Youth leading to achieve an AIDS-free generation


In a recent Lifelong AIDS Alliance press release, a group of advocates wrote:

The CDC found that in 2010, youth ages 13-24 accounted for over a quarter of the new HIV infections in the US whereas in Seattle, only one in every eight people are diagnosed with HIV between the ages of 13-24 years old.

In fact, the CDC reports that approximately “60% of all youth with HIV do not know they are infected, are not getting treated, and can unknowingly pass the virus on to others.”

Last year, Ed Murray, mayor of the city of Seattle, proclaimed April to be Youth HIV & AIDS Awareness Month. In the proclamation, he encouraged “all within Seattle to educate themselves and others of the very real threat HIV/AIDS continues to pose to young people and to contribute their talents to our ongoing fight on behalf of everyone impacted by this disease.”

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In truth, it’s the young people who are responding to this health issue that is still impacting youth and young adults. In Seattle, the youth HIV activists who urged for the city proclamation last year are continuing the awareness with hosting an educational community forum in celebration of National Youth HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (NYHAAD) held yearly on April 10th. The forum will be held on April 18th Saturday 1PM-3PM inside the Auditorium at the Downtown Central Library which includes an honest dialogue about HIV and AIDS stigma affecting youth communities in 2015 as well as prevention efforts.

This is a great chance to hear from 4 positive youth in Seattle area and PrEP Advocate Panelists. “This event is so important because it’s youth developed, youth led, and youth run,” Manuel Vengas, Seattle NYHAAD Youth Ambassador from Advocates for Youth, recently said.

Everyone can do something. Engage with your community and family at home. Most importantly, we need to have these discussions with our youth – otherwise we are neglecting them valuable information. Even though Seattle recognizes April as Youth HIV & AIDS Awareness Month, there’s still much to be done here and throughout the US as we strive to build an AIDS-free Generation. If folks can’t attend the community forum that’s understandable but there’s plenty of other ways to get educated and involved. There’s a list below of youth resources to get you started. Also consider joining Seattle area youth HIV activists, and regional community partners in a live twitter chat TODAY from 3-5PM. Join the Twitter chat by following @HEYOYouth and #PNWYouthHIV.

Let’s talk about this!

The forum is presented in partnership with the #MyHIVMoment campaign, a collaborative effort of Lifelong, BABES-Network YWCA, the Center for Multicultural Health, Entre Hermanos, Gay City Men’s Health, Seattle Counseling Services, and We Are 1.

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Youth Resources

Youth can drop-in for free, confidential HIV testing at Lifelong weekdays from 8:30a.m. to 5:30p.m. For a full list of testing locations, click here.

The Seattle Young People’s Project is a youth-led, adult supported social justice organization that empowers youth (ages 13-18) to express themselves and to take action on the issues that affect their lives. For more information, click here.

Health Education Youth Outreach (HEYO) is Lifelong’s youth education program for youth age 16-24. Through peer-to-peer outreach and education, HEYO reduces stigma around queer issues, promotes healthy sexual choices and makes HIV testing and other resources readily available. For more information, click here.

The Inspire Youth Project (formerly Rise n’ Shine) provides emotional support programs, stability, advocacy and AIDS education for children and teens affected by HIV/AIDS. For more information, click here.

Safe Schools Coalition offers support for LGBTQ youth. For more information, click here.

BABES Network-YWCA offers peer support to women & heterosexual men living with HIV and their families as well as HIV education and resources. For more information, click here.

For information about PrEP and PEP, click here or see the information below.

Harborview Medical Center
M-F regular business hours: (206) 744-4377
M-F outside normal business hours: (206) 726-2619
Or visit the Harborview Emergency Room at 325 9th Ave., Seattle, WA.

For Needle Exchange locations, click here.

For drug and alcohol resources in Seattle & King County, click here.

-Written by Tranisha Arzah, BABES Network Peer Advocate

Violence: Learn more, Do more


Where have you experienced or witnessed violence in your life?

Futures_Share_Graphic_650px-3Futures Without Violence has found that about 1 in 3 teenagers report some kind of abuse – including emotional and verbal abuse – in a romantic relationship.

Every day, an average of 483 women are raped or sexually assaulted in the United States.

In the past year, more than 5 million children were exposed to physical intimate partner violence – 6.6% of children in our country. Of these children, 1 in 3 reported being physically abused themselves.

With statistics like these, we could say that we have all been exposed to violence somewhere and at some point in our lives – whether we’ve experienced it ourselves or someone close to us has. We see the consequences to exposure to violence all around us. Violence leads to more violence and our exposure to it impacts our health and the health of our loved ones. For example:

  • Women victimized by abuse are more likely to be diagnosed with serious health problems including depression, panic attacks, high risk behaviors such as tobacco and substance abuse and sexual risk taking, as well as migraines, chronic pain, arthritis, high blood pressure, gastrointestinal problems, inconsistent use of birth control, and delayed entry into prenatal care.

  • Pregnant women are frequent targets of abuse and, as a result, are placed at risk for low birth weight babies, pre-term labor — pregnant and parenting teens are especially vulnerable.

  • Abused children and those exposed to adult violence in their homes may have short and long term physical, emotional and learning problems, including: increased aggression, decreased responsiveness to adults, failure to thrive, posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety, hyper vigilance and hyperactivity, eating and sleeping problems, and developmental delays.

It’s one thing to know more about violence in our communities and in our country – and another to be able to do something about it. When I stop and think – Ok, how, then, do we stop violence? – I get stuck. It’s such a BIG issue and incredibly complex. But it seems a few groups of people have some ideas. Here are a few ideas from the Coalition to End Violence Against Women in Sudbury, Canada:

  1. Recognize that it’s a men’s issue: Violence against women is not just a woman’s issue, it’s also a men’s issue that involves men of all ages, socioeconomic, racial and ethnic backgrounds.
  2. Break the silence: When you are ready, tell others your stories about survival; this can help others share their stories thus reducing the shame associated with abuse.
  3. Listen to women: When a woman discloses about violence in her life, listen and believe her.Futures_Share_Graphic_650px-1
  4. Heal the violence in your own life: Many of us are survivors of abuse in some way and many of us fear becoming a victim of violence.  If you are emotionally, psychologically, physically or sexually abused, get help. Get counselling or join a support groupIf you are abusive to women, in any way, get help now.
  5. Make violence your business: Some of us tend to have this belief that violence is a private thing and we should not be asking questions about other people’s business or relationships – especially when there is trouble. If you suspect violence in a home or if someone is being abused, ask them. Looking the other way will not help end violence against women. They may not tell you right away but your concern may show them you are someone they can trust. If you need extra support in support someone who is being abused, call your local women’s shelter or crisis line.
  6. Raise non-violent children: Talk to your children about abuse and violence. Help them find non-violent ways to solve conflicts and encourage co-operative and non-violent play. Don’t use violence as punishments.
  7. Support initiatives that promote women’s equality: Women make up the majority of victims of abuse. Get involved in your community’s rallies or awareness campaigns on ending violence. Help raise money so we can continue to our prevention work or volunteer in an organization working to end violence against women.
  8. Challenge sexism: Media often portray women as sexual objects and often use images of violence against women to sell products.  Websites, music, movies, even books often describe and portray women in a sexual degrading or abusive manner. This is not OK. Challenge those statements by talking about the realities of women. Challenge gender roles.

Next week is the YWCA’s Week without Violence – a signature initiative created by YWCA USA nearly 20 years ago to mobilize people in communities across the United States to take action against all forms of violence, wherever it occurs. What will you do to take a stand, interrupt violence, and promote peace, health and wellness? What will you do to get involved?

Hate begets hate; violence begets violence; toughness begets a greater toughness. We must meet the forces of hate with the power of love.

Martin Luther King, Jr. 

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For support around domestic violence, contact Doris O’Neal in Seattle at 206.280.9961 or JoJo Goan in South King County at 425.226.1266, ext.1017 or rgaon@ywcaworks.org. Learn more about YWCA services available for individuals and families experiencing domestic violence. To speak with a counselor to talk through something you’re experiencing, call us at 425.922.6192.

Uncomfortably Predictable: Race, Community and the Cycle of Violence


The focus of this blog has always been on access to and information on health, wellness, and health care. However, at this time, it feels more right to use this space to speak to the actively and publicly violent situation continuing in Ferguson, Missouri. There is much community dialogue around what’s going on, much press coverage, and much social media attention.

YWCAs across the country are fighting against racism. I see YWCA USA exercising leadership in the conversation around Ferguson and the death of Michael Brown. And for that reason, I share this blog post with you from YWCA USA, written by Donte Hilliard, the YWCA USA Director of Mission Impact.

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We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
– U. S. Declaration of Independence 1776

YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all.
– Adopted by the General Assembly, 2009

If you are silent about your pain, they’ll kill you and say you enjoyed it.
– Zora Neal Hurston

Donte Hilliard

Once again, an unarmed Black person is dead at the hands of local law enforcement agents. How many spectacles of bullet-riddled, broken Black bodies must we endure? How many cablecast reports and tweeted acts of grief and rage must we consume before we declare it is too much? How much evidence do we need before we admit that the United States of America has a problem?

Unfortunately, we at the YWCA USA know all too well that racialized community violence is neither novel nor rare for people of color in the U.S. Even as we join the hundreds of thousands of people who demonstrate their solidarity with the Brown Family (on the ground and online) as they grieve the loss of Michael Brown and seek justice, we know there are innumerable victims and survivors of this type of systemic violence who will never be acknowledged on a national platform.

We also know, that despite what continues to be revealed about the specifics of this incident in Ferguson, Mo., the script is uncomfortably predictable:

  • A person of color is racially profiled, surveilled and killed;
  • Despite being unarmed, he/she is accused of being a threat or threatening;
  • Peaceful, organized community action is ignored — framed as a riot rather than a protest or civic engagement, or rendered moot because of other acts (such as looting);
  • The local community is admonished for “rushing to judgment” and not waiting on the facts;
  • Images of the dead person of color surface that portray him or her as a scary, menacing, or gang-affiliated;
  • Local and national law enforcement agents and agencies will seek to frame the death in a race-neutral context, denying the reality of institutional and systemic racism; we will be asked to see victims, survivors and perpetrators only as individuals and not as members of social groups of varying institutional and structural power, while simultaneously being bombarded with racially-coded words and images;
  • Taxpayers will be treated as “enemy combatants,” rather than citizens who are guaranteed the right to gather, speak, and protest per our founding and governing documents.

What do we say and do in the face of this gut-wrenching, all-too-familiar cycle of violence against the psyche and soma of people of color?

We at the YWCA USA dare not desecrate the lives and memories of the victims and survivors of racialized community violence with hollow platitudes. Rather, we seek to transform our anger, confusion, and despair into action.

Here’s what we can do:

  • Locally, those near Ferguson can contact the YWCA of Metro St. Louis. This YWCA has a long history of working on racial justice and to end discrimination in St. Louis, through workplace seminars, hosting speakers, guided dialogues, and more. Amy Hunter, Director of Racial Justice, leads these groups to “increase understanding of the institutionalized and systemic impact of racism, work towards peace and healing and positively impact the community we all live in.” Earlier this week, she joined other community leaders at Christ the King United Church of Christ in Florissant for a forum with Ferguson Police Chief Tom Jackson.
  • No matter where you live, please take action today and tell Congress the time is now to end racial profiling—a United States problem that destroys American values of fairness and justice. Congress must take action and pass the End Racial Profiling Act this year. This bill requires that local law enforcement agencies receiving federal funds maintain adequate cultural competency policies and procedures for eliminating racial profiling. In addition, this bill allows victims to obtain declaratory or injunctive relief.
  • If you are or aspire to be a White racial justice ally, you MUST show up. Racism is a problem for all of us. People of color cannot be the only ones putting their bodies on the line.

Do not let this movement end here. Racialized community violence must not be allowed to remain a normal part of our daily lives. We must come together and continue to fight for the fair and equitable treatment of all.

The YWCA is a social justice organization and movement with over 150 years of experience providing direct service to, building with, and advocating on behalf of the most vulnerable people in our society: low wage workers, the unemployed, women and girls, people of color, non-native English speakers, members of the military, abuse survivors, etc. As a social justice organization, we have a deep and abiding commitment to working on issues of economic, gender, and racial justice — particularly in the places where these systems of oppression overlap each other.

As an organization dedicated to eliminating racism and empowering women, we will not allow issues of racial profiling, hate crimes and/or community violence be placed on the back burner.

Donte brings more than 10 years of administrative leadership in the areas of: Diversity, Inclusion & Social Justice; education/training in African American, Gender, and Religious Studies; knowledge and application of various social change models; history of advocacy for historically underrepresented groups; and coalition building within and across various communities. Donte has notable experience as faculty, trainer, community volunteer and activist, researcher and author, and has received many awards and honors. He is the co-founder and Chair of the Institute for Justice Education & Transformation (IJET), an initiative of the UW Madison Multicultural Student Center, that provides and supports opportunities for deep reflection and action around issues of Social Justice for underrepresented communities and their allies. Donte has a B.A. in Psychology from The University of Arkansas, a M.A. in African American studies from Ohio State University, and a M.A. in Religious Studies from Chicago Theological Seminary.

Stand Against Racism in a Healthy Way


It’s that time of year – Friday, April 25th is Stand Against Racism!

Stand Against Racism is a movement of the YWCA with the goal of bringing people together from all walks of life – across the country – to raise awareness that racism still exists.

The methodology of Stand Against Racism is to bring together like-minded organizations that share in our vision of eliminating racism and celebrating the richness of diversity. By inviting community organizations to partner with us, we maximize the outreach of this mission, attracting hundreds of thousands of participants.

This week, YWCA Health Access is sharing information about racial disparities in health – by sharing fresh, delicious fruit with Stand Against Racism stickers and labels with health data. Stop by the YWCA at 5th & Seneca or 3rd & Lenora to get some fruit from Health Access staff!

To participate in other Stand Against Racism events, visit the SAR site.

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National Youth HIV/AIDS Awareness Day


Tomorrow is April 10th – National Youth HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. On this day, there is a particular focus to educate the public about the impact of HIV and AIDS on young people as well as highlight the amazing work young people are doing across the country to fight the HIV & AIDS epidemic.

Today’s young people are the first generation who have never known a world without HIV and AIDS. In the United States, one in four new HIV infections is among youth ages 13 to 24. Every month 1,000 young people are infected with HIV and over 76,400 young people are currently living with HIV across the country. While there has been much talk about an AIDS-Free Generation, we know that is not possible without our nation’s youth. Young people and their allies are determined to end this epidemic once and for all and this day is a way to acknowledge the great work young people are already engaging in to do so.

Want to learn a little more about HIV, how it’s transmitted, and how to access testing? Visit Amplify Your Voice’s site, where they have an HIV/AIDS FAQ.

Get involved in National Youth HIV/AIDS Awareness Day this month – check out some local events taking place over the next few days:

NYHAAD Events Flyer

Language and statistics from this blog post are drawn from Advocates for Youth’s Amplify Your Voice website.

Social Justice & Love!


What is it going to take for humans to love our neighbors like we love ourselves?

The other night, I was watching a television show and one of the characters said: Love your neighbor as you do yourself! This isn’t an unfamiliar phrase to me. But after working all day in the office and spending a large portion of my day focusing on social justice, I heard this phrase from a new perspective.

During the commercial break, there were several advertisements that focused on Valentine’s Day, each attempting to sell a particular item or evoke an emotion to generate the ultimate response – the transference of capital from your hands to theirs! The messages were not really about strengthening relationships or generating love. They were about trying to sell something.

February means much more than the idea of a groundhog predicating the weather, a celebration honoring the great work of US Presidents, or our consumption of chocolate and flowers! It is the well-deserved annual celebration of achievements Black Americans have made to our country and a “time for recognizing the central role of African Americans in US history.”

History.com shares some history around Black History Month:

The event grew out of ‘Negro History Week,’ the brainchild of noted historian Carter G. Woodson and other prominent African Americans. Since 1976, every US president has officially designated the month of February as Black History Month. Other countries around the world, including Canada and the United Kingdom, also devote a month to celebrating black history.

Have you thought about the fact that the month which reflects love and affection for others is also the month when we honor a culture of people who have been categorized as second class citizens and not treated very lovingly at all?

I wish I could report that we live in a world where everyone is loved regardless of their race, gender, or social status – but I can’t. I dream of day when all of us will celebrate and embrace our differences and truly love one another! I look forward to the day when we all collectively hold our heads high and stick out our chest with pride for accomplishments and advancements created by humankind.

In honor of African American History month and in the name of love, please leave a comment and share your  thoughts on social justice and ways we can fulfill this dream.

Click on this link to refresh your knowledge on how African Americans have contributed to society and pass it along!

Happy Learning, Living and Loving!

Pregnancy Antidiscrimination


Are you pregnant, planning to be pregnant, or love someone who is?

These days a family’s economic security often depends on at least one full-time wage earner, and often two is barely enough to make the bills. If you know someone who’s pregnant, or is planning to be, you should also know that her continued employment depends only on the goodwill of her employer.

While you can’t be fired from a job because you’re pregnant, you can be fired if your pregnancy requires certain accommodations—such as asking other employees for assistance carrying heavier loads, requesting “light duty,” allowing a worker to carry a water bottle on a retail floor, or placing a chair within the cashier hub.

The Pregnancy Discrimination Act—which was enacted in 1978—was designed to protect women from losing their jobs during their pregnancies. Unfortunately, the law as it stands isn’t enough to protect women who face medical challenges during pregnancy.

The National Women’s Law Center is pushing forward legislation that would fully protect women by recognizing that some pregnancies are temporarily disabling and that the process of having a child is one that requires the employer’s accommodation. In other words, the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA) H.R. 5647 would “require employers to make the same sorts of accommodations for pregnancy, childbirth, and related medical conditions that they do for disabilities.”

All of that said, it’s up to the woman to determine whether or not she needs accommodation. Under the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, if she doesn’t want paid or unpaid leave, but instead wants a certain accommodation, the employee would remain in charge of her choices at work.

Enough is enough, we’re getting tough, we’re women and men united!


Few movements can claim to span across gender, race, class, sexual orientation and religion. Which is why, at the National Unite Women Rally, held April 28 at Westlake Park, we were amazed at the sense of community and the incredibly rich scene of diversity. From newborns to grandmothers, to ministers and DJs from Seattle’s most popular LBTQ bar, women and men came out in droves to show their support in the fight against the “War on Women”.

     

As speakers rallied for the crowd to speak out against representatives who attempt to pass legislation that is considered harmful to the advancement of family and women’s rights, Devin Seman and Samantha Tripoli from YWCA’s Health Access team “wo”manned the YWCA booth at the event. Devin and Samantha used the opportunity to educate attendees on the importance of investing in women and families.

     

“So many participants of the rally were extremely intrigued and proud of the work the YWCA does in our region. One woman in particular came to our table and spoke about how she had participated in our Women’s Health Outreach program several years ago to receive her yearly mammogram. She is now working and plans to help volunteer at the 14th Annual Women’s Health Outreach Rainbow Health Fair in June to give back to our community,” Samantha said.

     

The atmosphere and energy were electrifying. Hearing the speakers, and knowing that the work we do reflects their calls to action was a great feeling. I hope we are able to hold informational booths at more events like this in the region,” Devin said.

Check out this video below to weigh in on the action!

The YWCA Stands Against Racism


At YWCA locations across the United States, YWCA employees, clients, and community members have come together to take a Stand Against Racism. Stand Against Racism is a movement of the YWCA that aims to eliminate racism by raising awareness through annual events. Here, the YWCA and community partners, including the Pride Foundation and The Arc of King County have held over 40 events – just in the city of Seattle!

The YWCA’s Health Access Department participated in a few different events held at our YWCA Opportunity Place and Seneca locations.

Donmee and Julie with YWCA Health Access' Ariana, Ingrid, Devin & Emelia.

Today, I tagged along with Health Access Associate Director Ariana Cantú, Women’s Health Outreach Program Manager Ingrid Berkhout, Health Care Access Advocate Devin Seman, and Healthy Birth Outcomes Outreach Specialist Emelia Udd (seen above) to a slam poetry session at the YWCA Angeline’s Center for Women before attending a panel discussion on racial disproportionality in the criminal justice system. Along with the women of Angeline’s, we heard from four extraordinary, local African American poets. It was incredibly powerful to hear from these four writers and to explore issues springing from racism through the art of poetry.

After leaving Angeline’s, the five of us went to listen to the Disproportionality in the Criminal Justice System and the Impact of Permanent Punishment panel. It was moderated by the Honorable Richard A. Jones, and the panel speakers were Council Member Bruce Harrell, the Honorable Judith Hightower, Mona H. Bailey of the University of Washington’s Center for Educational Renewal, Rosa Melendez of the US Department of Justice – Community Relations Service, and Jennifer Shaw of the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington State.

Panel on Disproportionality in the Criminal Justice System and the Impact of Permanent Punishment at the YWCA Opportunity Place

Also in attendance was a group of 8th grade students from Seattle Girls’ School. Their presence highlighted and framed much of the conversation. Mona H. Bailey declared, “Education, education, education can close the prison pipeline. . . . Progress happens because people take action . . . and sustain it. . . . Let’s redirect the pipeline to productive citizenship.” Judge Hightower made an appeal for all us to systematize anti-racism work – beyond Stand Against Racism Day. In this spirit, Council Member Harrell offered the Seattle Girls’ School students some advice: “Have good friends who look differently than you. And then join an orgnization doing this kind of [anti-racist and social justice] work. And get out of your comfort zone.” Rosa Melendez offered: “If you’re a leader in your school, stand up for what’s right. . . . Treat others the way you want to be treated.”

What I walked away from this panel discussion with was the impact that policies have on different populations – whether intended or unintended. As Mona H. Bailey said, “Policies and procedures [may] appear neutral, but . . . in reality have disparate outcomes.” There is a lot of work for us to do, as individuals, organizations, communities, cities, states, regions, and as a nation. The first place I’ll start is to be in relationship with others who “look differently than” me and to push myself to have conversations about and around race, that may feel awkward and uncomfortable at first. My hope is that through these relationships, I’ll hold myself accountable and be held accountable by others – so that the unintended consequences of my actions are less and the positive impact I’m able to make is greater.

Breastfeeding in Seattle: “Would you eat your lunch in a public restroom?”


This week, the Seattle City Council unanimously approved legislation that protects breastfeeding mothers in Seattle from discrimination. Also this week, The Stranger published an article on this legislative victory that advocates have been pushing for – for over 9 months.

The new ordinance, which will likely take effect in May, will allow mothers to lodge discrimination complaints with the Seattle Office for Civil Rights, which will then investigate the alleged discriminatory businesses and collect statements from the mothers and witnesses. If the city finds a violation, it could impose fines of $750 or more, consistent with any other city discrimination charge (such as discrimination based on gender, race, or sexual orientation), and require that a business complete sensitivity training. In addition, a mother could seek claims of up to $10,000 in Seattle Municipal Court.

Leticia Brooks, one of the women advocating for this legislation (and quoted in The Stranger‘s article) shared her story at a Seattle City Council’s civil rights committee meeting last week. After having been forced to feed her child in a public restroom in the past, Ms. Brooks asked the committee, “Who wants to feed their child in a bathroom stall? … Would you eat your lunch in a public restroom?” (italics are mine). Local breastfeeding advocates – mothers, nutritionists, and doctors – have promoted the legal protection of women breastfeeding in public because, despite state-wide protection, women in Seattle continue to be discriminated against, stigmatized, and humiliated by employers, in restaurants, and by perfect strangers. These advocates argued their case by sharing that:

…nursing lowers child obesity rates, infection rates, and chronic diseases, while improving a mother’s mental and physical health (lowering breast- and ovarian-cancer risks, for example). They also pointed out that breast-feeding has been linked with reducing infant mortality rates.

Committee chair Bruce Harrell is the sponsor of this legislation. In the words of The Stranger‘s Cienna Madrid, Harrell “dismissed scattered opposition from sexed-up residents who squawked about the salaciousness of seeing a woman’s bare breast, saying simply, ‘This is a civil rights issue.'” To read the law itself, or to contact Seattle’s Office for Civil Rights with questions or to file a complaint, please visit their website.