repeal that currently
protect same-sex couples.
So we know the discussions about the text, title, and summary of the ballot
measure will continue. This is the beginning of a process: there is no deadline
by which Mr. Heath must respond to the Secretary. We will continue to monitor
developments with the Secretary's office, so if Mr. Heath forces another
anti-gay referendum on Maine, everyone will know what is at stake.
EqualityMaine will keep you informed and let you know how you can help stop this
referendum in its tracks, but perhaps you're wondering what you can do right
now. Here's one idea: forward this email to three friends and urge them to join
our news list. If we know we can count on them, we will know we can call on them
when it's time for action.
The longer the debate over this sweeping proposal drags on, the more important
it is for us to keep the message clear - Maine is not interested in
discriminating against gay and lesbian citizens.
Ironically, this proposal offers an unexpected opportunity for fair-minded
Mainers to unite and make our voices heard. Help us take advantage of it.
Forward this message to three people. Let them know it's time for us to stand
together.
Heath's Civic League Calls for New Anti-Gay
Referendum
The leader of the Christian Civic League of Maine has
taken a first step to launch a referendum drive to ban same-sex marriage and
civil unions in Maine.
The proposal advanced by Michael Heath would also strike
the sexual orientation category from the Maine Human Rights Act.
Heath says if the Secretary of States Office approves
his petition, he’ll begin recruiting organizers to gather signatures.
Putting a referendum on the state ballot requires about
55,000 signatures, or 10 percent of the turnout for the last gubernatorial
election.
In 2005, an effort to overturn the Maine law prohibiting
discrimination against homosexuals in the areas of housing, education and
employment was rejected.
Betsy Smith of EqualityMaine reacted to the news,
writing:
"The Christian Civic League
has proposed a referendum that would repeal
every protection we have ever won for LGBT people in Maine, including
removing sexual orientation from the Maine Human Rights Act.
The proposed question is extremely broad in its attack on LGBT Mainers. We
believe most fair-minded Mainers support our ability to live our lives, to
be treated fairly in our jobs and housing, and to send our kids safely to
school.
That said, Maine law is very lenient in regards to citizen initiatives and
this question (or some form of it) could very well end up at the polls in
2009.
Help stop this brazenly broad attack against LGBT Mainers by writing
a
letter to the editor of your local newspaper! We may be able to
influence the outcome of this referendum question by generating outrage
through our local newspapers!

Jury Rules: Princess Diana's Death "Unlawful"
The inquest into the death of Princess
Diana in a Paris car crash in 1997 returned a verdict of
unlawful killing on Monday, blaming "grossly negligent" driving
by her chauffeur and pursuing photographers for the car wreck.
Read More

Buckle Up - Or Pay
Maine's mandated Buckle Up or Pay A Fine seatbelt
law is now being enforced.
Maine's Bureau of Highway Safety said that as of
Tuesday, first-time violators can be issued $50 fines. Second violations can
bring $125 fines, and third and subsequent offenses can lead to $250 fines.
Since last September, violators received only warnings.
Previously, motorists had to be pulled over for a separate violation if they
were to be cited for nonuse of seat belts.
Maine is now the 26th state with a primary safety belt
law.
State officials estimated the law will save 10 lives and
avoid 155 serious injuries per year. Injuries avoided thanks to the law will
save taxpayers an estimated $33 million per year in unneeded medical expenses
and lost productivity.

High Marks For
Maine In Healthy State Rankings
A new survey ranks Maine as the
nation's fourth-healthiest state.
In a report released Wednesday, CQ Press ranked Maine
behind Minnesota, New Hampshire and Vermont as the nation's healthiest states.
The rankings are based on 21 factors that include access to health care, health
care affordability and preventive care.
Mississippi was named the least healthy state, below
Louisiana and New Mexico.
In a separate CQ Press survey, Maine was ranked in the
middle of the pack in a rating of the most livable states.
New Hampshire, Utah and Wyoming were the top three
states. Maine was ranked 20th, down four spots from last year.
For Sale: Your Local Newspapers

The Seattle Times Co. said it's exploring the sale of its newspapers in Maine.
Citing challenges within the industry, CEO and Publisher
Frank Blethen said the company needs to focus on the future of its newspapers in
Washington state.
The sale would include the Portland Press Herald/Maine
Sunday Telegram, the Kennebec Journal, the Morning Sentinel and MaineToday.com.
Blethen said the decision was painful, but a sale may be
the best opportunity for the long-term survival of his company's newspapers in
Washington and Maine.
The Blethen Maine Newspapers, as they're known, have
been owned by the Seattle Times for 10 years. They have about 500 employees and
combined circulation of about 101,000 daily and 136,900 Sunday.
Genetic manipulation, pollution
top
Vatican's 'new sins'

Vatican Announces Seven
New Deadly Sins
In an attempt to give moral and ethical
behavior more significance to current times, the Vatican has recently announced
seven new deadly sins, published in an issue of the L'Osservatore Romano, the
Vatican's official newspaper. The revision of the list comes after 1,500 years,
with Vatican officials explaining that the new items address a global "secular"
society bent on the concerns in the age of globalization. The sins are said to
be an address to the "decreasing sense of sin" in the modern world.
Read all The sinful
details
NY Gov Spitzer Is Linked to
Prostitution Ring

CNN) -- Gov. Eliot Spitzer said Wednesday that he
will step down from the state's top office and promised to "atone for my private
failings" with family members.
Eliot Spitzer built his reputation as a prosecutor of
white-collar crime before becoming New York's governor.
"The remorse I feel will always be with me and words
cannot describe how grateful I am for the love and compassion they have shown
me," Spitzer said.
The announcement came as the New York governor faces
allegations -- but no charges -- that he is tied to an international
prostitution ring ensnared in a federal probe.
Read More
Gay Marriage Attracting
Skilled Workers To Massachusetts

Massachusetts is reaping huge financial gains as a result of
same-sex marriage. The Boston Business Journal reports that the
only state in the country to allow gays to marry is become " a powerful lure
for same-sex couples who want to live in a place where they can get married,
gain legal rights and have access to spousal health benefits."
For
decades the state has seen a brain drain despite having some of the most
prestigious universities in the nation. From 2003 to 2005, the
population actually fell to 6,429,137 from 6,438,510, according to estimates
from the U.S. Census Bureau obtained by the publican.
"Since the marriage law passed, we see a lot more (gay)
professionals moving into the Boston area," Henry Hoey, a member of
the Greater Boston Business Council, a chamber of commerce for gay
professionals told the Journal. Hoey said that the organization's
membership has increased 5 percent to 1,100 members since last year.
"The effects of this law are starting to take hold."
Recruitment agencies and other business groups also say they have seen an
influx of same-sex couples - mostly professionals.
Attorney Jeffrey Webb and his partner Mark Schuster moved from Los
Angeles to Massachusetts in December order to marry. "That was
something that was really important to us," Webb told the Journal.
He is now a partner and practices trial law with a well known Boston-area
firm. Schuster is now the chief of general pediatrics and vice chair for health
policy research at Children's Hospital Boston.
In 2003 the Supreme Judicial Court, the highest court in
Massachusetts, struck down laws banning same-sex marriage and in 2004 the first
gay couples began to wed. Since then more than 10,000 gay and lesbian couples
have married in the state. [

Ellen Speaks Out On The Murder Of Gay
15-Year-Old Lawrence King
On today's show (Friday, February 29th) Ellen
DeGeneres will be speaking out on the recent murder of gay
15-year-old
Lawrence King.
"...I need to talk to you about something that's really
serious and really sad and if you know me, it's hard to talk about sad stuff
without getting emotional but this is really important to talk about. On
February 12th an openly gay 15-year-old boy named
Larry who was an 8th grader in Oxnard,
California, was murdered by a fellow 8th grader named Brandon. Larry was killed
because he was gay. Days before he was murdered, Larry asked his killer to be
his Valentine.
I don't wanna be political, this is not political, I'm not a political
person but this is personal to me. A boy has been
killed and a number of lives have been ruined
and somewhere along the line, the killer Brandon got the message that it's so
threatening and so awful and so horrific that Larry would want to be his
Valentine that killing Larry seemed to be the right thing to do. And when the
message out there is so horrible, that to be gay you can get killed for it, we
need to change the message (audience enthusiastically claps; Ellen is very
choked up and overwhelmed by the the audience clapping. She's fighting back the
tears, takes a deep breath - the audience is still clapping).
Larry was not a second-class citizen, I am not a second-class citizen. It is
okay if you're gay (audience erupts in cheers and clapping to show their
love and support). I don't care what people say, I don't care what people
think, and I know there are entire groups of people who face discrimination
every single day and we're a long way from treating each other equally - all of
it is unacceptable, all of it!
But I would like you to start paying attention to how often being gay is a
punchline of a monologue or how often gay jokes are in a movie. And that kind of
message, laughing at someone 'cause they're gay is just the beginning. It starts
with laughing at someone, then it's verbal abuse, then it's physical abuse, and
then it's this kid Brandon killing a kid like Larry. We must change our country
and we can do it, we can do it with our behaviour, we can do it with our
messages that we send our children, we can do it with our votes.
This is an election year and there's a lot of talk about change. I think one
thing we should change is hate. Check on who you're voting for and does that
person really, truly believe that we are all equal, under the law and if you're
not sure, change your vote, we deserve better...
(Ellen is very choked up and emotional)
My heart goes out to everybody (her voice breaks) involved in this
horrible, horrible incident, the whole... all the families and of course, even,
you know, Brandon's life has changed 'cause he did this. So, we're gonna put
more information on this, on our web site and we're gonna have a wonderful,
fabulous, funny show after this... we'll be back.
Watch The Video
Report
Alleges Transgender Discrimination
By Maine Camp

An investigator for the Maine Human Rights
Commission has determined that Camp Kieve employees in Nobleboro discriminated
against a transgender Pennsylvania man.
The investigator's report will be part of a hearing before the entire commission
Monday afternoon in Augusta. The commission has not made a finding on the
report's contents. Compiled by Paul D. Pierce and filed with the commission Feb.
7, the eight-page document supports the basis of a complaint filed by Jeremiah
Nazarkewycz on March 29, 2007.
Nazarkewycz alleged that Kieve-Wavus Education Inc. refused to rehire him for
the spring 2007 session after Nazarkewycz made a public appearance at Cony High
School in Augusta last January, discussing his transgender status.
Read The
Whole Story
$65 million to GLBT and HIV/AIDS
organizations

The estate of Ric Weiland, a high school classmate of Microsoft
Corp. founders Bill Gates and Paul Allen and one of the first five people to
work at the software giant, has left $65 million to gay rights and HIV/AIDS
organizations.
The bequests were announced Sunday by the Pride Foundation of Seattle, where
Weiland was a board member for several years. The foundation called it the
largest single bequest ever given to gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
causes.
Gates and Allen hired Weiland in 1975, the year they founded Microsoft. He
worked as a project leader for the Microsoft Works word
processing and spreadsheet software, and was a lead programmer and developer for
the company's BASIC and COBOL systems, two of the first
personal computing interfaces. He left Microsoft in 1988.
Weiland donated tens of millions to various organizations — from gay rights
groups to environmental and education organizations — before he
died in 2006. He committed suicide at age 53 after a long battle with
depression, and survivors include his partner, Mike Schaefer.
The $65 million is among bequests totaling about $160 million — the bulk of
Weiland's estate_ to various charities and Stanford
University, his undergraduate alma mater, according to an estimate provided by
the Pride Foundation.
In the latest bequest, the Pride Foundation said Weiland's estate had
established a fund at the foundation that would give $46 million over
the next eight years to 10 national gay rights and HIV/AIDS groups, including
Lambda Legal; the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force;
Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays; the Gay & Lesbian Alliance
Against Defamation; and amfAR, the Foundation for AIDS
Research.
His estate also bequeathed $19 million directly to the Pride Foundation for
scholarships and grants supporting the gay, lesbian,
bisexual and transgender community in the Pacific Northwest.
Awards Season
Big Night at The Oscars

Juno over No Country...
Depp over Daniel Day...

Moviefone's Fan Predictions
Moviefone.com polled readers for their Oscar picks in an
unscientific but telling, survey.
"Juno" was a runaway Moviefone pick for Best Picture, while
its star, Ellen Page, was a landslide selection for Best Actress. Voting pulled
in nearly 600,000 Moviefone readers.
In another fan-driven result, Johnny Depp in "Sweeney Todd" was the Moviefone
fan pick for Best Actor - and not odds-on favorite Daniel Day-Lewis.
Read the entire list
Read the list
"State of the Port"
Significant
Increases in Activity

Portland released its “State of the Port,” an assessment of transportation
activity in the City. The City’s Port activities experienced an 84% increase in
container moves, a record-breaking 55% increase in cruise ship passenger, and a
59% increase in cruise ship
revenue.
“The Port of Portland is an integral part of the City,” remarked Joe Gray, City
Manager. “The livelihoods of thousands of people depend upon a healthy, vibrant
working harbor and 2007 was a good year. It is also an exciting time for our
Port as the future holds a great deal of promise. In the coming year, we will
prepare for the opening of the Ocean Gateway Terminal, the construction of a new
garage and terminal expansion for the Jetport, and continued negotiations for
the reconstruction of the Maine State Pier. ”
Other highlights from the State of the Port include:
• 577 vessels visited the Port of Portland in 2007 (a slight decrease from 2006,
618 vessels).
• More than 4,000 containers disembarked in the Port, an 84% increase.
• Nearly 23.5 million tons of cargo entered the Port of Portland in 2007.
• A record-breaking 48,700 cruise passengers visited Portland, an increase of
55% over last year.
• 32 cruise ships visit Portland last year, an increase of 18%.
• Cruise ships visits generated an approximate $366,000 per boat, up 59% from
2006.
• Cruise ships visits generated approximately $1.5 million for Portland, a
nearly $10 million for the region.
• 942,000 passengers utilized the Casco Bay Ferries, up slightly from last year.
• The Cat experienced a 20% passenger increase with more than 56,400.
• Concord Trailways, Mermaid Transportation, VIP Tour and Travel Bus experienced
increases in passengers.
• Passengers of the METRO bus systems increased 4% to 1.43 million. System usage
has increased every year for the past eight years.
• Travelers on the Downeaster increased by 17% to 383,000.
• The Portland Jetport experienced a 17% increase in passengers, the fastest
growth rate for any airport in New England.
• More than 1.6 million passengers fly in or out of the Portland Jetport. 10 of
the 12 months of 2007 were record breaking.
• Portland’s transportation system had more than 6.8 million passengers in 2007,
a 9% increase from 2006.
The State of the Port is compiled annually by the City’s Department of Ports
and Transportation.
Victory in Case of Girl with
HIV
Court
Reverses MassHealth Refusal to Cover Surgery
Gay & Lesbian
Advocates & Defenders applauded today’s decision by the Massachusetts Court of
Appeals in favor of 17-year-old Ashley Shaw who has sought to get MassHealth to
cover her AIDS-related surgery.
“This is a great
victory because it affirms that a teenaged girl living with AIDS must receive
the health care that her doctors deem necessary,” said GLAD staff attorney
Janson Wu. “As people with HIV live longer – and especially children born with
HIV live into adulthood – access to care is the critical issue of their
lives.”
Ashley Shaw has
lived with HIV since her birth, and the powerful anti-AIDS drugs she takes cause
multiple side-effects, including the growth of an abnormal fat pad on the nape
of her neck. This “buffalo hump” caused her daily pain, severe headaches,
abnormal posture, and posed the danger of permanent damage to her spine. In
2004, her doctors at Children’s Hospital concluded that surgical removal was a
necessity.
Literally on the
eve of the scheduled surgery, MassHealth denied coverage. In light of Ashley’s
pain and the risk of long-term damage, Ashley’s mother, Liz Shaw, decided to
proceed with the surgery and appeal the decision later. “Any mother would have
made the same decision,” said Liz. MassHealth denied her right to appeal
because the surgery was performed “without authorization.”
“This was
error,” wrote Judge Elspeth Cypher on behalf of a unanimous Court. “We reject
the DMA’s [Division of Medical Assistance] view that Ashley’s claim may be
terminated because the procedure had been performed without authorization. There
was no timely and reasonable alternative available when the request for
authorization was denied.”
“When Ashley was
born, the median life expectancy of children with HIV was eight years old,” said
Liz Shaw. “But she is part of the first generation of children who are growing
up and living into adulthood. She’ll continue to need medical care, and I’m
grateful to the Court for providing that access to care.”
GLAD had filed
suit in Suffolk Superior Court in 2005 on behalf of Ashley and Liz Shaw. The
Court found on behalf of MassHealth and GLAD filed the appeal with the
Massachusetts Court of Appeals, arguing before the court on October 4, 2007.
Young Gay Shooting Victim Declared Brain Dead
in California
14 Year-Old Shooter Charged With Hate Crime
Ventura County prosecutors charged a 14-year-old boy with the
shooting death of a classmate Thursday and said the killing in an Oxnard
classroom was a premeditated hate crime.

Senior Deputy Dist. Atty. Maeve Fox declined to discuss a motive in the shooting
or why prosecutors added the special allegation of a hate crime against Brandon
McInerney (pictured) , who was charged as an adult.
But classmates of the slain boy, Lawrence King, said he recently
had started to wear makeup and jewelry and had proclaimed himself gay. Several
students said King and a group of boys, including the defendant, had a verbal
confrontation concerning King's sexual orientation a day before the killing.
Read More

Gay Rights Leader Attacked in Brazil
President of Sao Paulo's Gay Pride
Association hospitalized
From PinkNews.co.uk
The President of Sao Paulo's Gay Pride
Association was hospitalized after he was attacked at their offices yesterday.
Alexandre Peixe dos Santos was gagged, hooded and beaten by an unknown number of
attackers.
The association organizes one of the largest gay rights parades in the world.
Last year three million revelers packed the streets of the Brazilian city in
what officials have called the largest party in the world.
Mr Peixe dos Santos was beaten unconscious in the attack and called police when
he regained consciousness.
The incident is being investigated by a specialist police unit, the Racial
Crimes and Crimes of Intolerance Division.
In September GLBT activists in Brazil spoke about the high levels of homophobia
in their society in the wake of the brutal sexual assault and murder of a gay
teenager.
Osvan Inacio dos Santos, 19, was attacked in a street near a bar where he had
just won the local "Miss Gay" competition. His naked body was found on Sunday
morning and forensic examination found his skull had been fractured and
indicated sexual assault.
The attack and murder, in the town of Batingas in northeast Brazil, is just one
high-profile example of the problems the GLBT community face in the country,
which is often viewed as liberal in matters of sexuality.
Tedy Marques, president of the Alagoas Gay Group, told EFE news agency at the
time:
"Homophobia is one of the worst problems Brazil faces. It is unacceptable that
every other day in our country a homosexual is brutally murdered."
Activists estimate that more than 2,680 gay people were murdered in Brazil
between 1980 and 2006.
Awards Season
Grammy Award Winners

Read The List
Write On!
Writers Applaud Deal With Studios

Jubilant screenwriters declared victory Saturday in
their 14-week-old strike, hailing the
Writers Guild of America's tentative agreement with
Hollywood's major studios that, if accepted, could return employees to work
this week.
In meetings in
New York and
Los Angeles, rank-and-file writers expressed general support for the
studios' offer as the guild's leadership urged acceptance of the deal.
Read More
The Check Is (almost) In The
Mail

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The House on Thursday quickly
passed a Senate-approved economic stimulus package and sent the bill to the
president's desk for his signature.
The House voted 380-34 to accept the Senate's $170
billion measure, just a few hours after Democratic and Republican senators
reached accord and ended a days-long stalemate over the bill.
The deal, passed in the Senate on a 81-16 vote, includes
rebate check amounts of $300 to $600 for people who have an income between
$3,000 and $75,000, plus $300 per child.
Couples earning up to $150,000 would get $1,200.
But the plan also gives checks to more than 20 million
Social Security beneficiaries and 250,000 handicapped veterans and their widows.
Two White House officials said President
Bush will probably sign the bill next week.
Read More

Super Stunner
Giants End Patriots'
Perfect Season
After 18
victories, the New England Patriots fell from the unbeaten ranks with a 17-14
loss to the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLII.
A
victory at the University of Phoenix Stadium on Sunday would have given New
England a perfect 19-0 record on the year and allowed them to join the 1972
Miami Dolphins as unbeaten Super Bowl champions.
But history will have to wait.
Read All About It
Gay Pride In Jerusalem Could Be Barred

Move
to ban public events that
"insult religious values and public feelings."
A member of Israel's religious Shas Party
told a parliamentary committee Tuesday that homosexuality
is an epidemic and should be dealt with like the Health Ministry deals with bird
flu.
Read all about it
Federer's Grand Slam Run Ends With Djokovic
Victory

Read The Sweaty Details
