The Decatur City Council voted 6-1 Monday night to add sexual orientation to that city's Human Rights Ordinance. The ordinance is also gender-identity inclusive.
For more than two hours, the City Council members took testimony from 58 people, reports gay activist Rick Garcia of Equality Illinois.
"Opponents (almost all Baptist and other fundamentalist ministers) claimed the ordinance was bad for small businesses, would violate religious institution's rights, provided special rights for pedophiles, voyeurs, prostitutes, and would draw God's wrath on the city of Decatur," Garcia said.
"Linda Schroeder, the key organizer of this effort, did a bang-up job of lining up brilliant testimony and providing the Council members with an enormous amount of solid and reliable information about the ordinance," he added. "Linda is a member of the Decatur Human Rights Commission. She follows Greg Gravmeier, former president of GLAD, on the Commission. Both are treasured Equality Illinois members and have been honored by us for their work in Central Illinois."
Equality Illinois' newest board member, Pamela Sumners, provided expert legal opinion on the legislation and the Gay and Lesbian Association of Decatur's members and leadership provided the firm foundation for this legislative success, Garcia noted.
A wide variety of people testified in favor of the ordinance. The head of the Decatur Federation of Labor gave brilliant testimony, Professor Ramona Oswald provided solid polling data, and Lutheran (ELCA), Methodist, UCC, and Disciples of Christ ministers gave inspiring testimony, Garcia said. Equality Illinois also testified.
The most compelling testimony came from GLBT citizens of Decatur. Some spoke out publicly for the very first time about being gay in Decatur, Garcia said.
The City Council of Bloomington will address a similar ordinance Oct. 28. Equality Illinois is working with two other Illinois cities and one county planning strategy for local ordinances.