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vsoy
Mar 17th, 2007, 07:18 PM
My jaw dropped when I read this in the paper:
http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/local/16913352.htm
Posted on Fri, Mar. 16, 2007
COMMENTARY
Lesbian kiss falls flatter than a pancake
By MIKE HENDRICKS
Columnist

Just one kiss. That’s all it took — to get thrown out of the IHOP in Grandview.

“It was a kiss I would share with my uncle,” Blair Funk told me. Except it wasn’t her uncle she kissed. It was her honey, Eva Sandoval.

Two young women sharing a kiss didn’t seem inappropriate to the other couple in the restaurant booth that night, Jackie Smith and the woman with whom she shares her life, Toni Smith. But someone watching the scene was offended.

So later, the manager confronted them in the lobby and told them to get out.

The way Blair tells it, “He said, ‘I have to tell you, we’ve had some complaints about public displays of affection, and we’re a family restaurant. We can’t accept it, and we won’t accept it.’

“The way he worded it was like: We don’t accept you.”

These days it’s rare for gays and lesbians to be denied service in restaurants for acting like who they are. Blair assures me that she and Eva did nothing that wouldn’t have been appropriate for a man and a woman to do at a dinner date. No heavy makeout. No groping.

However, incidents like this one are not unheard of, and the people affected often can do nothing about it.

There is no federal law prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation. Neither Kansas nor Missouri are among the few states that protect gay people from being discriminated against in areas of employment, housing and public accommodations.

Kansas City does have an ordinance protecting gays, as do St. Louis, Columbia and University City. But if you’re anywhere else in Missouri and you’re gay, you can legally be denied service in restaurant. Landlords can refuse to rent you a place to live.

You can even be canned from your job on the suspicion that you’re romantically inclined toward members of your own sex.

“Many people are shocked to hear that people can be fired from their jobs for being gay or being perceived to be gay,” says Julie Brueggemann, executive director of the Missouri gay rights group Promo.

That would change if bills pending in Kansas and Missouri would ever pass. It’s only the first year for Senate Bill 163 in Kansas. But the so-called Missouri Nondiscrimination Act, House Bill 819, has been up time and again.

And as in past years, it has almost zero chance in Jefferson City, says Rep. Jeneé Lowe, a Kansas City Democrat, the bill’s sponsor.

“It’s surprising to me,” Lowe says, “how many people think there’s federal legislation. But there is no law.”

No law, but there is power in public opinion. So the night that she and her friends were evicted from the restaurant, Jackie Smith started tapping furiously on her computer keyboard.

E-mails to the media yielded a TV report on Fox 4, as well as a call from me.

Promo and other civil rights groups responded with support. IHOP was apologetic.

“Thank you for taking the time to contact us concerning your experience at the IHOP in Grandview,” began the letter from someone identifying himself as the guest services representative at the company’s headquarters in Glendale, Calif.

“We are sorry to learn of the difficulties you encountered at this location. Please be assured that the matter will be shared with the proper individuals to address your concerns.”

When I called the Grandview restaurant for comment I was told to ring the company headquarters. But the P.R. director there failed to return my phone calls. However, I can tell you that the restaurant chain wants Blair, Eva, Jackie and Toni to come back for pancakes sometime.

“It is our hope,” the guest services rep wrote, “that you will once again allow us to earn your patronage.”

Jackie isn’t ruling it out entirely.

“But it’s not likely,” she said.
Grandview is a good sized town/suburb of the greater Kansas City area. It used to and still is a very conservative, blue collar area with affordable housing. But the past couple of years with new housing explosion and proximity to Lee Summit, that general area is popular for affluent, conservative middle-class families.

It just blows my mind this kind of stuff still happens. I didn't have much regard for Grandview to begin with and never went to IHOP, but now I have no desire to ever go to either of these places. What's next on the list for Grandview IHOP?

LaiSteve66
Mar 17th, 2007, 08:49 PM
It's sad to be reminded that there are still backward ass places full of backward ass people. I bet if this were a heterosexual couple, no one would of complianed.

Dialectic
Mar 17th, 2007, 09:23 PM
Didn't Kansas just ban evolution in schools not too long ago, and the Supreme Court had to step in and say you can't do that? If they can kick evolution out of schools, they can certainly kick gays out of IHOPs ....

vsoy
Mar 17th, 2007, 10:47 PM
Science standards have been a constant battle, seesawing back and forth from including evolution to including intelligent design in Kansas. It's all determined by elected school board members who get voted in and majority wins. Kansas just voted in a moderate school board in 2006 and now those new "science" standards which included intelligent design will not be taught in the schools.

Just to give you idea of the seesaw, I got part of the timeline from http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2005/nov/08/evolution_timeline_events_related_kansas_controver/?evolution
—Aug. 11, 1999: Board votes 6-4 to adopt science standards in which most references to evolution are eliminated.

-- Feb. 14, 2001: Board votes 7-3 for new science standards restoring evolution’s previous place in the standards as well-founded science, crucial for students to learn.

— Aug. 6, 2002: Conservatives Connie Morris, of St. Francis, and Iris Van Meter, of Thayer, win GOP primary against incumbents who favored a return to evolution-friendly standards.

— Jan. 14, 2003: Morris and Van Meter are sworn in; board is split 5-5.

— Aug. 12, 2003: The state board votes 7-3 to have state science standards reviewed but says work won’t start for another year.

— Jan. 11, 2005: Martin sworn in, giving conservative Republicans a 6-4 majority on the board.

— May 5, 2005: Three-member subcommittee opens four days of hearings on evolution, hearing testimony from intelligent design advocates. National and state science groups boycott, saying the hearings are rigged.

— June 9, 2005: Subcommittee approves proposed standards containing language sought by intelligent design advocates.

— Oct. 26, 2005: National Academy of Sciences and the National Science Teachers Association tells board it can’t use language from their publications in its science standards.

— Nov. 8, 2005: Board votes to approve proposed science standards. *note to add, this is where the Kansas School Board redefines what science is :rollseye:

Then in 2006, new pro-evolution board members are voted in and they voted to remove the proposed science standards would have included intelligent design.

In the IHOP article, it's mentioned that Kansas and Missouri (which is where Grandview is located) are the handful of states that don't have laws that protect gay people from discrimination. But then again, there's no federal law prohibiting discrimation against gay people. Just terrible.

nskripchun
Mar 17th, 2007, 10:48 PM
Sad... but then again, Missouri has never struck me a very progressive place to live.