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University of Maryland’s LGBTQ+ students march for LGBTQ+ rights

Legislation aimed at erasing discussions about gender and sexual identity in schools has been on the rise across the country

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LGBTQ students march to McKeldin Mall at the University of Maryland (Blade photo by Tinashe Chingarande)

COLLEGE PARK, Md. – LGBTQ students at the University of MarylandĀ marched across campus Saturday in response to legislation passed in many states that bars the discussion of gender identity and sexual orientation in schools.

As this happened, families from across the state were gathered all over campus to celebrate the universityā€™s annual community outreach event, ā€œMaryland Day.ā€Ā 

The ā€œLetā€™s Say Gay Paradeā€ began in the Adele H. Stamp Student Union, trekked through McKeldin Mallā€”where many Maryland Day attractions were situatedā€”and ended in the student union. Students, parents and members of the campus community were in attendance. 

ā€œFor the people who arenā€™t at this event today, call [and email] your local representatives,ā€ said Veena Aruldhas. 

Aruldhas, 23, is a senior studying information science at the university. They are also vice president of the schoolā€™s Pride Alliance and also work on the Pride month committee within Multicultural Involvement Community Advocacy, a campus inclusion group.

ā€œShow up for the people who canā€™t speak for themselves because their rights have been infringed upon,ā€ said Aruldhas. 

Legislation aimed at erasing discussions about gender and sexual identity in schools has been on the rise across the country. 

Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the controversial ā€œDonā€™t Say Gayā€ bill in late March that bans public school teachers from providing instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity in classrooms. The bill also allows parents to sue schools that violate its prescriptions. 

Ohio lawmakers also proposed a similar bill in early April that, in addition, limits education about other ā€œdivisive conceptsā€ such as the 1619 Project, critical race theory and ā€œany other concept that the state board of education defines as divisive or inherently racist.ā€

While Maryland legislators this year havenā€™t launched attacks on classroom instruction like the other two states, recent efforts to provide health equity for transgender individuals through the Trans Health Equity Act were stalled in this yearā€™s General Assembly 90-day legislative session.

Therefore, graduate student Joey Haavik, 26, believes the rise of homophobic legislation around the country escalates the need for Marylanders to review local legislation. 

ā€œThis didnā€™t get as much attention,ā€ they said in reference to the Trans Health Equity Act. Haavik is studying international education and policy and works as an advisor to campus LGBTQ organizations. ā€œSo, even though people experience many differing levels of hatred, thereā€™s many ways to advocate for our community.ā€

State Sen. Mary Washington (D-Baltimore City), who attended the event and also gave a keynote speech, spoke on the billā€™s failure.

ā€œEvents like these empower us to mobilize against attacks on marginalized people in our communities,ā€ she said. ā€œWe must be relentless in the fight for a fair and just world.ā€

House of Delegates candidate Ashanti Martinez also spoke about the bill at the event. 

Martinez is a Democrat campaigning for the District 22 seat, and if elected will be the first openly gay Afro-Latino man from Prince Georgeā€™s County to represent the jurisdiction in the chamber. 

ā€œThe [bill] vanished ā€¦ [and] we want to know why,ā€ he said. ā€œThis erasure of LGBTQ folks is intentional.ā€

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Maryland

Larry Hogan speaks with the Washington Blade

Republican former Md. governor defends LGBTQ rights, abortion records

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Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (Photo courtesy of Hogan's campaign)

Republican former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan in a written interview with the Washington Blade discussed his decision to run for the U.S. Senate and defended his record on LGBTQ rights.

ā€œItā€™s more important than ever to have strong, independent leadership at every level of government bringing people together and fighting for the exhausted majority,” said Hogan in response to the Blade’s questions that his campaign sent on July 30. “Marylanders know me, and they know I was proud to represent all Marylanders as governor, and thatā€™s exactly what Iā€™ll do in the U.S. Senate.ā€

Hogan was Maryland’s governor from 2015-2023.

He defeated then-Lieutenant Gov. Anthony Brown, who is now the stateā€™s attorney general, by a 52-46 percent margin in 2014. Hogan four years later defeated former NAACP President Ben Jealous by a 56-43 percent margin.

Hogan in March 2023 said he would not run for president. He announced in February that he is running for retiring U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.)’s seat. 

Hogan in May easily won the Republican primary. He will face off against Democratic Prince Georgeā€™s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks in November. The outcome could determine whether Democrats maintain control of the Senate.

ā€œI like the county executive and respect her ā€” we worked together on a number of things as governor,” said Hogan, referring to Alsobrooks. “We just have fundamental disagreements on the issues, and how we approach things. Iā€™m committed to taking an independent approach, challenging hyper-partisanship, and getting the country back to decency and common sense.ā€

Former governor defends LGBTQ record amid criticism

Hogan in 2018 signed a bill that banned so-called conversion therapy in Maryland. Hogan during a 2023 interview with CNN’s “State of the Union” criticized Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis over his state’s “Don’t Say Gay” law he signed.

A bill that created the Commission on LGBTQ Affairs in the Governor’s Community Initiatives Office took effect in 2021 without Hogan’s signature. 

Hogan also did not sign a bill that banned the so-called LGBTQ panic defense in Maryland.

That law also took effect in 2021. 

Hogan spokesperson Blake Kernen further elaborated on the former governor’s LGBTQ rights record.

“After calling for ‘tolerance and mutual respect’ in his inaugural address, Gov. Hogan supported LGBTQ community priorities throughout his time in office,” Kernen told the Blade. “As some examples, he enacted legislation to ban the practice of conversion therapy, and he upheld and strengthened the stateā€™s anti-discrimination protections ā€” including allowing measures to take effect that extend IVF treatment coverage to same-sex couples, allow transgender Marylanders to revise their birth certificates, ban the ā€˜gay panic defense,ā€™ and make it easier to prosecute hate crimes.”

(The panic defense ban bill became law without Hogan’s signature.)

Kernen pointed out Hogan appointed the first openly LGBTQ person to serve as a chief judge on a Maryland appellate court.

Hogan in 2022 named E. Gregory Wells as chief judge of the Court of Special Appeals. Wells, who is also Black, is also the first African American person named to the position.

Kernen also noted to the Blade that Hogan ā€œappointed the first members and administrative director of theā€ Maryland Commission on LGBTQ Affairs. (The law took effect in 2021 without Hoganā€™s signature.)

ā€œHe signed anti-bullying laws, and championed numerous initiatives to combat bias and hate crimesā€“including increased funding, and expanded community and school resources,ā€ said Kernen.

ā€œIn January 2023, when Gov. Hogan left office, the state continued to have the Human Rights Campaignā€™s highest rating for Working Toward Innovative Equality,ā€ he added. ā€œMaryland has a bipartisan legacy of supporting the LGBTQ community, and Gov. Hogan looks forward to building on this work in the Senate.ā€ 

Hogan on June 1 participated in the Annapolis Pride parade.

Democratic Gov. Wes Moore also took part. An Alsobrooks campaign spokesperson told the Blade that she was unable to attend, but many of her campaign volunteers and supporters marched in the parade.

ā€œWeā€™re grateful to Annapolis Pride for giving candidates the opportunity to take part in their festival,ā€ said Hogan. ā€œI wish County Executive Alsobrooks had been able to join us, but it was an outstanding parade, and a true testament to the spirit of the community.ā€ 

HRC last month endorsed Alsobrooks.

HRC President Kelley Robinson in a statement said Alsobrooks ā€œhas always been a champion for equality and freedom, from her support for the state law that legalized same-sex marriage in 2012, to becoming the first Maryland county executive to authorize flying the Progress Pride flag over county buildings, and much more.ā€

Alsobrooks throughout her campaign has highlighted abortion rights within the context of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that struck down Roe v. Wade. Alsobrooks during interview with the Blade before the May 14 Democratic primary noted Hoganā€™s ā€œwell-known position as a person who is not pro-choice.ā€

Kernen in a May 22 statement criticized Alsobrooks over her comments about Hoganā€™s abortion rights record.

ā€œGovernor Hogan protected choice in Maryland for eight years, funding access to abortion in the budget every year and being the first governor in America to provide over-the-counter birth control paid for by Medicaid,ā€ said Kernen. ā€œHe said in 2019, Roe was rightly decided and has been on the record against a national abortion ban since 1992.ā€ 

ā€œHe rightly vetoed legislation to allow non-licensed medical professionals to perform abortions because that would have lowered health care standards for women,ā€ added Kernen. ā€œIn the Senate, instead of playing politics with this issue, he will work to reinstate Roe v. Wade as the law of the land. Marylanders know that when Gov. Hogan gives his word, he keeps it, and that is why voters continue to reject these same tired, false, and fear-mongering attacks.ā€

Attempted Trump assassination was ā€˜terrible tragedyā€™

Hogan remains a vocal critic of former President Donald Trump.

He did not support Trump in 2016 or 2020. Hogan also did not attend last month’s Republican National Convention in Milwaukee.

Trump in June endorsed Hogan for Senate. Kernen said the former governor ā€œdidnā€™t seek the endorsement, and has no interest in it.ā€

Trump on July 13 survived an assassination attempt during a rally in Butler, Pa.

Hogan described the assassination attempt as a ā€œterrible tragedy.ā€ He added the country is ā€œat a dangerous inflection point ā€” our nation is like a tinderbox right now.ā€

ā€œIā€™ve long been a proponent of lowering the temperature and finding a way to do away with the divisive rhetoric and the angry, toxic politics,ā€ said Hogan.

The Blade asked Hogan whether he thinks the country can unify in the wake of the assassination attempt.

“When I travel the state meeting Marylanders, they give me hope,ā€ he said in response to the question. ā€œIf politicians and pundits were more like regular people, our whole nation would be in a better place.”

Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan marches in the Annapolis Pride parade on June 1, 2024. (Photo courtesy of Hogan’s Facebook page)

A Public Policy Polling poll conducted between June 19-20 found Alsobrooks ahead of Hogan by a 45-34 percent margin. Hogan would be the first Republican from Maryland in the U.S. Senate since Charles Mathias retired in 1987 if he wins in November.

ā€œI think a lot of voters, both Republicans and Democrats, want strong independent leaders who will clean up the mess in Washington,ā€ Hogan told the Blade. ā€œThey know me, and they know Iā€™m that guy.ā€

ā€œThe pundits said for a long time the Hogan brand of politics is dead, but every time we prove them wrong,ā€ he added. ā€œI know Iā€™m the underdog, but Iā€™m seeking to prove them wrong again.ā€

Hogan responded to the Washington Blade’s questions before Vice President Kamala Harris chose Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate.

ā€œI want to extend my congratulations to Gov. Walz on being selected as the Democratic vice presidential nominee,” said Hogan on Tuesday in a statement. “We had the chance to work together as fellow governors, and while we come from different parties, I have always appreciated his dedication to public service. I believe we need more governors at the national level because governors have to actually get stuff done. I wish Tim and his family well in the campaign ahead.ā€

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Baltimore Pride event disrupted causing panic & injuries

A possible chemical agent was released in front of the main stage at the Baltimore Pride Parade and Block Party

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This yearā€™s Pride Parade and Festival was expected to attract 100,000 people. (Photo by Kaitlin Newman/the Baltimore Banner)

By John-John Williams IV and Brenna SmithĀ | BALTIMORE, Md. – A possible chemical agent was released in front of the main stage at the Baltimore Pride Parade and Block Party on Saturday night, causing a stampede.

The incident occurred around 7 p.m. and police did not release the chemical agent, according to a spokesperson. The main stage for the event was located near North Avenue and Charles Street.

ā€œThe event was closed. The fire department responded and was tending to several injuries from the mass exodus,ā€ a spokesperson for the police department said Sunday morning. Online social media posts suggest the chemical agent was mace. These posts allege it was sprayed after a fight broke out, prompting panic and the stampede.

Editor’s note: The rest of this article can be found on the Baltimore Bannerā€™s website.

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The preceding article was previously published by The Baltimore Banner, a media partner of The Washington Blade and is republished with permission.

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Beloved gay neighbor remembered by a Maryland neighborhood

The sign was vandalized numerous times last fall, resulting in neighborhood residents taking turns repairing it

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Tony Brown's neighbors help repaint the Pride sign his late partner created in their Silver Spring neighborhood. (Photo courtesy of Molly Chehak)

By Sean Koperek | SILVER SPRING, Md. – Residents of Silver Spring Marylandā€™s Rosemary Hills neighborhood, in suburban Washington D.C., have come together to rebuild a Pride sign.Ā 

The sign was constructed in June 2020, and was meant to stay in place throughout Pride Month. Neighborhood residents, however, requested it stay up past its intended month-long display, and has remained in place for more than four years. 

The sign spelling LOVE is at the neighborhoodā€™s entrance between Sundale and Richmond Streets. It was made from plywood and the O was painted in the colors of the Pride flag.

ā€œWe wanted to take it down, but we just felt it was not ours anymore and belonged to the neighborhood.ā€ Tony Brown told the Washington Blade during a telephone interview. ā€œIt was a positive thing for the neighborhood and began to take on a life of its own.ā€ 

Brown and his partner, Mike Heffner, designed the sign and said the Black Lives Matter movement inspired them to create it as a strong symbol of an accepting community.

The sign was vandalized numerous times last fall, resulting in neighborhood residents taking turns repairing it. Brown and his partner could not do the repairs themselves because Heffner was fighting Stage 4 lung cancer.

Heffner passed away on Oct. 6, 2023.

A GoFundMe page was set up to help raise funds for the replacement Pride sign, and it has raised more than $4,000. The replacement sign is more permanent and made of metal.

ā€œI canā€™t speak for the neighborhood overall, but people who knew Mike I think are happy that we were able to honor his memory with this sign because this sign is so him,ā€ Molly Chehak, a friend who lives next door to Brown, told the Blade. ā€œHe (Heffner) was an outgoing super social (person) who just made you feel good the way this sign does. Itā€™s a perfect tribute to him.ā€ 

Chehak and other neighbors created the GoFundMe account.

Heffnerā€™s family and his neighbors are still working to rebuild the Pride sign. It has become a memorial to Heffner.

ā€œWe wanted to do one that was clearly a Pride reference,ā€ said Brown, noting the L is a fully painted Pride flag that spirals across the entire letter. 

ā€œFor the O we wanted to do something reminiscent of times in the past, a throwback to the 60ā€™s and 70ā€™s so itā€™s a hippie montage of flowers and butterflies,ā€ he said. 

Brown described the V as being colorful, nonbinary people hugging each other with the idea that love is more than what one may see. 

ā€œDuring COVID, he had started painting rocks and putting kind and fun messages on them leaving them around places as sort of a pay it forward Karma and so the E is basically that stylized writing and to embrace a bunch of ways we embrace love,ā€ he said. 

The final letter had the phrase ā€œlove is loveā€ written repeatedly in various handwritings to pay homage to Heffner and what he did for his neighborhood during the pandemic. Brownā€™s four daughters ā€” one of whom is a professional artist ā€” and their friends designed it.

The landscape around the sign has also been transformed with rocks that honors Heffnerā€™s love for Rosemary Hills and his passion for rocks.

Chehak also said Heffner always wanted a bench, and neighbors are looking to install one soon next to the Pride sign.

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Sean Koperek is a senior at Westfield State University in Massachusetts and is majoring in communications. He is interning with the Washington Blade as part of a continued partnership with the Washington Center.

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Mayor of Maryland Eastern Shore city cancels Pride flag display

This will mark the first time in five years that a Pride flag will not fly at the cityā€™s office for Pride month

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Mayor Randolph Taylor has yanked the display of Pride flags in Salisbury, Md. (Screenshot/YouTube PAC 14)

By Joe Reberkenny | SALISBURY, Md. – The City of Salisbury, Md., centrally located on the Free State’s Eastern Shore between the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic, will not fly the Pride flag outside the city office building in downtown Salisbury. This will mark the first time in five years that a Pride flag will not fly at the cityā€™s office for Pride month.Ā 

Randolph J. Taylor, the mayor of Salisbury, told the Blade that the choice not to raise the flag was based on being ā€œfairā€ and ā€œtransparent.ā€

ā€œThe administrationā€™s position on the PFLAG kick-off is very simple,ā€ Taylor said to the Blade in an email. ā€œThat is, to be neutral. Neutrality is not to be interpreted as anything else but simply that ā€” being neutral.ā€œ

Taylor explained that the decision to appear more neutral was not to single out one particular group. ā€œThis is an approach the City has and will take with any other event held in the City of Salisbury as we entertain more than 100 events a year from a variety of groups and causes.ā€

Taylor concluded his statement with good wishes for PFLAG, the LGBTQ human rights organization that previously collaborated with the mayor on the flag raising and recently relocated within Salisbury.

ā€œI am glad PFLAG has a new location on Carroll St. for its kick-off,ā€ Taylor said. ā€œThe City of Salisbury wishes the event good luck!ā€

Nicole Hollywood, legislative chair for PFLAG Salisbury, said the decision not to promote cultural events using ā€œcity assets,ā€ which includes the cityā€™s flagpoles and street lamps, could impact longstanding celebrations of cultural heritage in the city. 

ā€œWe simply got an email saying that ā€˜weā€™re evaluating the use of city assets for cultural events,ā€™ and ā€˜we donā€™t feel itā€™s appropriate moving forward to hang flags that represent special interest groups,ā€™ā€ Hollywood told the Blade regarding the denied request for flying the flag. ā€œWe were disheartened and made a statement saying that the planned event, which has occurred for a number of years always on the same day in the same location, is temporarily postponed until we could find an alternative.ā€

Hollywood continued, explaining that she, and other supporters of the LGBTQ community, have plans to bring the issue to the city councilā€™s attention. She hopes to get a more standardized approach to the vetting of cultural events, like the Pride flag raising, in Salisbury. 

ā€œWe do have a request that weā€™ll be making in front of the city council, which is simply that a structure be put in place thatā€™s uniform and equitable, thatā€™s used to vet applications for flag raisings and other civic and cultural events,ā€ she explained. ā€œIt isnā€™t clear, at this time, who exactly holds authority over city assets.ā€

In addition to her concerns regarding the current ā€œmurkyā€ methods of approval for cultural events, Hollywood also highlighted her fears for the future of the Pride crosswalk in Salisbury. 

The crosswalk, which includes the classic rainbow Pride flag, the updated progressive Pride flag (that comprises the colors of the classic Pride flag, transgender pride flag, and stripes of black and brown to recognize people of color in the LGBTQ community), as well as a transgender flag, was the first to be installed in Maryland. 

Hollywood fears that if the city re-evaluates the crosswalks, it could be the beginning of the end of outward support for the LGBTQ community on any public land. 

ā€œWe think that itā€™s been a beacon of hope to people in the community having this rainbow, the trans, and progress Pride crosswalks,ā€ Hollywood said. ā€œWe really want to protect and steward their existence because we know that if theyā€™re painted over, or erased, that it wonā€™t be as easy to get them back.ā€

Despite the shift in attitude from the city, some in the community have pledged to show their support in full force. The downtown business alliance in Salisbury, which works to foster growth for business in Salisbury, has encouraged its members to fly rainbow flags on private property in solidarity with PFLAG. 

ā€œWeā€™re trying to get as many people as possible to feel that they have a voice,ā€ Hollywood said. ā€œTo feel that theyā€™re included and to find other ways that we could celebrate queer joy.ā€

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Joseph Reberkenny is a recent graduate of American University and the The Blade Foundation’s recipient of its 2024 Steve Elkins Memorial Fellowship in Journalism. Reberkenny is covering issues of interest to Delawareā€™s LGBTQ community for 12 weeks this summer for the Washington Blade.

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A year after Safe Harbor in Maryland, TurnAround & sex trafficking

Perhaps the most striking thing about TurnAround is how large of an operation it is ā€” how large of an operation itĀ needsĀ to be

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The staff at TurnAround Inc. in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo courtesy of TurnAround Inc.)

By CJ Higgins | BALTIMORE, Md. -In 2023, the law in Maryland dictated the following: If a child was discovered to be sex trafficked during a sting operation, they were to be arrested, handcuffed, and then incarcerated as a ā€œchild prostitute.ā€ One survivorĀ testifiedĀ to Maryland lawmakers that after being trafficked throughout College Park from ages 12 to 15, it was their ā€˜rescueā€™ by law enforcement that was the most traumatizing part of their experience.

In 40 states and in federal law, the sex trafficking of minors was already understood to be a crime committed against children, and not a crime committed by children. When Gov. Wes Moore signed the Safe Harbor law on May 16th of last year, prohibiting the criminal prosecution of sex-trafficked minors, he brought Maryland out of a legal dark age.

How do things look in Maryland a year later? The Washington Blade got in touch with TurnAround Inc., headquartered in Baltimore, to find out. TurnAround is Marylandā€™s first provider of comprehensive services to survivors of sexual trafficking, Baltimoreā€™s rape crisis center, and a support center for victims of intimate partner violence and sexual violence.

Perhaps the most striking thing about TurnAround is how large of an operation it is ā€” how large of an operation it needs to be. The organization fielded more than 10,000 calls on their hotline in 2022, conducted almost 4,000 counseling sessions, and placed 337 clients in safe shelter: nearly one for every day of the year. But the staff at TurnAround is relieved to see these numbers so high. During the pandemic, there was a steep decrease in reports of sex trafficking. 

ā€œ[COVID] had a very chilling effect on the number of trafficking survivors that were getting access to services,ā€ said Amanda Rodriguez, executive director of TurnAround. Many of the avenues through which cases were referred to TurnAround simply shut down. The hospitals were inundated with COVID cases, and so werenā€™t referring anyone; the schools were closed down, and so werenā€™t referring anyone; and State Attorney Marilyn Mosby stopped prosecuting low-level crimes, which had the unintended consequence of limiting the opportunities law enforcement had to identify youth at risk of trafficking.

In 2020, TurnAround moved into a new office in downtown Baltimore, and it is cavernous ā€” half the floor of a skyscraper. When you walk in, you could mistake the headquarters for a dentistā€™s office for how calmly the front desk attendant answers the phone. A few lines here and there give away the seriousness of their work: ā€œIs it OK for us to leave a voicemail?ā€ Not every callerā€™s phone is a safe place.

The office is flanked by a hallway of therapists on one side of the building, who focus on the inner lives of their clients, and a hallway of advocates on the other side, who focus on their outer lives: support in court, government benefits, direct outreach on the streets of Baltimore. At the center are a host of services one would think spread across the whole of the city: a computer center, a clothing donation center, storage for the goods and products needed to survive while in shelter, a kitchen for group meals, and a place to wash and dry your clothes. But the most sobering part of the office is the play center full of toys, for the children that TurnAround serves. ā€œWe have clients as young as three years old,ā€ said Jean Henningsen, senior director of strategic initiatives. Some of these children come in as the dependents of adult survivors, but they are sometimes the victims of sexual violence themselves.

ā€œWhen we were creating Safe Harbor, we looked to see how many kids had been arrested and charged by law enforcement in every county in the state,ā€ Amanda said. ā€œBaltimore City had the highest number at the time. This has changed since then, and is actually getting much better.ā€ The majority of these trafficked kids were trans girls living in the Charles Village neighborhood of Baltimore ā€” a situation that would surprise many Baltimore residents. Charles Village has a reputation for being one of the safest neighborhoods in the city. It is the neighborhood of Johns Hopkins University, which has, in an effort to assuage the concerned parents of its undergraduates, stationed security officers on many of the surrounding street corners. Despite criticism, the university recently partnered with the Baltimore Police Department to create its own police force, and has started recruiting and training officers as of this spring.

ā€œItā€™s historically been a safer neighborhood for the LGBTQ community in general,ā€ Amanda said. ā€œI donā€™t know what spurred more nefarious individuals coming in and exploiting people, other than opportunity. Traffickers are just such master manipulators. They will figure out for anybody what their vulnerability is.ā€ But these nefarious individuals are not part of some transnational crime organization. They are sometimes trans women themselves, trafficking these girls to serve their own needs in the home. Often rejected by their families and in search of community,  trans girls find this community among other trans women, and then get manipulated into sexual service.

The procedure for dealing with suspected child sex trafficking in Maryland begins with what are called ā€œRegional Navigators,ā€ a role established by the Child Sex Trafficking Screening and Services Act of 2019. Law enforcement agents and local departments of Social Services will notify the countyā€™s Regional Navigator of a suspected trafficking case, and then this Regional Navigator will put together a Multi-Disciplinary Team, or MDT. The MDT consists of all agents and departments that are involved in or have some stake in the case, including Child Protective Services, Juvenile Services, law enforcement, therapists, and schools. These stakeholders will compare notes on what the youth has told them, since they will often have provided different agents and departments with competing descriptions of whatā€™s going on. 

While the MDT procedure is highly effective for inter-departmental coordination on a given case, Stephanie Gonzalez, the Acting Regional Navigator for Howard County, explained that the system has some way to go when it comes to LGBTQ youth. ā€œWhen we get referrals in general, a lot of times, itā€™s not mentioned how they identify,ā€ she said. As a consequence, their data on how many LGBTQ youth are being trafficked isnā€™t always accurate, and these youth sometimes arenā€™t being handled in ways consonant with their sexual or gender identity. And even when these youth are appropriately identified, they arenā€™t always able to access the appropriate resources.

ā€œWe had a transgender female come to us from another state, and she had been trafficked,ā€ Stephanie said. ā€œWe had her in a hotel while we looked for other housing options. We could not find trans-friendly housing options.ā€ The womenā€™s shelters they approached didnā€™t have the requisite training or resources. They would ask insensitive and irrelevant questions about any surgeries the girl had undergone as part of her transition, or require that she be isolated from other women for their safety. ā€œWhy are they trying to make it seem like Iā€™m going to hurt someone,ā€ she would ask.

But that situation is changing. TurnAround has partnered with the YWCA of Annapolis and Anne Arundel County to open up a safe house with the resources needed to support any child survivor of sex trafficking. ā€œItā€™s built!ā€ Jean said. ā€œTurnAround will be staffing it and running it 24/7. Right now there are no children in the facility. Weā€™re still waiting on the final licensing paperwork from the state.ā€

The project is expensive, with an estimated running cost of $1.5 million each year. TurnAround has partnered with Femi Ayanbadejo, a former Super Bowl winner with the Baltimore Ravens, to help coordinate fundraising. Ayanbadejo advocates for TurnAround with a deep enthusiasmā€”hearing him talk on the work they do, it could easily be a field-side interview in the final quarter of a game. ā€œIf we can reach five, ten, twenty, thirty, forty thousand people that we wouldnā€™t have with [the Bladeā€™s] reach, maybe thereā€™s one or two foundations that would give five, ten, a hundred, a thousand, maybe a million dollars. Who knows?ā€

To learn more about TurnAroundā€™s work, visit their website at turnaroundinc.org. If you or someone you know is experiencing sexual violence, TurnAround has offices in Baltimore City, Baltimore County, and Howard County. All three offices can be reached via 410-377-8111.

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CJ Higgins by Sam Jeong

CJ HigginsĀ is a postdoctoral fellow with the Alexander Grass Humanities Institute at Johns Hopkins University.

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Maryland’s governor signs Freedom to Read Act

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore on Thursday signed a bill that seeks to combat efforts to ban books from state libraries

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Maryland Gov. Wes Moore/Twitter(formerly X)

ANNAPOLIS, Md. – Maryland Gov. Wes Moore on Thursday signed a bill that seeks to combat efforts to ban books from state libraries.

House Bill 785, also known as the Freedom to Read Act, would establish a state policy ā€œthat local school systems operate their school library media programs consistent with certain standards; requiring each local school system to develop a policy and procedures to review objections to materials in a school library media program; prohibiting a county board of education from dismissing, demoting, suspending, disciplining, reassigning, transferring, or otherwise retaliating against certain school library media program personnel for performing their job duties consistent with certain standards.ā€

Moore on Thursday also signed House Bill 1386, which GLSEN notes will ā€œdevelop guidelines for an anti-bias training program for school employees.ā€

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Maryland poised to become trans sanctuary state

Maryland would become the 12th state to implement such a law to protect trans people if Democratic Governor Wes Moore signs it

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Maryland State House in Annapolis. (Photo by Michael Key/Washington Blade)

ANNAPOLIS, Md. – A bill that would make Maryland a sanctuary state for transgender people and their health care providers received final approval this week.

The Maryland House of Delegates on April 4 passed a version of Senate Bill 19, the Trans Shield Act, that state Del. David Moon (D-Montgomery County) introduced. The Maryland Senate earlier this year passed SB 19 that state Sen. Clarence Lam (D-Anne Arundel and Howard Counties), Shelly Hettleman (D-Baltimore County) and Jeff Waldstreicher (D-Montgomery County) introduced.

The Washington Blade previously reported Maryland would become the 12th state to implement such a law if Democratic Gov. Wes Moore signs it. D.C. has enacted a similar statute.

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Baltimore County police arrest suspect in rape of trans female

Baltimore County Police Departmentā€™s Special Victims Unit is seeking information from anyone who may have been in contact with this subject

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Jalen Green, 22, has been charged with first-degree rape, first-degree assault, armed robbery, and firearm-related charges in addition to other offenses. (Booking photo via Baltimore County Police, Maryland)

PARKVILLE, Md. ā€” Baltimore County Police announced Thursday they had arrested and charged a 22-year-old man with first-degree rape, first-degree assault, armed robbery, and firearm-related charges in addition to other offenses.

According to a statement released by police, Jalen Green was arrested in connection with a sexual assault that occurred in the 3000 block of Putty Hill Ave. in Parkville on Sunday, February 11, 2024, at approximately 3:30 p.m.Ā 

Investigators say Green targeted a member of the transgender community utilizing a dating app.

WBAL 11 Baltimore reported:

According to the charging documents, the victim told officers that Green contacted her for sex in exchange for money. The victim told officers that Green pointed the gun at her and demanded money, the documents state.

Not having any cash, the victim said Green used her phone to send himself $100 in the Cash App and then stole two prescription bottles from the victim. According to police, Green then sexually assaulted the victim at gunpoint and recorded video on his cellphone.

The charging documents state that investigators recovered evidence from the scene, including DNA. A search warrant was being sought to recover potential evidence on Green’s cellphone, the documents state.

Investigators seek to hear from anyone who may have been in contact with Green.

The Baltimore County Police Departmentā€™s Special Victims Unit is seeking information from anyone who may have been in contact with this subject. Detectives can be contacted at 410.887.2223.

If you are a survivor of a sexual assault, you can contact the Sexual Assault Hotline for crisis counseling by calling 410-828-6390. The Special Victims Unit also works with TurnAround who can be contacted by calling 410-377-8111.

Green is being held without bond at the Baltimore County Detention Center.

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Maryland

Maryland could become next state to pass trans sanctuary law

Maryland Senate Finance Committee heard SB119 that would establish Maryland as a sanctuary state for trans people fleeing other states

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The City Of Annapolis, Maryland LGBTQ+ Pride June 2023. (Photo Credit: City Of Annapolis/Maryland, Government)

By Erin Reed | ANNAPOLIS, Md. – On Thursday, Marylandā€™s Senate Finance Committee heardĀ Senate Bill 119, a bill that would make Maryland a sanctuary state for transgender individuals and providers fleeing other states.

The bill would add gender-affirming care toĀ a law passed last yearĀ thatĀ shields abortion patients and providersĀ from out-of-state prosecution and investigations. Many more individuals testified in favor of the bill than against it, including Maryland state government officials who remarked on its necessity.

If passed, the law would make Maryland the 12th state, not counting the District of Columbia, to do so.

The bill includes several protections for transgender individuals. It would block the enforcement of out-of-state subpoenas for medical records and information on transgender patients who seek care within Maryland’s jurisdiction.

It would also prevent foreign financial judgments from other states attempting to sue Maryland providers. It would prohibit liability insurers from taking adverse action against healthcare providers for providing gender affirming care.

Additionally, it would block the extradition of individuals who have received gender-affirming care in Maryland. Lastly, it specifies that the state cannot use state funds to provide “information, spend time or money, or use state facilities, state property, state equipment, state personnel, or other state resourceā€ in aiding investigations around gender affirming care – a virtually total barring of any enforcement of anti-trans laws in the state.

The state joinedĀ several othersĀ in providing protections for patients and providers when Governor Wes Moore signedĀ an executive orderĀ in June to enact many of these policies. Heather Forsyth spoke on behalf of the office of the Maryland Attorney General in favor of the bill at the hearing, stating that this bill would go farther than that executive order: ā€œItā€™s both critical and urgentā€¦ The executive order provided some protections, but it couldnā€™t offer many of the protections this legislation would provide.ā€

Movement Advancement Project. “Equality Maps: Transgender Healthcare ‘Shield’ Laws.”Ā 

Among the things she stated this bill would do beyond Governor Mooreā€™s executive order:

  • It would prevent liability insurance from taking adverse action on providers for providing gender affirming care.
  • It would ensure license and regulatory boards could not take adverse actions for providing gender affirming care.
  • It would place limits on subpoenas, wire tapping, ex parte and foreign judgments that target care provided within the state of Maryland
  • It would go into law and protect transgender people regardless of who holds the Governorā€™s office.

Forsyth was not the only one to speak on behalf of the bill from the Maryland executive branch. Ryan Moran, representing the Maryland Department of Health, also testified to the importance of the bill, emphasizing that “Maryland remains a leader in supporting trans peopleā€™s rights to equitable healthcare and safety.” Moran highlighted the growing list of Republican states banning gender-affirming care as a reason for the bill’s necessity: “These list of states are growing… the states include criminal penalties against health officials providing gender-affirming care.”

The hearing also saw testimony from representatives of large hospitals and medical associations. Michael Huber, representing Johns Hopkins University and School of Medicine, asserted that gender-affirming care is “medically necessary, lifesaving, evidence-based, and age-appropriate healthcare.”

Pam Kasemeyer, testifying on behalf of the state medical society, the Academy of Pediatrics, the Mid-Atlantic Community Health Centers, and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, stated that the bill was needed due to “legal challenges and fear” from out-of-state actors targeting care in the state.

These challenges and investigations are indeed unfolding. Recently, Attorney General Ken PaxtonĀ made national headlinesĀ by subpoenaing the medical records of patients who traveled from Texas to Seattle Childrenā€™s Hospital for gender-affirming care.Ā Similar subpoenasĀ have been issued to gender-affirming care clinics in other states.

Meanwhile, 19 Republican state attorneys generalĀ have signed a letterĀ asserting their right to medical information from other states, indicating that this tactic may be employed against both transgender individuals and those seeking and providing abortions moving forward.

Only a three people testified against the bill – one concerned citizen, a representative from the Maryland Family Institute, a religious organization, and Health Choice Maryland, an anti-vax organization.

The bill will need to pass a committee vote before moving to the full senate floor in the coming days.

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Erin Reed is a transgender woman (she/her pronouns) and researcher who tracks anti-LGBTQ+ legislation around the world and helps people become better advocates for their queer family, friends, colleagues, and community. Reed also is a social media consultant and public speaker.

Follow her on Twitter (Link)

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The preceding articleĀ was first publishedĀ atĀ Erin In The MorningĀ and is republished with permission.

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Maryland

Maryland House committee killsĀ anti-trans youth sports bill

State Del. Kathy Szeliga (R-Baltimore County) introducedĀ House Bill 47. Ā More than a dozen other Republican lawmakers co-sponsored the measure

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The Maryland State House overlooking the Old Town section of Annapolis, Maryland. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

ANNAPOLIS, Md. – A Maryland House of Delegates committee on Thursday killed a Republican backed bill that would have barred transgender children from joining school sports teams consistent with their gender identity.

State Del. Kathy Szeliga (R-Baltimore County) introduced House Bill 47, which is also called the Fairness in Girlsā€™ Sports Act. More than a dozen other Republican lawmakers co-sponsored the measure.

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The House Ways and Means Committee on Wednesday heldĀ a hearingĀ on HB 47. State Dels. Joe Vogel (D-Montgomery County) and Kris Fair (D-Frederick County), who are both gay, are among the committee members who voted to kill the measure.

ā€œYesterday, my committee heard testimony on the Save Womenā€™s Sports Act to ban transgender children from playing in high school sports,ā€ said Vogel on his X account after the vote. 

ā€œJust now I moved unfavorable on the bill and the majority of my colleagues joined me in voting it down,ā€ he added. ā€œThe bill is dead.ā€

The Senate Education, Energy and the Environment Committee on Feb. 7 is scheduled to hold a hearing on an identical bill, Senate Bill 381, that state Sen. Mary Beth Carozza (R-Somerset, Worcester and Wicomico Counties) introduced in the Maryland Senate. 

The House Ways and Means Committee in 2022Ā killedĀ the Save Womenā€™s Sports Act that Szeliga introduced during that yearā€™s legislative session.

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