Transcription
Reprinted from the September 3, 1985
THE ADVOCATE
by PETER FREIBERG
In March 1982 a milestone in the gay
rights movement occurred in Wiscon-
sin as then-Gov. Lee Sherman
Dreyfus, a Republican, signed into law
the first statewide gay rights legislation
in the United States. Since that time, gay
rights groups, and their supporters in
more than a dozen states, have sought
passage of similar bills-but despite
some near successes, Wisconsin still
stands alone as a "free state," in the
words of state Rep. David Clarenbach (D-
Madison), the law's chief sponsor.
How has Wisconsin's law worked in
the almost 3½ years since it was
signed? Has it affected the daily lives of
lesbians and gay men in the state, mak-
ing it easier-and safer-to come out?
Was the law worth the priority Wisconsin
activists gave it, just as groups in other
states continue to do?
In interviews with The ADVOCATE,
Clarenbach, Wisconsin activists and
supporters of gay rights within the state
administration generally agreed that the
bill's impact has been positive and even
profound. On a symbolic level, they said,
the legislation bolstered the morale of
lesbians and gay men; on a practical
level, it gave them recourse by making
antigay discrimination illegal in private
and public employment, housing and
public accommodations.
"I feel lucky to live in Wisconsin," says
Sandra Lipke, who heads the Wisconsin
Lesbian and Gay Network. "The law has
granted us credibility as a minority."
Moreover, current Gov. Anthony Earl,
a Democrat, whose responsibility it has
been to implement the gay rights law,
has shown extraordinary sensitivity to
gay concerns, according to activists.
Earl set up an advisory Council on Les-
Peter Freiberg is The ADVOCATE's Eastern
regional news editor.
12/THE ADVOCATE IIIII
bian and Gay Issues to help in implemen
tation of the legislation and to make
recommendations on other gay-related
issues. Recently Earl won funding for a
half-time staff member for the council
despite legislative opposition. Without
the law, it is extremely doubtful such a
council would have been created.
On the other side of the ledger, the
number of people filing discrimination
complaints with the state's Equal Rights
Division (ERD) has been relatively
small-only about 100 to date. And ac-
tivists in the rural areas of Wisconsin say
that most straight people-even many
gays-are unaware of the law's exis-
tence. It seems clear that most gays in
Wisconsin, like gays in the 49 other
states, still fear coming out, making it im-
possible for them to take advantage of
the law when discrimination does occur.
Nevertheless, the very existence of
the law makes it likely that more and
more gays will use it as time goes on.
Merry Fran Tryon, ERD's administrator,
says that this has been the experience
with other minority groups that win rights
legislation. And the long-term benefit,
Clarenbach maintains, will be to provide
a basis for gays to assert their rights on
Wisconsin:
Gay Rights
a variety of issues "in every nook and
cranny" of Wisconsin. "The battle will be
waged in the village squares," he says.
Some activists outside Wisconsin,
who remember the state as the home of
Sen. Joseph McCarthy, whose now-
infamous House UnAmerican Activities
Committee included "fag hunts" along
with its publicized "red hunts," feel the
state was an odd locale for passage of
the nation's first state gay rights legisla-
tion. But Wisconsin, which nurtured the
progressive movement earlier in the cen-
tury, passed much legislation that was
subsequently emulated in other cities
and states-and the populist tradition
has never entirely died out there.
The state gay rights bill was approved
about eight years after it was first in-
troduced, according to Clarenbach. A
key element in its passage was support
obtained from mainstream religious
groups and leaders, especially the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Mil-
waukee. This backing helped offset last-
minute organizing by right-wing Moral
Majority-type groups who sought to con-
vince Gov. Dreyfus to veto the measure.
Ironically, it was not until the year after
approval of the gay rights bill that the
Wisconsin legislature repealed the
state's sodomy law, decriminalizing gay
sex.
Since passage of the gay rights law,
says Clarenbach, there have been some
attempts to repeal it, but none recently-
and he does not believe any future effort
"The message is
clear that Wisconsin
is a 'free state, and
lesbians and gay
men are to be
accepted in our
state on an equal
legal footing"
-Rep. David Clarenbach
will succeed. He also believes that the
law "has had a profound impact on the
lives of lesbians and gay men, both from
a legal and symbolic standpoint.
"The message is clear that Wisconsin
is a 'free state, and lesbians and gay men
are to be accepted in our state on an
equal legal footing," claims Clarenbach.
"The message is equally directed at the
straight community, that we are a
diverse society...and we have to pro-
tect subgroups in our society from
mistreatment."
Following passage, gay groups.coop-
erated with the ERD in publishing a
brochure about the law, "The Rights of
Gay People." A respected former
Republican governor of Wisconsin, War-
ren Knowles, made a television public
service announcement in which he enu-
merated the protections of the state's
equal rights legislation, including sexual
orientation. Media coverage of the law
has continued to surface on occasion.
This publicity has probably helped to
make many lesbians and gay men in the
cities aware of the law's existence, but,
ERD's Tryon says, "I'm not sure the word
is really out as much as we'd like it to be."
In the rural areas of the state, ignorance
of the law is widespread among both
gays and straights, according to some
activists.
The people here don't know it.
passed," says Bob Jansen, who owns
the Main Club, a gay bar in Superior, a
northern Wisconsin city of about 20,000.
One reason for the lack of awareness,
according to Jansen, is the absence of
contact between gay activists in areas
like Milwaukee and Madison and those
up north. "I don't think people in the
lower part of the state realize there's a
gay community up here," Jansen says.
Duane Graves, 20, who organized a
gay student group in Superior, was
forced to leave his job in a restaurant
after he was interviewed on television
protesting an antigay sign placed on a
marquee by a fundamentalist minister.
"I thought of filing a complaint under
the legislation," says Graves, "but I didn't
know where to turn. I didn't know any
lawyers to turn to. Then I decided for the
amount of money I would get, it would
have cost three times as much [to file the
complaint]."
In fact, it doesn't require a lawyer to
file a complaint with the ERD. Tryon, who
heads the agency, says a bigger barrier
to gays' filing complaints is the fear of
retaliation if their gayness becomes
known.
"I think that's the big reason," says
Tryon, in explaining why so few people
I have filed charges since the law was
enacted. "I think they [gays] don't want
to...call attention to themselves. Better
to remain quiet or leave or suffer indig-
nities. I've had potential complainants
call me and say, 'This is what happened,'
and I say, 'Are you willing to file charges?'
There's very little you can do unless a
person comes forward."
Tryon is convinced there's a great deal
more antigay discrimination in Wiscon-
sin than is reflected by the number of
complaints filed to date. But even when
complaints are not filed, the existence of
the law sometimes gives ERD an oppor-
---
Evaluating the First State
Law Three Years Later
tunity to exercise influence.
Tryon recalls a case in which a gay
male university professor was hired by a
state school. The professor and his lover
began looking for a house. A real-estate
agent who realized they were gay called
the university, after which the dean re-
quested the gay man's resignation.
According to Tryon, the professor did
not want to file a complaint, fearing it
would jeopardize any future employ-
ment. But Tryon wrote a letter to the
dean, saying that while the agency could
not take any formal action, she did want
to inform the school of the state's gay
rights legislation.
"They retained him, they rescinded
the request for the resignation," she
says.
While the number of complaints has
increased since the first year, Tryon
warns that employers are "sophisticated
in their ways," and that proving antigay
discrimination is harder than demon-
strating bias against other groups of
people.
"It's not like gender or race, where you
can see this person is black or Asian or
a woman. Someone will say, 'I had no
idea they were gay. You have to have
evidence that really stands out."
mes
Issues. She says that after ERD found
"probable cause" in a case involving
discrimination by a bar owner who re-
fused to let two gay men dance together,
the case was referred back to the district
attorney-who has filed no charges.
WISCONSIN
Madison
The majority of complaints filed thus
far are in public accommodations and
employment. About 30%, Tryon esti-
mates, have had a "definite positive out-
come," with the case settled either
before the agency completed its investi-
gation or after it found "probable cause"
for hearings on the complaints.
The other cases include those that
were withdrawn by the complainant,
were found by the agency to have "no
probable cause" of discrimination or did
NANTUCKET SHORES
Gov. Anthony Earl (left), CCBA Sect'y Sue Mortensen and CCBA Pres. Marc
Haupert (right)
Moreover, the public accommoda-
tions section in Wisconsin's equal rights
law is weak, because prosecution is left
up to the local district attorney-
something gay activists and others are
trying to change. An example of the
"weak link" in this system is given by
Kathleen Nichols, cochair of the Gover-
nor's Council on Gay and Lesbian
not come within the agency's jurisdic-
tion. A handful of cases are still going
through the hearing process, with no
final decision yet rendered.
Just as important as the formal proc-
ess of implementing the law has been
the support shown by Gov. Earl. Shortly
after he took office in 1983, Earl created
the Governor's Council on Lesbian and
Gay Issues and appointed an openly gay
man, Ron McCrea, as his press secre-
tary. Sandra Lipke, who heads the
Wisconsin Lesbian and Gay Network,
which is seeking to organize gay people
throughout the state, sums up the view of
many activists when she says: "We've
been very fortunate to have a governor
who has shown as much courage and
guts as he has. His appointment of the
council, of his own press person, those
are moves he politically didn't have to
make.
Earl's commitment was demon-
strated again this year. He signed into
law-despite requests from his own
agencies for a veto-legislation
guaranteeing confidentiality for people
taking the AIDS antibody test. He
secured nearly $200,000 in AIDS fund-
ing and overcame a 9-1 legislative.com-
mittee vote against his request for
money to enable the council to hire a
staff person.
The council, says Cochair Kathleen
Nichols, has worked with state agencies
to make sure that they enforce the law.
The 14-member council, according to
Nichols, initially spent time familiarizing
itself with state government. "Then we
used leverage to make certain changes,"
she says.
When gay prisoners complained that
they were being harassed by guards
Nichols says, the council stepped in: The
prison system has since agreed to in-
clude gay rights material in its training
curriculum for guards. The council
recently asked Earl to direct the state
Law Enforcement Standards Board to in
clude gay rights material in the training
curriculum for local police agencies
and Earl, she says, agreed to make that
request.
Nichols, an openly lesbian elected
member of the Dane County Board of
Supervisors (which includes Madison
and surrounding areas), says many
police agencies are staffed by "decent-
hearted people" who need to be told how
to adapt their programs to meet the
needs of lesbians and gay men.
On the other hand, the state super-
intendent of public instruction has not yet
agreed to requests from the council to
discuss educational policies, notes
Cindy Lampman, a Racine resident who
is also on the Governor's Council. And
the number of openly gay police officers
in localities remains tiny-reflecting the
discrimination that undoubtedly still
exists.
"The challenge," says Marc Haupert,
president of the Cream City Business
Association, a Milwaukee gay organiza-
tion, "is to get the legislation infused in
the whole bureaucratic structure."
There have also been unexpected ef-
fects from the law. Sue Burke, editor of
Out!, a Wisconsin gay monthly
newspaper, and a former member of the
Governor's Council, believes it was
largely because of the gay rights legisla-
tion that she and others were able to
meet with the top editors of the
Milwaukee Journal and do some "con-
sciousness raising" with them. The law,
of course, did not mandate any such
meeting, but Burke is convinced the
credibility it gave to gays helped in ob-
taining the meeting
Some activists say the law has
Cindy Lampman
spurred gay groups in Madison to pro-
pose alternative family legislation, which
would bar discrimination against unmar-
ried couples-gay and straight-by
local government and businesses; many
issues, such as child custody, are not
covered by the gay rights law. Activists
are working for such legislation.
"I don't think anyone's taking it easy
yet," says Lampman. "There's still a lot of
work to be done."
Among that work is political organiz-
ing. Press Secretary McCrea says that if
the gay rights law was proposed today, it
would be extremely difficult to pass,
given the conservative trends in the na-
tion and in the state. "It doesn't seem to
me," says McCrea, "that the gay political
vote counts for anything in Wisconsin.
There's no really strong [statewide] gay
organization."
Unless a homophobic governor is
elected, however, there seems little
likelihood that the law will be overturned.
And that, says McCrea, means "the
whole nature of discussions about gay
rights has changed....The law confers
a kind of legitimacy on a sexual minority
that it never had before. The burden is not
on the individual to justify his or her
sexuality. The burden is on the
discriminators."
SEPTEMBER 3, 1985/13
DIANA GILES
---
based in Ft. Wayne, Ind., sent a letter to
700 smaller firms it underwrites, asking
them to take "lifestyle" and habits into
account when considering applicants.
Jerry Davis, a spokesman for the com-
pany, said later that the letter had been
"misunderstood" by the press and that
the company had no intention of dis-
criminating against homosexuals. But he
says the company has gotten approval in
about 35 states to add AIDS-related ques-
tions to its application forms-just as it
inquires about other diseases.
Another firm, Columbus, Ohio-based
Nationwide Insurance Co., which had
been quoted as saying it would search out
and reject gay applicants, claimed it was
misquoted. But a company vice presi-
dent, Stephen Rish, says, "If it came to
our attention in the underwriting process
[of an applicant] that an individual hap-
pened to be gay, we'd give serious
thought to giving him the antibody test."
In San Francisco, Steve Shiflett, 33,
says he was turned down for disability in-
surance by a firm after his doctor sent the
company data that he had participated in
a research blood study. He was subse-
quently turned down by three more firms.
As with many gay men who were sex-
ually active, Shiflett's case is compli-
cated. He has a history of STDs that
would have made it difficult for him to get
insurance even before the AIDS crisis.
While Shiflett acknowledges he's in the
"high risk group," he says he has no
symptoms of ARC. "I don't think the insur-
ance companies are using diagnoses to
make their decisions. They're using pre-
conceived notions about applicants."
Shiflett's insurance agent, Deborah
Pines, says, "The way to sneak through is
to ask for small amounts [of disability
insurance], but to ask for a guaranteed
insurability option [that allows the holder
to raise it later]. The same applies for life
insurance, she says. Asking for $100,000,
she says, "is no problem"; if the amount
is higher, the underwriter-the person
who checks on applications submitted
through insurance agents-is going to
give it a rigorous review.
Carl Heimann, an openly gay insur-
ance broker in San Francisco, says dis-
ability insurance is the most difficult to
get, followed by life insurance and then
health. His advice to gay men who don't
have adequate insurance is: "Apply now,
for God's sake, get it done. Things aren't
going to get any easier, the AIDS crisis is
crisis is not going to get any better. Try to
get insurance as quickly as possible.
Screw the VCR, take care of yourself
first." Heimann added that gay men
should read their health insurance pol-
icies carefully-especially the sections
on exciusions, limitations and preexisting
conditions-to find out if they need addi-
tional coverage. Most group disability
www
plans, he says, are inadequate against
AIDS-and a separate individual con-
tract should be purchased. Still, Heimann
maintains insurance companies have no
business singling out gay men for special
testing. "They should look at the rest of
our health history," he says.
No lawsuits have yet been filed on any
cases. "It's still at an early stage," says
Leonard Graff, legal director of National
Gay Rights Advocates, the San Francis-
co-based legal rights group, "and there's
still a chance we can have some in-
fluence short of litigation."
Ben Schatz, an NGRA lawyer, says,
"We don't even know if a case can be
brought." As Schatz noted, and as in-
surance firm executives emphasized in
Rep. David Clarenbach
interviews with The ADVOCATE, in-
surance underwriting is inherently dis-
criminatory-the object is to exclude
from coverage as many unhealthy people
as possible, providing firms can show an
actuarial basis for their decisions.
ACLI's Bier says he expects an in-
creasing number of companies to start
using the HTLV-3 antibody test. Ques-
tioned about whether people who test
positive will automatically be marked
uninsurable, he replied:
"All I'm prepared to say is that they're
going to have a lot harder time if they test
positive than if they don't, and a company
may decline to insure you altogether.
That's in fact not so different from a
middle-aged man with hypertension,
who's overweight and has an abnormal
EKG. He would probably have an awfully
difficult time getting insurance."
Asked whether this would be fair to the
estimated 80% of positive testing people
who will not come down with AIDS, Bier
said, "To quote from a former president of
ours, 'Life's not fair.' We know that some-
one who tests positive may not go on to
get the disease, but we have no way of
knowing who is going to go on to get it."
Individuals covered through group in-
surance obtained by their firm-which
accounts for 85% of all health insur-
ance-are unlikely to be asked to take the
antibody test, since those contracts do
not include health questions.
Bier also says that for people holding
individual insurance, "There's no ques-
tion of [insurance] companies changing
the rules and saying we're not going to
honor claims. Under existing laws, that
simply is not permissible." (Individual
employers who pay for their employees'
health care and are not state-regulated
may seek to lessen coverage.)
The catastrophic effect of lack of in-
surance for an individual led Wisconsin
state Rep. David Clarenbach (D-Madison)
to sponsor a law last summer to assure
confidentiality of HTLV-3 antibody test
results and to ban insurance companies
from using the test to determine "insura-
bility or insurance rates."
The legislation was approved, but this
fall the insurance industry sought to over-
turn it. In negotiations, a new bill was
approved, which both Clarenbach and
George Hardy, legislative counsel to
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
call a "compromise."
The new bill states that before antibody
test results can be used, the state epi-
demiologist must certify that the tests
were proven to be "medically significant."
What "medically significant" will mean in
practice is uncertain.
The new law also provides that if and
when the test is deemed "significant,"
anyone denied individual health insur-
ance will automatically be covered under
Wisconsin's high-risk sharing pool for
catastrophic illnesses. (Seven other
states have similar high-risk pools, with
costs shared by insurance companies.)
Dr. Mathilde Krim, cochair of the
American Foundation for AIDS Research,
echoes others who say the insurance in-
dustry isn't acting much differently with
AIDS than with other diseases. "It's the
system that's wrong," she says. "This
country, because of AIDS, is going to have
to rethink whether it doesn't need some
sort of national health insurance."
In a similar vein, The New York Times
wrote in an editorial: "If the epidemic and
its costs continue, Federal payment of
AIDS medical bills may be the only way to
protect the present system of private
health insurance and to defend AIDS vic-
tims from the cruelty of needless ostra-
cism." But whether even such a limited
national policy will be adopted given the
present conservative political climate is
very doubtful-and one of the reasons
gay men have serious cause to be
alarmed.
-Peter Freiberg
///////// NOVEMBER 26, 1985/25
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