New York City Council LGBT Caucus explained

Country:United States
Ideology:LGBTQ rights
Seats1 Title:Seats on the Council
Seats2 Title:Seats in the Council Democratic Caucus
Seats3 Title:Seats in the Council Republican Caucus

The New York City Council LGBT Caucus is a caucus of LGBT members of the New York City Council.[1] The Caucus's stated purpose is "to advance the rights of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) individuals through education, legislation, public policy changes and advocacy" and "to increase the visibility of LGBT New Yorkers through events, forums and media outreach." The Caucus has grown from membership of as low as two members in 2005[2] to seven as of 2017. Former speakers Corey Johnson and Christine Quinn were members of the caucus. David Carr became the first gay Republican elected to the council in 2021.[3]

Current members

NameResidencePartyYears in Council
Tiffany CabánQueensDemocratic2021–present
David CarrStaten IslandRepublican2021–present
Erik BottcherManhattanDemocratic2022–present
Crystal HudsonBrooklynDemocratic2022–present
Chi OsséBrooklynDemocratic2022–present
Kristin Richardson JordanQueensDemocratic2022–present
Lynn SchulmanQueensDemocratic2022–present

Former members

NameResidencePartyYears in Council
Jimmy Van BramerQueensDemocratic2010–2021
Daniel DrommQueensDemocratic2010–2021
Corey JohnsonManhattanDemocratic2014–2021
Carlos MenchacaBrooklynDemocratic2014–2021
Ritchie TorresBronxDemocratic2014–2020
James VaccaBronxDemocratic2006–2017
Rosie MéndezManhattanDemocratic2002–2017
Christine QuinnManhattanDemocratic1999-2013
Margarita LópezManhattanDemocratic1997–2006
Phil ReedManhattanDemocratic1998–2005
Antonio PagánManhattanDemocratic1992–1998
Thomas DuaneManhattanDemocratic1992–1998

Activities

In the 2010 legislative session, the LGBT Caucus was responsible for introducing a resolution seeking U.S. Congress to repeal its "Don't ask, don't tell" policy on gays in the military.[4]

In 2016, Daniel Dromm, a former public school teacher and member of the Caucus, led the effort in funding the first LGBT liaison within the NYC Department of Education Office of Safety and Youth Development, with the goal of fighting LGBT intolerance and seeking ways to be inclusive to LGBT communities.[5] [6]

The Caucus rebuked Mayor Eric Adams appointment of several anti-LGBTQ individuals to the Mayor's Office.[7]

References

  1. Web site: LGBT Caucus. 15 March 2017.
  2. Web site: ON CITY COUNCIL, lgbt CAUCUS DOWN TO TWO. gaycitynews.nyc. 2017-03-16.
  3. Web site: David Carr sworn in as new NYC Councilman representing Staten Island's Mid-Island. November 30, 2021. January 24, 2022. Liotta. Paul. Staten Island Advance.
  4. News: Caucuses Weigh In: The To-Do List for NYC's City Council. 2011-09-23. MetroFocus. 2017-03-16. en-US.
  5. Web site: Biography. Daniel Dromm. en-US. 2017-03-16.
  6. Web site: Ed Department's First LGBTQ Liaison Aims to Make Schools Safe for Everyone. DNAinfo New York. 2017-03-16. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20170316114741/https://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20160126/jackson-heights/ed-departments-first-lgbtq-liaison-aims-make-schools-safe-for-everyone. 2017-03-16.
  7. Web site: Council's LGBTQ Caucus Condemns Adams' Appointments. Tracy. Matt. February 21, 2022. March 4, 2022. Gay City News.

External links