Saturday, September 30, 2023

PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE - OCTOBER 2023

 

While Florida’s LGBTQ+ community continues to be challenged on all fronts, the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council (PBCHRC) continues to be up to those challenges. 

Founded in 1988, PBCHRC is Florida’s oldest, independent, non-partisan, political organization dedicated to ending discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity or expression. We promote equality through education, advocacy, direct action, impact litigation and community outreach. 


In the thirty-five years since PBCHRC was founded, we have been responsible for the enactment of more than 150 laws and policies which now provide equal rights, protections and benefits for the LGBTQ+ community. For a list of the laws and policies enacted as the result of PBCHRC’s efforts, click here and select "Laws & Policies."

In the thirty-five years since PBCHRC was founded, we have been responsible for the enactment of more than 150 laws and policies which now provide equal rights, protections and benefits for the LGBTQ+ community. For a list of the laws and policies enacted as the result of PBCHRC’s efforts, click here and select "Laws and Policies."


Frankly, back in the 1980s, I optimistically thought there would no longer be a need for our organization in the 21st century. I assumed that by the turn of the century, our community nationwide would be protected by federal civil rights laws. (Back then, I did not envision marriage equality even becoming an issue, let alone reality.). However, for all the progress made over the past three decades, Florida’s LGBTQ+ community continues to be targeted by Governor DeSantis and the Republican controlled state legislature. Since 2021, Governor DeSantis has signed into law: 


  • The “Don’t Say Gay” law – and an expansion of the law – prohibiting classroom discussion of LGBTQ+ matters in public schools grades kindergarten through 8th grade, 
  • A law permitting healthcare providers to discriminate against LGBTQ+ people by refusing to provide healthcare services that conflict with the provider's chosen religious, ethical, or moral beliefs, 
  • Restrictions on gender affirming care, including banning Medicaid coverage for gender-affirming care for young people and adults, 
  • Requirements for people to use gender-designated restrooms in public facilities based on the gender assigned at birth – not their gender identities, 
  • A ban on trans female students from playing on public school teams intended for athletes designated female at birth, and 
  • Restrictions on drag performances. 

Fortunately, the courts have temporarily blocked the Medicaid ban on gender-affirming care and the drag performance restrictions from taking effect pending trials in those cases. As for the constitutional challenges brought by students, parents, and teachers in federal court to the “Don’t Say Gay” law, the federal trial courts have repeatedly refused to allow the case to move forward. The case is now before the very conservative U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. However, in September, after the parties announced they were in settlement negotiations, the court issued a stay on litigation. We will keep you posted on the progress of the litigation.


PBCHRC continues to concentrate on Palm Beach County and our local. municipalities to expand and protect our rights. Our work never stops. 

CONVERSION THERAPY BANS

In Otto and Hamilton v. City of Boca Raton and Palm Beach County, the very conservative U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit ruled that the conversion therapy bans PBCHRC worked diligently to enact were unconstitutional. That ruling is contrary to every other federal appellate ruling on conversion therapy bans in the nation – including Tingley v. Ferguson, a case brought in the state of Washington. In Tingley, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled the U.S. Constitution does allow states to enact laws to protect youth from the harms of conversion therapy by licensed therapists


As a result of this conflict in rulings, in May, anti-LGBTQ+ organizations backing the Washington State conversion therapists asked the U.S. Supreme Court to take up their case to determine whether state and local governments can continue to enact laws to protect children from the harms cause by conversion therapy. We will keep you posted.

LAKE WORTH BEACH

NOW A SANCTUARY CITY

FOR LGBTQ+ PEOPLE

On September 5, 2023, Lake Worth Beach became the first city in Florida adopt a resolution declaring the city a sanctuary city for LGBTQIA+ individuals and their families. The resolution, brought forward by Mayor Betty Resch at PBCHRC’s request, was adopted by a unanimous vote of the City Commission. 

PALM BEACH COUNTY SCHOOLS REVERSE BANS

ON LGBTQ+ LIBRARY BOOKS

In September, Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody determined that the infamous “Don’t Say Gay” laws do not apply to books in public school libraries, since the laws specifically refer to classroom instruction – not library content. Within days, the Palm Beach County School District policies were modified to allow for previously banned books to be returned to library shelves.

SCHOOL BOARD TO RECOGNIZE LGBTQ+ HISTORY MONTH

Despite the existence of Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” laws and pressure from anti-LGBTQ+ activists, the School Board of Palm Beach County will continue to recognize LGBTQ+ History Month by issuing a proclamation at the October 18, 2023 school board meeting. Thanks go out to local public school teachers and educational advocates for their advocacy at the School Board meeting in mid-September.

FLORIDA’S FIRST SCHOOL NAMED IN HONOR OF OPENLY GAY MAN

Classes began in August at the Dr. Joaquín García High School in Palm Beach County, which is named after an openly gay veterinarian and educational advocate who died in 2021. Dr. García was a founding member of the board of Directors of Compass LGBTQ Community Center of Lake Worth and the Palm Beaches and did extensive volunteer work for the International AIDS Education Foundation and the Homeless Coalition of Palm Beach County. He encouraged the development of scholarship programs, advocated for dual-language learning, and supported efforts to make our schools more accepting of LGBTQ+ students. 


The school is one of a handful of public schools nationwide named after LGBTQ+ people such as San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk, civil rights advocate Bayard Rustin, poet Walt Whitman, and astronaut Sally Ride..

2024 WINTER FÊTE HOST COMMITTEE

PBCHRC's 2024 Winter Fête will be held on Saturday, January 13, 2024, from 7:00 to 10:00 p.m. at the home of Sarah and Melissa Hassan. Their fabulous central Boca Raton property is in a community ranked among the top ten exclusive gated communities in the United States by Forbes.


While individual tickets are not yet available, we are in the process of putting together a Host Committee to help underwrite the event and PBCHRC’s projects. For a $1,000 contribution, Host Committee Members will receive two tickets to the Winter Fête and listings in all event related materials. As of January 4, 2024, the Host Committee includes:


Joe Abruzzo

Altima Palm Beach

Steve Avila

Alexandria Ayala and Rob Long

Lori Berman

Paul Bernabeo and David Cohen

Mack and Shawn Bernard

James Berwind and Kevin Clark

Ryan Boylston

Ric Bradshaw

Karen Brill

Pamela Buchmeyer and Shellie Crandall

Castle Wealth Management

Nancy Chanin

Jim Chard

Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick

Gil Cohen and Paul Gervais

Compass LGBTQ+ Community Center

Peter Conn, Jr. and Oscar Garza

Cornerstone Solutions

John David Corey and Miguel Rosales

Alexcia Cox

David Crespo and Nicholas Coppola

Joseph Paul Davis

Tennille DeCoste

Yvette Drucker

Echo

ECP Event Rentals and Design

Daniel Eisinger

Peter Emmerich

Joel Flores

Adam Frankel

Lois Frankel

Mark Foley and Ryan Ruark

Christy Fox

Anne Gannon

Charles and Michael Freeman-Grattendick

Habitat for Humanity of Greater Palm Beach County

Sarah and Melissa Hassan

Rand Hoch

Dorothy Jacks

Elaine Johnson James

Keith and Lorna James

Bill Jennings and Richard Triggs

Michael Judd and Ben Small

Richard Katzenberg and John Betz

Aimee Kelly

Christina and Monte Lambert

Gregg Lerman

Wendy Link

Rachelle and Jeffrey Litt

Joseph Marino, Jr. and Anthony Sibilia

Mimi May

David Mooney and Philip Bianco

Michael Napoleone

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, LLP

Joe and Erin Peduzzi

Greg & Jessica Ransom

Betty Resch

Pernod Ricard

H. G. Roosters

Paula Ryan and Clifford Hertz

Maria Sachs

SandyJames Fine Food & Productions

Jill Sasso & Roe Manghisi

Arthur Schofield

Jeff Sophir and Jim Gielda

Eric Telchin and Logan Nolting

Andy Thomson

Don Todorich

Scott Velozo and Stephen Mooney

Katherine Waldron

Cathleen Ward

Shalonda Warren

A.J. Wasson and Randy Christensen

Dr. Donald Watren and Anthony Jaggi 

Gregg and Rebecca Weiss

Wine Wave

Charles Williams


Thanks go out to all Host Committee Members!

To join PBCHRC’s 2024 Winter Fête. Host Committee, click here.

PBCHRC CHARITABLE FOUNDATION

In addition to the Foundation’s annual Social Justice Awards, the Charitable Foundation has established the W. Trent Steele Legal Advocacy Award in recognition of Trent’s decades of pro bono work on behalf of PBCHRC as well as his work as a PBCHRC Board Member. The scholarship is available to LGBTQ+ and allied second and third year law students with ties to Palm Beach County. Please contact PBCHRC@gmail.com for further information.


So far this year, PBCHRC and the Charitable Foundation have made significant contributions to:

 

  • ACLU of Florida Foundation, which works to create a Florida free of discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, 
  • First Amendment Foundation, which watched over a legislative program to review, and reenact if warranted, each of the hundreds of exemptions to Florida's public records law. 
  • Lambda Legal, a national legal organization representing LGBTQ+ people and everyone living with HIV in court – and in the court of public opinion. 
  • MAP (the Movement Advancement Project), a nonprofit think tank working to create a thriving, inclusive, and equitable America where all people have a fair chance to pursue health and happiness, earn a living, take care of the ones they love, be safe in their communities, and participate in civic life. 
  • PRISM, which works to expand access to LGBTQ+-inclusive education and sexual health resources for youth in South Florida, 
  • Stonewall National Museum & Archives, which presents exhibitions on LGBTQIA+ themes and public programs in South Florida and across the United States, and, 
  • Vita Nova, which is a safe bridge to independence for former foster care, LGBTQ+ and other homeless local youth through supportive housing, education, employment and life. 

VOTERS ALLIANCE

Our success in enacting pro-LGBTQ+ laws is directly related to our community’s participation in electoral politics. 


Since 1988, the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council Voters Alliance (PBCHRCVA) members — all volunteers — have conducted close to 1,000 face-to-face endorsement interviews — and close to 100 interviews via Zoom and phone — of candidates seeking public office. We have done this to educate public officials, make endorsements and take action to elect people who will take steps to change laws and policies to provide equal treatment and equal benefits for the local LGBTQ community 


Municipal elections will be held throughout Palm Beach County on March 19, 2024 – the same day as the Presidential Preference Primaries. In additional, federal, county and state Primary Elections will be held in August 20, 2024 with the General Election on November 6, 2024. 


We have a lot of work to do. 


To date, PBCHRC has made the following endorsements: 


  • U.S. Representative (Dist. 22) - Lois Frankel
  • Constitutional Tax Collector - Anne Gannon
  • Sheriff - Ric Bradshaw
  • State Attorney - Gregg Lerman
  • State Representative (Dist. 90) - Joe Casello
  • State Representative (Dist. 92) - Kelly Skidmore
  • State Representative (Dist. 93) - Katherine Waldron
  • State Representative (Dist. 94) - Rochelle Litt
  • Boca Raton City Council (Seat D) - Andrew Thomson
  • Delray Beach Mayor - Ryan Boylston
  • Delray Beach City Commissioner (Seat 3) - Nicholas Coppola 
  • Lake Worth Beach City Commissioner (Dist. 1) - Sarah Malega
  • Wellington Mayor - Michael Napoleone


For a list of more than 60 elected officials who were endorsed by PBCHRCVA and who currently hold office, click here


In an effort to suppress the vote, the Florida Legislature enacted a law causing Vote-By-Mail requests to expire at the end of the year in which a General Election is held. If you have not taken action, your Vote-By-Mail ballot request expired last year. If you want to continue voting by mail in 2023 and 2024, you need to complete a new Vote-by -Mail ballot request. You may do this online easily at www.pbcelections.org/Voters/Vote-By-Mail, In the alternative, you may request to vote by mail: 

  • By Phone: (561) 656-6208 
  • By Email: votebymail@votepalmbeach.gov 
  • By Fax: (561) 656-6230 
  • In person at any Office of the Supervisor of Elections 


The vote-by-mail request must include your driver's license/Florida State ID number OR the last 4 digits of your social security number, whichever you provided when you registered to vote. (If you do not remember which you used, PBCHRC recommends you provide both numbers to ensure your vote by mail application can be processed.) 

CONGRATULATIONS GO OUT TO ...

  • PBCHRC Co-Treasurer Gemma Torcivia and her wife Kate McMahon on the birth of their daughter Rowan. Their family also includes big brother Jack (age 2) and big sister Finley (age 3).


  • Jasmin Lewis, PBCHRC Board Member and Chair of PBCHRC's Social Justice Awards Committee, on her promotion to Literacy Coach in Broward County Schools.

CURRENT INITIATIVES

PBCHRC is currently working to persuade: 

  • The local courts, prosecutors and public defenders to utilize the appropriate pronouns when addressing trans people with business before the courts, 
  • The Health Care District of Palm Beach County to provide trans-specific healthcare services to indigent patients, and 
  • The School District of Palm Beach County to cease doing business with Chick-fil-A and other companies that discriminate against LGBTQ people and other minorities. 

For more than three decades, the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council has worked diligently on behalf of the LGBTQ community. With your support, we will continue to do so in the years to come. As always, we will keep you posted on our progress. 


Judge Rand Hoch (retired), 

President and Founder 


A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY CALLING TOLL-FREE WITHIN THE STATE. REGISTRATION DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL, OR RECOMMENDATION BY THE STATE. PBCHRC'S Registration Number is CH46486. To obtain registration information, you may consult the website or call 800-43

Monday, August 21, 2023

Classes Begin At Florida’s First School Named After Openly Gay Man

 

With great anticipation, Palm Beach County’s first new high school in 20 years opened to students last week in western Lake Worth. 




The school is named after Dr. Joaquín García, an openly gay businessman and educational advocate who died in 2021.


For decades, Drs. Joaquin and Xavier García --husbands and partners of 40 years – ran the El Cid Animal Clinic in West Palm Beach.


Dr. Joaquín García High School is one of a handful of public schools nationwide named openly LGBTQ+ people such as San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk, civil rights Bayard Rustin, the poet Walt Whitman, and astronaut Sally Ride..

Following her death in 2012, a statement Ride had prepared was released acknowledging her longstanding relationship with Tam O’Shaughnessy, the woman who was also her business partner. When the Sally Ride Elementary School in Orlando opened in 2018, it became the first public school in Florida named in honor of an LGBTQ+ Floridian.

Most of the other schools are in located in New York City, including seven in Manhattan, two in Brooklyn, one in the Bronx and one in Staten Island, There are also two in Maryland, one in California, and one in Pennsylvania.

“Joaquín García was a passionate and inspirational advocate for all students in Palm Beach County schools,” said retired judge Rand Hoch, president and founder of the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council. “Through his words and deeds, he was an exemplary community leader."


PBCHRC is Florida’s oldest, independent, non-partisan, political organization dedicated to ending discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity or expression. The organization promotes equality through education, advocacy, direct action, impact litigation, and community outreach.

García was a founding member of the board of Directors of Compass LGBTQ Community Center of Lake Worth and the Palm Beaches. The organization’s mission is to engage, empower and enrich the lives of LGBTQ+ people as well as those impacted by HIV and AIDS. He also did extensive volunteer work for the International AIDS Education Foundation and the Homeless Coalition of Palm Beach County .


“Joaquín García exemplified leadership and was a truly inspirational advocate and a role model for LGBTQ+ youth, “ said Compass Executive Director Julie Seaver.

“Palm Beach County is rich in its diversity and we have a significant LGBTQ+ population,” said Alexandria Ayala, Palm Beach County’s first elected Hispanic/Latina School Board Member. 


“Our School Board knew Joaquín was gay and married to Xavier, his partner for decades,” said Ayala, a friend of Garcia who considered him a mentor. “We were proud to know he was involved in the creation of Compass, our county’s LGBTQ+ Community Center, and at no point did Joaquín’s sexual orientation prevent us from honoring him and his legacy.” 

“If Joaquín García’s legacy is allowed to be taught in Florida schools, his influence on LGBTQ+ students will be carried on for generations to come,” Hoch said. “Unfortunately, it is unclear whether Florida’s regressive education law will permit that to happen.”


Under Florida’s Parental Rights in Education Act, more commonly known as Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law, public schools are prohibited from any classroom discussions relating to sexual orientation or gender identity. While the law technically applies to kindergarten through eighth grade, most Florida high schools are currently prohibiting these discussions to avoid lawsuits brought by anti-LGBTQ+ activists.


“The DeSantis administration is intent on erasing LGBTQ+ history and culture,” said Hoch. “Now more than ever, we must recognize the achievements of LGBTQ+ leaders such as Dr. Joaquín García.” 


Originally from Cuba, Garcia grew up in Spain and Puerto Rico, and earned his medical degree in the Dominican Republic. After he moved to Palm Beach County, he co-founded of Palm Beach County’s Hispanic Education Coalition. He served as its chairman for close to a dozen years. He encouraged the development of scholarship programs, advocated for dual-language learning, and supported efforts to make our schools more accepting of LGBTQ+ students. 


So, in addition to being Florida’s first public school named after an openly LGBTQ+ person, the school is also the first in Palm Beach County named after a Hispanic person.

While Dr. Joaquín García High School, built at a cost of more than $100 million, has 1,600 students enrolled, the facility can accommodate 2,600. 


The school provides specialty medical, business and IT programs and includes a performing arts center and an impressive sports complex.

Saturday, July 15, 2023

PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE - JULY 2023

While Florida’s LGBTQ+ community is being challenged on all fronts, the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council (PBCHRC) continues to be up to the challenge. 

Founded in 1988, PBCHRC is Florida’s oldest, independent, non-partisan, political organization dedicated to ending discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity or expression. We promote equality through education, advocacy, direct action, impact litigation and community outreach. 

In the thirty-five years since PBCHRC was founded, we have been responsible for the enactment of more than 150 laws and policies which now provide equal rights, protections and benefits for the LGBTQ+ community. For a list of the laws and policies enacted as the result of PBCHRC’s efforts, click here and select "Laws & Policies." 

Frankly, back in the 1980s, I optimistically thought there would no longer be a need for our organization in the 21st century. I assumed that by the turn of the century, our community nationwide would be protected by federal civil rights laws. (Back then, I did not envision marriage equality even becoming an issue, let alone reality.). However, for all the progress made over the past three decades, Florida’s LGBTQ+ community continues to be targeted by Governor DeSantis and the Republican controlled state legislature. Since 2021, Governor DeSantis has signed into law: 
  • The “Don’t Say Gay” law – and an expansion of the law– prohibiting classroom discussion of LGBTQ+ matters in public schools grades kindergarten through 8th grade, 
  • A law permitting healthcare providers to discriminate against LGBTQ+ people by refusing to provide healthcare services that conflict with the providers chosen religious, ethical, or moral beliefs, 
  • Restrictions on gender affirming care, including banning Medicaid coverage for gender-affirming care for young people and adults, 
  • Requirements for people to use gender-designated restrooms in public facilities based on the gender assigned at birth – not their gender identities, 
  • A ban on trans female students from playing on public school teams intended for athletes designated female at birth, and 
  • Restrictions on drag performances. 
Fortunately, our courts have temporarily blocked the Medicaid ban on gender-affirming care and the drag performance restrictions from taking effect pending trials in those cases. Unfortunately, federal trial courts have not allowed constitutional challenges to the “Don’t Say Gay” law to move forward and the issue is now before the very conservative U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit– the only federal court in the nation to strike down conversion therapy bans. 

So, PBCHRC continues to concentrate on Palm Beach County and our local. municipalities to expand and protect our rights. Our work never stops. 

PBCHRC CHARITABLE FOUNDATION 
2023 Social Justice Award 
 
In April, the PBCHRC Charitable Foundation selected Richeley Cajuste to receive our 2023 Social Justice Award. The award is presented annually to a college-bound graduating senior who has demonstrated an interest in advocacy on behalf of the LGBTQ+ community. Richeley will receive a $2,500 scholarship. 

Haitian-born Richeley, who emigrated to the U.S. in 2016, lives in West Palm Beach and graduated from Palm Beach Lakes Community High School. At school, through his participation in Rainbow RAMS, he advocated for LGBTQ+ and social justice issues. He hopes to establish a chapter of the organization at Palm Beach State College, where he will be in the pre-med program, studying health sciences and biology. After receiving his undergraduate degree, he plans to graduate from medical school and open a medical practice to help underserved communities. 

 Norman L Stern and August R. Venezio Scholarships 

Longtime Boynton Beach residents Norm Stern and Auggie Venezio passed away last year, having spent close to 67 years together as a couple, When planning their estates, they made unrestricted bequests to PBCHRC and several other LGBTQ+ advocacy organizations. In recognition of their relationship with and commitment to our community, the Charitable Foundation Board established the Norman L. Stern and August R. Venezio Scholarship. 

The first recipient is Michael Thayer, a West Palm Beach native, a longtime PBCHRC volunteer. He received his B.A. from the University of Maine, summa cum laude, and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa Society, the oldest academic honor society in the United States. He also holds a Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Missouri - Kansas City. 

Now residing in New York City with his partner, Michael works for a entertainment law firm and serves as a volunteer counselor at Trevor Project, the world's largest suicide prevention and mental health organization for LGBTQ+ young people. In the fall, Michael will begin his studies for a second Master's degree at Columbia University's School of Social Work, so that he may carry out his work on behalf of LGBTQ+ youth. The Foundation will be providing Michael with a $2,500 scholarship per semester. 

W. Trent Steele Legal Advocacy Award 

The Charitable Foundation has also established the W. Trent Steele Legal Advocacy Award in recognition of Trent’s decades of pro bono work on behalf of PBCHRC as well as his work as a PBCHRC Board Member. The scholarship is available to LGBTQ+ and allied second and third year law students with ties to Palm Beach County. Please contact PBCHRC@gmail.com for further information.

Recent Charitable Foundation Contributions 

So far this year, PBCHRC and the Charitable Foundation have made significant contributions to: 
  • ACLU of Florida Foundation, which works to create a Florida free of discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, 
  • First Amendment Foundation, which watched over a legislative program to review, and reenact if warranted, each of the hundreds of exemptions to Florida's public records law. 
  • Lambda Legal, a national legal organization representing LGBTQ+ people and everyone living with HIV in court – and in the court of public opinion. 
  • MAP (the Movement Advancement Project), a nonprofit think tank working to create a thriving, inclusive, and equitable America where all people have a fair chance to pursue health and happiness, earn a living, take care of the ones they love, be safe in their communities, and participate in civic life. 
  • PRISM, which works to expand access to LGBTQ+-inclusive education and sexual health resources for youth in South Florida, 
  • Stonewall National Museum & Archives, which presents exhibitions on LGBTQIA+ themes and public programs in South Florida and across the United States, and, 
  • Vita Nova, which is a safe bridge to independence for former foster care, LGBTQ+ and other homeless local youth through supportive housing, education, employment and life. 
VOTERS ALLIANCE

Our success in enacting pro-LGBTQ+ laws is directly related to our community’s participation in electoral politics. 

Since 1988, the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council Voters Alliance (PBCHRCVA) members — all volunteers — have conducted close to 1,000 face-to-face endorsement interviews — and close to 100 interviews via Zoom and phone — of candidates seeking public office. We have done this to educate public officials, make endorsements and take action to elect people who will take steps to change laws and policies to provide equal treatment and equal benefits for the local LGBTQ community 

Municipal elections will be held throughout Palm Beach County on March 19, 2024 – the same day as the Presidential Preference Primaries. In additional, federal, county and state Primary Elections will be held in August 20, 2024 with the General Election on November 6, 2024. 

We have a lot of work to do. 

To date, PBCHRC has made the following endorsements: 

U.S. Representative (Dist. 22) - Lois Frankel

Constitutional Tax Collector - Anne Gannon

Sheriff - Ric Bradshaw

State Attorney - Gregg Lerman

State Representative (Dist. 90) - Joe Casello

State Representative (Dist. 92) - Kelly Skidmore

State Representative (Dist. 93) - Katherine Waldron

State Representative (Dist. 94) - Rochelle Litt

Boca Raton City Council (Seat D) - Andrew Thomson

Delray Beach Mayor - Ryan Boylston

Delray Beach City Commissioner (Seat 3) - Nicholas Coppola

Lake Worth Beach City Commissioner (Dist. 1) - Sarah Malega

Wellington Mayor - Michael Napoleone


For a list of more than 60 elected officials who were endorsed by PBCHRCVA and who currently hold office, click here
In an effort to suppress the vote, the Florida Legislature enacted a law causing Vote-by-Mail requests to expire at the end of the year in which a General Election is held. If you have not taken action, your vote-by-mail ballot request expired last year. If you want to continue voting by mail in 2023 and 2024, you need to complete a new Vote-by -Mail ballot request. You may do this online easily at www.pbcelections.org/Voters/Vote-By-Mail, In the alternative, you may request to vote-by-mail: 
  • By Phone: (561) 656-6208 
  • By Email: votebymail@votepalmbeach.gov 
  • By Fax: (561) 656-6230 
  • In person at any Office of the Supervisor of Elections 
The vote-by-mail request must include your driver's license/Florida State ID number OR the last 4 digits of your social security number, whichever you provided when you registered to vote. (If you do not remember which you used, PBCHRC recommends you provide both numbers to ensure your vote by mail application can be processed.) 

CURRENT INITIATIVES 

PBCHRC is currently working to persuade: 
  • The local courts, prosecutors and public defenders to utilize the appropriate pronouns when addressing trans people with business before the courts, 
  • The Health Care District of Palm Beach County to provide trans-specific healthcare services to indigent patients, and 
  • The School District of Palm Beach County to cease doing business with Chick-fil-A and other companies that discriminate against LGBTQ people and other minorities. 
Finally, congratulations to longtime PBCHRC Board Member Chauncey Graham upon his graduation from Atlanta's John Marshall Law School, where he served as Editor-in-Chief of the school's law review. We are so proud! 

For more than three decades, the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council has worked diligently on behalf of the LGBTQ community. With your support, we will continue to do so in the years to come. As always, we will keep you posted on our progress. 

Judge Rand Hoch (retired), 
President and Founder 

A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY CALLING TOLL-FREE WITHIN THE STATE. REGISTRATION DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL, OR RECOMMENDATION BY THE STATE. PBCHRC'S Registration Number is CH46486. To obtain registration information, you may consult the website or call 800-435-7352.