UTF-8 Skip to main page content.
Television news crews.

Newsroom

January 19, 2007

Murray State's Staff Congress approves recommendation

Article includes comments by KFA Board of Directors Chairperson, Jody Cofer.

Staff Congress approves recommendation
Written By: Amanda Crider
Issue date: 1/19/07

The Staff Congress approved a recommendation Dec. 13 to include sexual orientation in the University's anti-discrimination employment policy by a vote of 12 to one. The resolution also included adding political affiliation to the anti-discrimination policy, but that half of the resolution is not what kept the vote from being unanimous.

Jody Cofer, program specialist for undergraduate research and scholarly activity, first proposed the change to the staff congress in October. He said other Kentucky universities, like Western Kentucky, Morehead State and Eastern Kentucky, have already made similar changes in their employment policies.

"The 12-to-one vote by the Staff Congress was a strong vote and, simply stated, the right thing to do for a minority that already receives such protection at other public universities across Kentucky," Cofer said. "I am hopeful that President Dunn and the administration will move on the recommendation."

Orville Herndon, public systems manager for the department of journalism and mass communications, cast the single vote against the recommendation. He said he based his vote on a presentation to the Staff Congress given by Annazette McCane, director of the Office of Equal Opportunity. "Basically, she indicated in her presentation that there had been no instances when sexual orientation had been used as discrimination in her 15 years at Murray State," Herndon said. "My standpoint is when you have someone who has done such an outstanding job at keeping the University on the straight and narrow and who feels the change is unnecessary, I feel like we should respect their professional opinion." McCane said her comment was taken out of context. She said she did not feel the change in policy was unnecessary." Someone from the meeting alluded to the fact that they were aware of a situation where someone had been discriminated against due to their sexual orientation and I replied that I was not aware of this and no one had reported an instance to my office," McCane said. "Our office is employed to enforce the Board of Regents' policy. If there's a change, we will implement it. We want to assure individuals are not discriminated against."

January 16, 2007

Courier-Journal on anti-fairness extremism in Frankfort

Early session coverage on a pressing fairness issue - defeating the proposed ban on equal healthcare (HB 48)

GOP's Stan Lee gains power

HB 48 would bar public universities from offering health-care benefits to the unmarried partners of employees. Such "domestic partner benefits" would be barred for both gay and straight workers.

The University of Louisville offers such benefits, and the University of Kentucky has expressed interest in doing so. They say such a policy could be an important recruiting tool.

Lee said it's a questionable use of tax dollars that's unfair to part-time employees and could promote fraud. Giving benefits to homosexuals also undermines traditional marriage, he said.

The Kentucky Fairness Alliance, the state's leading gay-rights advocacy group, regards Lee's legislation as a "serious threat to creating fair workplaces," said executive director Christina Gilgor.

Read the rest...

Subscriptions

Subscribe to KFA Website updates via RSS  

Subscribe to KFA E-mails via RSS.(Read all e-mails)

  Newsroom Archives

May 28, 2006
June 04, 2006
June 11, 2006
June 18, 2006
June 25, 2006
July 09, 2006
July 16, 2006
July 23, 2006
July 30, 2006
August 06, 2006
October 01, 2006
October 08, 2006
October 15, 2006
October 22, 2006
October 29, 2006
November 26, 2006
December 17, 2006
December 24, 2006
December 31, 2006
January 07, 2007
January 14, 2007

Powered by Blogger

Ampersand. The Ampersand symbolizes the solidarity we are building through Friends & Family, and suggests the inclusiveness we are working toward. It reflects the idea that no one individual, legislator, organization, or city can carry all the water for equality. Our success lies in our solidarity.



Get informed.