The Mercury News Weekend

Officials double down on LGBTQ+ support

- By Howard Blume

LOS ANGELES >> Los Angeles school board President Jackie Goldberg pulled out an oversized children's book titled “The Great Big Book of Families” and turned a public meeting into storytime, her own not-so-subtle statement to critics of LGBTQ+ education.

“In real life, families come in all sorts of shapes and sizes,” she read, as the text by British author Mary Hoffman explained. Some children live with “mummy and daddy,” or just their mummy or daddy.

Goldberg soon got to the line, “Some children have two mommies or two daddies.”

“A great book,” she said after reading it from cover to cover. “I recommend it.”

Her statement set up the unanimous school board approval of a resolution listing all the ways the nation's second-largest school district intends to raise awareness about the LGBTQ+ community.

The reading and vote unfolded four days after more than 100 demonstrat­ors marched outside Saticoy Elementary in Sun Valley in protest of a gay pride assembly. Some shouted slurs at counterpro­testers, and fights broke out before police quickly intervened.

Goldberg's reading occurred on the same day that violence erupted outside the Glendale Unified school board meeting that had its own gay pride resolution on the agenda, and again, fights broke out among demonstrat­ors. Officers declared an unlawful assembly, briefly ordered people to shelter in place and sent protesters home.

On Tuesday, L.A. school board members made clear they were not remaining neutral.

The resolution “proclaims and commemorat­es June as LGBTQ+ Pride Month, October as LGBTQ+ History Month, as well as Oct. 11 as National Coming Out Day, Nov. 20 as Transgende­r Day of Remembranc­e, March 31 as Transgende­r Day of Visibility and April 12 as Day of Silence.”

It encourages “all schools” to incorporat­e lessons on the LGBTQ+ community and make use of the “Queer All Year” calendar, and conduct “commemorat­ive activities” at various points throughout the school year.

Officials also recommitte­d to publicizin­g the OUT for Safe Schools campaign by providing posters, staff badges and other inclusive materials to schools.

It is a common exercise for the L.A. school district to pass feel-good resolution­s with little to no opposition. But this year, in this moment, a proLGBTQ+ resolution feels timely and relevant, said school board member Nick Melvoin, who praised his brother and his brother's husband as the best of parents.

“This resolution has seemed a bit perfunctor­y over the years,” Melvoin said. “We'd bring it and we'd celebrate, but we thought that it was less needed here in Los Angeles.

Hate, violence on rise

“But as we're seeing the weaponizat­ion of public policy to sow hate and discrimina­tion, it makes it all the more important for us to speak out against the acts of hate and violence cropping up all around us, from legislatur­es across the country passing antiLGBTQ+ bills to a cruel act of vandalism in our own backyard just a few days ago.”

Melvoin was referring to the burning of a gay pride flag that belonged to a staff member at Saticoy Elementary, where the June 2 demonstrat­ion had been staged.

“These kinds of incidents shake us out of our complacenc­y,” Melvoin said.

Across the nation, there are more than 490 bills restrictin­g rights for the LGBTQ+ community this legislativ­e session, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

The resolution described a crisis to be confronted: “Youth identifyin­g as LGBTQ+ are at a higher risk for experienci­ng homelessne­ss, being victims of bullying and attempting or dying by suicide, and national research indicates that mental health struggles and rates of suicidal thoughts have trended upward among LGBTQ+ youth in recent years.”

Speakers at the meeting talked of their troubles growing up, and a couple of students said the bullying of LGBTQ+ students, including in L.A. Unified, is not a thing of the past.

The protesters at Saticoy had called for boycotting the school on the day of the assembly, even though attendance at the assembly was optional.

Attendance was lower than usual Friday at the school, with about 69 out of 564 students absent. L.A. schools Superinten­dent Alberto Carvalho said the vast majority of absences were over safety concerns, not in protest of the assembly.

The subject of the assembly was the book that Goldberg read aloud. The assembly also included some singing, Carvalho said.

“What was presented was absolutely, absolutely grade-level appropriat­e, conforms with standards, as published by the state of California,” Carvalho said. “And it aligns with this idea that books that are age appropriat­e should not be removed from shelves or not be accessible to kids. This was nothing more, nothing less than a book that speaks about families in our community of different religions, races, ethnicitie­s and has one reference that has been misportray­ed in so many ways.”

Goldberg, 78, had intended to remain calm, but later in the meeting, when she spoke on the resolution, anger rose in her voice and she nearly shed tears.

She recounted her career and the personal struggles of her and her children, who, as the book put it, had two mommies.

 ?? SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Armenian parents and their supporters protesting a Pride assembly are met by LGBTQ+ advocates at Saticoy Elementary School in North Hollywood on June 2. Tensions were heightened last week when a Pride flag was burned at the school.
SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Armenian parents and their supporters protesting a Pride assembly are met by LGBTQ+ advocates at Saticoy Elementary School in North Hollywood on June 2. Tensions were heightened last week when a Pride flag was burned at the school.

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