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- From: trussell@cwis.unomaha.edu (Tim Russell)
- Newsgroups: soc.motss,soc.bi,alt.politics.homosexuality
- Subject: News story: "Growing Boycott Concerns Colorado"
- Summary: Cool!
- Keywords: boycott colorado
- Message-ID: <trussell.722452312@cwis>
- Date: 22 Nov 92 17:11:52 GMT
- Article-I.D.: cwis.trussell.722452312
- Sender: news@news.unomaha.edu (UNO Network News Server)
- Organization: University of Nebraska at Omaha
- Lines: 129
-
-
- Any typos are mine.
-
- GROWING BOYCOTT CONCERNS COLORADO
- by James Coates
- The Chicago Tribune
-
- Denver - Less than three weeks after Colorado voters approved an anti-
- gay constitutional amendment, a boycott against the state launched by gay
- activists is steaming ahead with surprising force.
- Already a labor group and a national labor organization have canceled
- Colorado conventions scheduled for 1993. Several other groups have said
- they are thinking of canceling major conferences there.
- One large city has passed a measure banning its employees from spending
- city funds in Colorado. Several other cities are thinking of doing some-
- thing similar.
- Celebrities are publicly denouncing the state over the gay-rights issue.
- Colorado civic and business leaders are so worried that they called an
- emergency strategy session Saturday to plot a defense against the growing
- calls for a boycott.
- But exactly what the state's leaders will be able to do about the
- growing boycott is unclear.
- The measure, Amendment 2, was passed by Colorado voters Nov. 3. Re-
- scinding it would require another referendum unless a federal lawsuit
- against the measure is successful.
- The boycott effort, dubbed "Undo Two" by its proponents, seeks to
- create a movement similar to one that blacks launched against Arizona that
- was widely credited with forcing voters there to reverse a state ban on
- the Martin Luther King holiday.
- Proponents of the Colorado boycott include gay rights groups and enter-
- tainers. Singer-actress barbara Streisand joined the fray at a Los Angeles
- AIDS benefit Wednesday.
-
- Recent days have seen a spate of real and threatened convention can-
- cellations. The Atlanta City Council approved its Colorado boycott
- Tuesday.
- The developments are creating a widespread concern in a state where
- tourism is the single largest industry.
- Major efforts to strike down the amendment and head off any boycotting
- began Nov. 12 when plaintiffs, led by tennis star Martina Navratilova,
- an avowed lesbian who lives in Aspen, filed a federal lawsuit.
- Ms. Navratilova volunteered to serve as a test case in an action filed
- by the cities of Aspen, Denver and Boulder and the American Civil Liberties
- Union charging that Amendment 2 would deprive Ms. Navratilova of her
- constitutional freedoms.
- The amendment, which passed by 100,000 votes, struck down laws in the
- three cities banning discrimination in hiring and housing against gays
- and lesbians.
- Colorado officials say a boycott would unfairly punish the three
- tourist-dependent communities of Boulder, Denver, and Aspen, whose pro-
- gay actions were targeted by the amendment in the first place.
- A spokeswoman for the Atlanta City Council said officials in Boston;
- New York; San Francisco; Oakland, Calif.; Los Angeles; and Chapel Hill,
- N.C., had requested copies of Atlanta's ordinance.
-
- Refuse to Visit
-
- Officials at the Chicago-based American Library Association said
- Friday that an unknown number of their members had decided to drop plans
- to attend a January convention of 2,000 librarians in Denver.
- The association's executive director, Peggy Sullivan, noted in a
- newsletter to be mailed to the membership this week that although it was
- too late for the group to cancel the Denver plans this year, it was likely
- members would vote to scrap a 1998 convention set for the city.
- On Wednesday, the Coalition of Labor Union Women canceled its 1,500
- hotel reservations for a November 1993 convention in Denver to protest
- the amendment. The day after the vote, the gay- and lesbian-oriented
- American Association of Physicians for Human Rights canceled plans for
- a 1,000-member Denver convention.
- Denver tourism officials admitted that the National Education Assoc-
- iation, the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and several
- other groups all have contacted them to discuss whether to cancel major
- conventions planned for the city.
-
- Punishing the Innocent
-
- Rich Grant, spokesman for the Metropolitan Denver Convention and
- Visitors Bureau, noted that the cancellations announced or threatened to
- date involve only a small fraction of the approximately 1 million con-
- vention and business visitors who come to Denver each year.
- "But we are very concerned at the fact that some whose visits we
- value have cancelled and others are talking about it," he said.
- "We just hope that they will hear our plea that it isn't fair to
- punish Denver, where people voted 60-40 (percent) against the amendment
- and where the City Council has passed one of the country's strongest bills
- protecting gay and lesbian citizens," Grant said.
- But he acknowledged that the new round of cancellations came after a
- brief period in which boycott sentiment appeared to be on the wane after
- Denver Mayor Wellington Webb and others made that same argument.
- Last weekend, for example, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force
- announced it had decided against calling for a nationwide boycott against
- Colorado although many of the group's members said they would implement
- boycotts on their own.
-
- Vote for Hate
-
- Then, on the heels of the Atlanta boycott vote, Miss Streisand urged
- a crowd of stars including Elton John, Liza Minelli and Dolly Parton to
- abandon any vacation plans in Colorado.
- Miss Streisand, who skis frequently in Aspen, said, "Just look at
- the vote for hate in Colorado, where voters rescinded any protection for
- gays in employment or housing.
- "There are plenty of us who love the mountains and rivers of that
- truly beautiful state, but me must now say clearly that the moral climate
- there is no longer acceptable, and it we're asked to, we must refuse to
- play where they discriminate."
- Briggs Gamblin, press secretary for the mayor, said Friday that Denver
- took Miss Streisand's move seriously because it could trigger a boycott
- among trend-setters and entertainers similar to what happened in Arizona
- over the King holiday issue.
-
- Backlash
-
- Gamblin said that at Saturday's emergency session, Webb would offer to
- boost a planned advertising campaign to urge Americans not to boycott the
- slopes of Colorado.
- But the mayor also will recommend a campaign to meet with gay and
- lesbian leaders and other critics to argue that a boycott would create a
- backlash among ordinary voters, making it even more difficult to amend
- the constitution again.
- "People in the West often take the view that they're not going to be
- pushed around by people in the big cities on the coast and back East,"
- Gamblin said. "A boycott could get our voters' backs up and make winning
- impossible for those of us who feel strongly that the law is very wrong."
-
- --
- Tim Russell Omaha, NE trussell@unomaha.edu
- "Who can doubt that pleasure is the only goal of a reasoned life?"
- -- Epicurus
-