Report from the Community Survey Task Force’s first meeting

Alaska LGBT Community SurveyA big thank you to those of you who attended the meeting of the Community Survey Task Force last night — I think we made some real progress on figuring out what the short and long-term goals of this project should be.

For those of you who were not able to make it, we have settled on completing two surveys: one smaller survey focused on bias and discrimination in the LGBT community in Anchorage — the Anchorage Discrimination Survey, to be completed in the next year — and a far more expansive Alaska LGBT Community Statewide Survey of the LGBT community to occur over a longer timeline.  There is going to be plenty of room for different levels of involvement moving forward, and I am really excited to work both with full-blown members of the Task Force and individuals who will be joining us on a consulting basis.

We were fortunate to have Brad Myrstol and Khristy Parker of UAA Justice Center join us last night and ask some hard questions about what the project needs to look like — and what our priorities should be — moving forward.  It has become clear that in order to have usable data by the spring of 2011, work on the Anchorage Discrimination Survey simply cannot begin soon enough.  Therefore we will continue having Task Force meetings on roughly a monthly basis while also having a research and methodology team start on the survey within the next week.  Anyone who is interested in participating in the survey design and outreach to respondents is encouraged to attend the meeting.

The Anchorage Discrimination Survey Research and Methodology team will meet:

Monday, October 4
6:00-7:30 PM
1057 West Fireweed Lane
First floor conference room

The wider Task Force will meet again later in October, details to follow.

Again, thank you all for your support and involvement in this project.  Your work on this really will make a difference!

More details on discussion at last night’s meeting will follow in the next couple of days.

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Community Survey Task Force to meet

Tonight we’ll be holding the first meeting of the Community Survey Task Force, through which we’ll be organizing the work involved with conducting the Alaska LGBT Community Survey (or AKQ, for short).

As I wrote on September 13, the Task Force’s job will be defined more completely during the meeting; but as I see it, its chief functions will be to:

  1. Revise and update the One in Ten survey questionnaire to reflect changes in society that have taken place since 1985, the need for trans-inclusiveness, and new questions/issues that we’d like to address in the survey.  (And perhaps additional smaller surveys.)
  2. Continue to conduct outreach to the LGBT and allied community in all areas of the state, both for complete coverage of our community in all its diversity, and in particular to solicit respondents who are willing to be interviewed about instances of discrimination, harassment, violence, or other forms of bias that they have experienced because they are, or were perceived to be, trans, bisexual, gay, or lesbian.
  3. Coordinate distribution and administration of the survey, data entry, and analysis and writing of the report(s) of our findings.

This will be a community survey in two senses:

  • a survey of the LGBT community;
  • a survey conducted by the LGBT community.

Thus, AKQ will be a collaborative project involving LGBT organizations & individuals statewide, as well as other stakeholders  — our allies — committed to the welfare & social equality of LGBT Alaskans.  But for a high quality survey, it’s necessary to balancing the “community” nature of our work with a credible, reliable research design following solid social science research practices.  We’ll begin sketching this out tonight.

There’s no doubt a lot of people who would like to be a part of this who can’t be there tonight — not only people in Anchorage who have other commitments, but also people throughout the state whose participation will be crucial to the success of our effort.  Up to this point, we’ve had just three of us making contacts and doing the other early work to set something up, and fitting that work into our already busy days. One of the things I most look forward tonight is adding in the help of other people — more intelligences, more hands to do the work, & each of them with their own networks of contacts who can help expand the effort to make it truly a community-wide, & statewide, project; while decreasing the chances that any one of us will become overwhelmed & subject to burnout.  (Something that I’m personally prone to if I’m not careful!)

So if you want to be “in the loop” & help out with this project, in any way, there will be plenty of opportunity.  And if you want to be a part now, don’t hesitate to contact us at alaskacommunity@gmail.com to let us know.  We should begin to have more specific information about how you can take part after tonight’s meeting.

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AK Community Tweets for 2010-09-18: Research links

  • New research from the Applied Research Center: “The Intersection Between Racial Justice and LGBT Community” http://bit.ly/9V5iBD #
  • StudentPulse (Jan 2010): transgender/gender-nonconforming youth in U.S. schools (by Alaskan Tonei Glavinic) http://bit.ly/cJqz14 #
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It’s not only about discrimination

St. MMembers of St. Mary's Episcopal Church in 2009 Anchorage Pride marchary's Episcopal Church in 2009 Anchorage Pride march

Members of St. Mary's Episcopal Church in 2009 Anchorage Pride march. Photo by Mel Green.

In announcing the Alaska LGBT Community Survey last Sunday, I may have given a false impression that LGBT folks’ experience of discrimination & other antigay/antitrans bias is the only thing this survey is about.

It’s not.

That’s why we’re calling for a full survey, on a full range of the questions & concerns that we LGBT Alaskans would like to know the answers to ourselves, or that we’d like our friends, families, neighbors, faith communities, workplaces, health providers, political representatives & policymakers, and fellow citizens to know about us — without putting any one of us at personal risk of discrimination or bias to have answered.

For example, one set of questions in the original One in Ten questionnaire asked respondents which religious faiths they were raised in as a children, whether they still participated in the same religious faith (and if not, why not), and how often those who participated in any religious faith attended worship gatherings.  Another set asked a range of questions about physical and emotional health, including use (or nonuse) of alcohol and drugs, use of medical and mental health providers, whether or not providers were aware of a repondents’ sexual orientation, and — if they were — whether respondents felt their providers’ knowledge improved or worsened the kind of care they received.  Reliable answers to questions like these — particularly when cross-referenced with other important information derived from the survey — have great potential for helping LGBT-friendly faith communities extend and improve their ministries; and for health care providers, insurance companies, and public health policymakers to improve treatment of LGBT clients and to address LGBT-related health issues.

And so it goes for any other question or set of questions that appear in the survey. Just as the One in Ten in 1986 was “A profile of Alaska’s lesbian and gay community,” the Alaska LGBT Community Survey will be a profile of Alaska’s lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans community, covering a full range of questions we face in our lives and work.

Discrimination & bias included, of course.

* * *

Part of the design of any good survey is in having a good idea of what we already know.  So, besides using this blog to keep you updated on our progress on our survey—from designing it all the way to reporting its results—we’ll also have articles about what research has already told us about LGBT folks in general and LGBT folks in Alaska in particular.  We’ll also write about some of the issues that we’ll be addressing with our research design, such as making it truly representative of our community (both in questions asked, and in sampling), protecting the anonymity of respondents, and so on.

Stay tuned!

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Equality Works and the new Community Survey Task Force

Shelby Carpenter

Shelby Carpenter, LGBT Public Policy Director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Alaska

Hello All-

A big thanks to Mel Green for putting together this amazing website!  I will be contributing here from time-to-time and am so excited to be involved in the new Alaska LGBT Community Survey!

For a little background, I am the LGBT Public Policy Director for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Alaska.  As of right now, the only affirmative right LGBT people have in the state of Alaska is the right of same-sex partners of public employees to receive domestic partner benefits.  While it is frustrating that there are so few protections for LGBT Alaskans, it is important to remember that we did make a BIG step forward last summer.  In the summer of 2009, the Anchorage Municipal Assembly passed Ordinance 64, which would have protected LGBT people in the city from discrimination, by a vote of 7 to 4.   While it is disappointing that Mayor Sullivan decided to veto the ordinance, the Assembly’s actions last summer still represent a significant victory for the LGBT community in Alaska.  I can tell that things are changing here, and changing for the better.  To learn more about the activism I and others have been doing for LGBT rights in Alaska, please visit www.EqualityWorks.org.  I know we can make equal rights happen in Anchorage, but not without your help!  Please visit our website or call me at 907-263-2006 to volunteer or to donate.

Equality WorksAs for the survey, Mel, our technology and research wiz, has been kind enough to set up this terrific website and to get things going on the research design end of things.  I have been helping out by reaching out to local and state leaders in the LGBT community as well as to leaders on transgender issues at the national level.  It would be fair to say that Mel is the brains of the operation, but I am doing my best to be the feet.  Or at least a foot I guess.  Because there are going to be SO many terrific people involved in this project—it will come not just from a single organization like Identity or the ACLU, but truly from the LGBT community of Alaska.  We will be holding our first Community Survey Task Force meeting at the end of the month, soon to be followed by focus groups about how we are crafting the survey.  To get involved, please email me at scarpenter@akclu.org or Mel at alaskacommunity@gmail.com. We look forward to hearing from you!

Shelby Carpenter

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Who we are & where we’re at

In announcing the Alaska LGBT Community Survey — I call it AKQ for short — I frequently used the word “we.” “We’ve decided…,” “we’ll use the survey…,” “we aim….”

So just who are “we” — besides, of course, me?

In 1985-1986, “we” were the volunteers of Identity, Inc. which put together the survey instrument for One in Ten, administered it to LGB respondents throughout the state, tallied up the results, & wrote the report One in Ten: A Profile of Alaska’s Lesbian & Gay Community (1986).  In 1987-1989, “we” were a lot of volunteers & a few people who got some pay (I think), who contacted & interviewed respondents who had experienced violence, harassment, discrimination because they were, or were perceived to be, lesbian or gay (yes, some of our respondents were heterosexual people who were misperceived at being homosexual), who surveyed Anchorage area landlords & employers, & who compiled the information gathered from those efforts & wrote them up in Identity Reports: Sexual Orientation Bias in Alaska (1989).

Right here & now, on September 13, 2010, “we” are three people who met last Thursday & decided to do this.  Let me introduce us:

  • Melissa S. “Mel” Green.  I was part of the “we” in both 1985-86 effort that resulted in One in Ten, of which I was principal writer; and in the 1987-1989 effort which resulted in Identity Reports, of which I was coauthor (along with Jay Brause).  I’m also have my personal blog, Henkimaa.com, from whence I did a lot of blogging last year about the Anchorage equal rights ordinance AO-64, which passed the Anchorage Assembly only to be vetoed by Mayor Dan Sullivan.  I’m also a 20-year staff member at the UAA Justice Center, where I’ve grown even more familiar with social science research, and developed relationships with some of the research faculty who we hope to have help from throughout our work on the current survey.
  • Shelby Carpenter is the LGBT Public Policy Director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Alaska… and I’ll let her tell you more about herself as she has time.
  • Barbara Soule is a longtime Alaska resident and LGBT community activist who is jumpstarting our outreach to the trans community. I’ll let you her tell you more about herself as she has time, too.

By now, you might be asking, three people?!!!  Just three people are going to conduct a high quality research project covering the LGBT population of the entire state of Alaska?!!!

Well, no.  Because our very first step is to bring in more people.  So right now the three of us are doing a lot of work behind-the-scenes to contact people to form our Community Survey Task Force.  The Task Force’s job will be defined more completely as it’s formed; but as I see it, its functions will chiefly be to:

  1. Revise and update the One in Ten survey questionnaire to reflect changes in society that have taken place since 1985, the need for trans-inclusiveness, and new questions/issues that we’d like to address in the survey.  (And perhaps additional smaller surveys.)
  2. Continue to conduct outreach to the LGBT and allied community in all areas of the state, both for complete coverage of our community in all its diversity, and in particular to solicit respondents who are willing to be interviewed about instances of discrimination, harassment, violence, or other forms of bias that they have experienced because they are, or were perceived to be, trans, bisexual, gay, or lesbian.
  3. Coordinate distribution and administration of the survey, data entry, and analysis and writing of the report(s) of our findings.

We hope to have our first meeting of the Community Survey Task Force in late September/early October.  By the necessities of geography and the inability of most people to be more than one place at one time, it may be that our first meeting can consist of only those people who can easily travel to Southcentral Alaska for an Anchorage-based meeting.  But we will be working on how to make sure we can fully involve both organizations and individuals in all parts of the state.

Another task that we’re working on already is beginning our outreach to the trans community.  We are committed to making AKQ — again, that’s what I’ve taken to calling the Alaska LGBT Community Survey for short — fully trans-inclusive, not only in the kinds of questions that appear in the survey — but also in participating on the Task Force in questionnaire design, administration, and analysis.  All three of us are involved in some aspect of this, with Barbara and I contacting people we know in the Alaska trans community & Shelby working with national-level trans organizations and activists who have conducted research within the trans community throughout the country.

Barbara is also coordinating focus groups for members of the trans community to get input on questionnaire design. We hope to hold the first of these at the Alaska Pride Conference 2010 sponsored by Identity, Inc. to be held October 9 in Anchorage and a second one probably about a week later, also in Anchorage, for those who cannot attend the Pride Conference.  We’ll also work on how we can involve transfolk in other areas of the state in our research effort.

As we continue to organize our effort, I hope soon to be able to introduce other people involved in this effort on this blog; better yet, to let them introduce themselves & add their voices to this blog, & to our overall effort to invigorate & strengthen our community statewide & advance our effort for full social and economic justice for LGBT in Alaska & nationally.

Stay tuned to our progress and news about how to get involved by subscribing to this blog, “liking” our Facebook page, and/or following our Twitter feed @alaskacommunity.  You can also write to us at anchoragecommunity@gmail.com.  You can also find all our contact info on our About page.

Mel Green

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Announcing the Alaska LGBT Community Survey

Identity Reports (1989) and One in 10 (1986)

Identity Reports (1989) and One in 10 (1986)

In the 1980s, the nonprofit organization Identity, Inc. conducted two major research efforts to profile Alaska’s lesbian/gay/bisexual community and to document sexual orientation bias in Alaska.

One in Ten: A Profile of Alaska’s Lesbian & Gay Community (1986) provided the first statewide portrait of Alaska’s lesbian and gay (and to some extent bisexual) population, describing our experiences of coming out, of discrimination, our physical and emotional health, religious and political affiliations, demographic characteristics, and a general needs assessment.  Identity Reports: Sexual Orientation Bias in Alaska (1989) focused on discrimination and bias, documenting 84 actual instances of antigay bias, discrimination, harassment, or violence (including three murders) around the state, as well as the positive willingness of 20% of landlords and 31% of employers in the Anchorage area to discriminate against persons who were — or were perceived to be — gay or lesbian.

A lot has changed in the two-and-a-half decades since.  There’s a lot more live-and-let-live, a lot more acceptance of lesbians and gays.  Yet the continuing legacy of antigay prejudice and discrimination persists. Arguably, prejudice against transfolk is even more virulent — often even within our own community.

One of the chief arguments used by opponents of last year’s Anchorage Ordinance 64 — which would have added sexual orientation and gender identity to the Municipality of Anchorage’s equal rights code — was that there was no evidence of discrimination against LGBT people.  This claim was made in spite of the weight of evidence provided in One in Ten and Identity Reports.  But of course, that evidence was two decades old, so ordinance opponents found it easy to ignore; and they found it just as easy to close their ears to the public testimony of Anchorage LGBT residents who stepped forward to testify to very recent experiences of discrimination and bias — even as one opponent openly told the Assembly that he’d once beaten a gay man so badly that he put him in the hospital.

Alaska LGBT Community SurveyAnd so — we’ve decided to bring One in Ten up-to-date by conducting a new statewide survey — the Alaska LGBT Community Survey.  Like its predecessor, the Alaska LGBT Community Survey aims to create a profile of our community in all its diversity and with all its diverse concerns; and as we did in 1985-86, we’ll use the survey as vehicle to solicit case histories to document our community’s continuing experiences with discrimination, harassment, and violence.  Unlike One in Ten, the Alaska LGBT Community Survey will include transfolk as well as gay, lesbian, and bisexual folk, in the design of the survey questionnaire as well as in filling it out.

We’re in a very early stage right now.  We just made the firm commitment to do this last week! But we wanted to tell you about it right away.

We aim to have at least initial results of our survey by April 2011. For more and continuing information as we go along:

We’ll also doing our best to keep you updated through our regular LGBT news channels such as Bent Alaska, TransAlaska Pipeline, Grrlzlist, the Alaska GLBT News maillist, and — well, yeah, my own blog, Henkimaa.

Stay tuned!

— Melissa S. (Mel) Green

Learn more about Identity Reports and One in Ten.

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