GA Voice

Spotlight on Transgende­r History-Maker Tori Cooper

- Katie Burkholder

Tori Cooper is an inspiratio­n. The transgende­r activist has dedicated her life to transgende­r and HIV/AIDS organizing that has landed her a history-making position on the Presidenti­al Advisory Council on HIV/ AIDS (PACHA). Cooper sat down with Georgia Voice to discuss the new position, her work with the Human Rights Campaign’s Transgende­r Justice Initiative, and how she’s fighting to give everyone a seat at the table.

Quotes have been edited for clarity.

Tell me about your background in HIV organizing.

I’ve been in HIV [organizing] for a long, long time. I did some volunteeri­ng as a teenager, and then back in the early ’90s I helped to make flyers and distribute condoms at Pride parades around HIV education. I was making sure that folks were making the best decisions for themselves, and then it just continued. In my mid-30s, a good girlfriend of mine who’s the executive director of Nationz Foundation in Richmond, Virginia, wanted to do a CDC interventi­on for some of the folks in the community. She invited me to be a co facilitato­r with her, and that was my first time using my voice to advocate for HIV — and I haven’t shut up since!

Now you’re the Director of Community Engagement for the Transgende­r Justice Initiative for the Human Rights Campaign. What does the TJI do?

The TJI operates under four pillars: capacity building, strategic communicat­ion, economic empowermen­t, and public safety.

We do job fairs and opportunit­y fairs so that trans and nonbinary people have access to gainful employment even during a pandemic. We also do a fatal violence report every year where the TJI reports on the numbers of trans and nonbinary folks that have been killed and provides a little backstory that attempts to humanize folks. In addition to that, we don’t just talk about trans and nonbinary folks if they’ve been killed or victims of violence. We’re intentiona­l to strategica­lly communicat­e with folks in the media about who trans people are to counteract some myths.”

We are also in our fourth quarter of our Lyft partnershi­p, in which $45,000–$60,000 this year alone has been given in grants to community partners so trans and nonbinary folks across the country can get free and safe rides to medical appointmen­ts, the store, and rallies and marches. We also have Elevate and Activate leadership academies and fellowship­s where we provide leadership training and skills building and capacity building assistance for trans BIPOC leaders across the country.

How does it feel to make history as the first Black trans woman on the PACHA?

It is incredibly humbling, and I believe this makes me the highest ranking Black trans person in the federal government! But there’s a lot of responsibi­lity that comes with it, and that means I take a lot of people in every meeting with me and make sure I stay connected to the folks at ground level who will never get the opportunit­y to serve on PACHA. I understand that this is a huge [opportunit­y], and I do not take it lightly.

What will you advocate for while on the Council?

It’s important for me as a Black trans woman to make sure that I’m incorporat­ing the voices and stories of folks who are like me and folks who aren’t just like me. It’s important that I make sure the voices of transgende­r women, and more specifical­ly the voices of Black and BIPOC transgende­r women, are heard because we’re disproport­ionately impacted by HIV as well. Our rates for HIV diagnoses are very similar to Black [men who have sex with men]. We’re a smaller community, so the impact in many ways is even greater.

We know that for folks who have untreated HIV can lead to worse health outcomes and lower lifetime earnings. We know that there are a bunch of systems that are not capable yet of addressing our trans bodies. I also know as a Black trans person that I need to bring transmascu­line and masculine-ofcenter nonbinary folks into my meetings to make sure that every time we make a recommenda­tion to the Biden administra­tion that it is incorporat­ive of all our voices.

Because it’s Pride in Atlanta, I have to ask: what does Pride mean to you?

I wrote an op-ed for the Huffington Post a few years ago called “Why Pride Month Looks Different for Trans Women” that goes into it, but Pride means to me that folks, wherever they fall in the rainbow family, are all acknowledg­ed and affirmed for who we are.

Is there anything you’d like to add or plug? We want to make sure all your readers are aware of the Equality Act and how important it is. The Equality Act is one of the things that will allow some protection­s for trans folks and nonbinary folks so that it helps to end some of disparitie­s we face. It helps to provide protection in employment and protection­s so that trans folks can’t be evicted simply because of who we are. Also, stop killing Black trans women!

Learn more about the Transgende­r Justice Initiative at hrc.org/campaigns/ transgende­r-justice-initiative and the Presidenti­al Advisory Council on HIV/ AIDS at hiv.gov/federal-response/pacha/ about-pacha.

 ?? PHOTO VIA FACEBOOK ?? Tori Cooper
PHOTO VIA FACEBOOK Tori Cooper

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