She refers to herself by her soon to be old male name since the name change is reportedly in the works to Andrea, but Florida's first trans prom queen Andii Viveros does an It Gets Better video.
Showing posts with label transkids/transteens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transkids/transteens. Show all posts
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Transteen Standing Up For Her Rights In Maine
Ken Fredette was a dissenting vote on the Maine Human Rights Commission when it ruled a transteen was discriminated against at her middle school.
And Nicole, the child the MHRC ruled in favor of last year is fighting this unjust bill along with her family. In addition to her father's testimony against the bill, she has done her part to be an agent for her own liberation by lobbying Maine's lawmakers.
She has this to say about the unjust bill.
"I think that what I want lawmakers to know is that bill, first of all, makes absolutely no sense," Nicole said in an interview. "It's pointless, I think, because you're not going to know if a person's trans, unless they tell you. So it needs to be stopped where it is before anything like this gets out of hand."
And a little child shall lead them. Go get 'em Nicole!
Mainers, why don't you help this youngling out? Call, fax or e-mail your legislators and tell them to vote NO on LD 1046.
Nicole, her family and the entire trans community of Maine would deeply appreciate that.
Now Representative Ken Fredette (R) has penned LD 1046, a bathroom bill that says unless otherwise specified, rest rooms, showers and locker rooms designated for one biological sex are restricted to that biological sex.
Trans people under Fredette's bathroom bill who were denied access to those facilities would also have their ability to claim discrimination under the Maine Human Rights Act taken away since there have been two rulings in favor of transpeople over this issue that Fredette was on the losing end of.
And Nicole, the child the MHRC ruled in favor of last year is fighting this unjust bill along with her family. In addition to her father's testimony against the bill, she has done her part to be an agent for her own liberation by lobbying Maine's lawmakers.
She has this to say about the unjust bill.
"I think that what I want lawmakers to know is that bill, first of all, makes absolutely no sense," Nicole said in an interview. "It's pointless, I think, because you're not going to know if a person's trans, unless they tell you. So it needs to be stopped where it is before anything like this gets out of hand."
And a little child shall lead them. Go get 'em Nicole!
Mainers, why don't you help this youngling out? Call, fax or e-mail your legislators and tell them to vote NO on LD 1046.
Nicole, her family and the entire trans community of Maine would deeply appreciate that.
Monday, June 6, 2011
Camp Aranu'tiq Is Back
"Aranu'tiq, a great place to be!
I love this camp, I love this camp, 'cause I can be me!
It's easy to be yourself at camp, it's all in your hands
We can wear what we want, we can be who we are, everyone understands.
Canoeing, playing in the dirt,
Arts and crafts, mud on your shirt;
Frogs, toads, spiders too,
Aranu'tiq loves you......woooooo!
Aranu'tiq, a great place to be!
I love this camp, I love this camp, 'cause I can be me!"
I wrote last summer about a unique summer camp geared toward trans kids age 8-15 based in New England called Camp Aranu'tiq. Its name comes from the indigenous Chugach people of Alaska and describes a person who was thought to embody both the male and female spirit. Aranu'tiq people were often revered in Chugach culture and thought to be very lucky because their existence transcended traditional gender boundaries.
The inaugural Camp Aranu'tiq 2010 session was tuition free and featured 41 campers and six staffers split into six cabins enjoying a traditional summer camp program. Three housed the campers on the trans masculine end of the spectrum, three housed the campers on the trans feminine end of the spectrum.
They have now shifted to a tuition based model in which it now costs $500 per camper for the week Nick Teich, the founder, president and director of Camp Aranu'tiq explains why:
First and foremost, we want everyone to know that we will continue to accommodate families as best we can because the experience of Aranu'tiq is so important to a transgender or gender-variant child's life. We continue to operate, as we have from the very beginning, on the generosity of individuals and businesses. 100% of our funding comes from cash donations and in-kind donations, and we are completely volunteer-run. We want to ensure that Aranu'tiq not only exists in the future, but continues to thrive and is able to accommodate more campers each summer. In order to guarantee this, we now must charge families the modest tuition rate of $500. We will offer need-based financial support to any camper that would not otherwise be able to attend Aranu'tiq.
While I understand it isn't cheap to run a summer camp and the importance of having it as a place for our transkids, I'm always concerned when a program that starts out tuition free shifts to a fee based one. The folks that don't have the cash to take advantage of what the formerly tuition free program has to offer now get frozen out of it. But I'm cognizant of the fact that in order to expand the program to another 20 campers and keep it around for future generations of transkids the money to keep it going has to come from somewhere.
Here's hoping that the 2011 session of Camp Aranu'tiq is an even bigger success than last year.
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