Press Release: “Transgender-friendly Tucson featured at IFGE 2008 Conference”

1 04 2008
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Date: 1 April 2008
Contact: Kynn Bartlett, IFGE 2008 Media Team
Email: nextofkynn@gmail.com
Cell Phone: (520) 429-7751

Tucson, Arizona, has a reputation as one of the most transgender-friendly cities in the country, both in policy and mindset, and this week the city plays host to the International Foundation for Gender Education’s 22nd annual conference, March 31 to April 5. Workshops given throughout the conference will highlight the unique qualities and programs in southern Arizona make Tucson a friendly place those who do not conform to society’s gender norms. The focus on Tucson will conclude on Saturday, April 5, with a public open house featuring a distinguished panel of civic and community leaders.

Hosted by the Southern Arizona Gender Alliance, the IFGE 2008 conference is the first national transgender conference in Tucson and attendance is expected to exceed 400 — from Arizona, the southwest, the rest of the United States, and beyond. The conference is held at the Doubletree Hotel at Reid Park, 445 S. Alvernon Way.

Social activities and excursions to Tucson tourist destinations kick off the week starting on Monday, March 31, and the conference programming begins on Thursday, April 3, with a welcome by Tucson mayor Bob Walkup and a plenary session by activist Jamison Green, author of the prize-winning book “Becoming a Visible Man.”

Wingspan, southern Arizona’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community center, will offer an open house and facility tour on Thursday, April 3, starting at 2 p.m. Wingspan is one of the nation’s ten largest LGBT centers. The Southern Arizona Gender Alliance is a program of Wingspan and provides support, reference, and education on transgender issues in the Tucson area.

Tucson has had an ordinance in place since February 1977 that prevents discrimination on basis of sexual orientation; in 1999, gender identity was added to this ordinance, which is a model for other communities. Fifth-generation Tucsonan Liana Perez, director of the Office of Equal Opportunity Programs for the city of Tucson, will present a workshop on “Our Shared Diversity: Meeting the Challenge to Create Success” on Thursday, April 3.

Sarah Jones, Raquel Mrozowski, and Karen Orr will also present “Safe Shelter – Creating a Safe Domestic Violence Shelter” on Thursday, discussing the process that led to the Tucson Centers for Women and Children designating a transgender room in the shelter.

On Friday, April 4, Cathy Jacobus, consumer health librarian at Pima County Public Library, and Karyn Prechtel, managing librarian at PCPL, will co-present a workshop on “Transgender Health and the Public Library.”

Transgender youth between the ages of 13 and 23 in Tucson have the support of the Prism Project and the Eon Youth Center. On Friday, Carly Thomsen, T.C. Tolbert and Wendy Sampson will co-present “The Prism Project – Building a Dynamic Support Program for Transgender Youth.”

Transgender health and social service needs were examined in a twelve-month period in 2006, and primary investigator Kendall Roark, doctoral candidate at Temple University, will present the results in Saturday’s workshop “Transgender and Gender Diverse Community Needs Assessment in Southern Arizona.”

The public is invited to a town hall meeting on Saturday, April 5, at 10 a.m. that will answer the question, “How did Tucson get to be such an accepting community?” Panelists will include Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Tucson; former mayor George Miller; Peter Likens, former president of the University of Arizona; city council member Nina Trasoff; Amelia Craig Cramer, chief deputy Pima County Attorney; John-Peter Wilhite, Commission on GLBT issues; Stephen Russell of the Community Foundation for Southern Arizona; Kevin Maxey, co-founder of the Southern Arizona Gender Alliance; and Amanda Simpson, 2004 candidate for Arizona House of Representatives, district 26. The town hall meeting will be held at Reid Park Doubletree Hotel and is sponsored by Raytheon, southern Arizona’s largest private employer.

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The International Foundation for Gender Education (IFGE) is a non-profit advocacy organization founded in 1987. IFGE’s purpose is overcoming the intolerance of transgenderism brought about by widespread ignorance and outreach through education for the emancipation of all people from restrictive gender norms.

The IFGE 2008 conference is open to all — transgender, crossdresser, transsexual, transvestite, female to male, male to female, significant other, friend, helping professional, student, educator, or others. For more information on the conference, see http://ifge.sagatucson.org/.

The Southern Arizona Gender Alliance (SAGA) is a program of Wingspan, Tucson’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community center. SAGA provides educational, support, outreach, and other programs for transgender, transsexual, and gender-variant people, as well as families, allies, service providers, employers, and others. For more information on SAGA, see http://www.sagatucson.org/.

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Press Release: “IFGE 2008 Conference Spotlights Transgender Diversity”

31 03 2008
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

IFGE 2008 Conference Spotlights Transgender Diversity

Date:        31 March 2008
Contact:      Kynn Bartlett, IFGE 2008 Media Team
Email:        nextofkynn@gmail.com
Cell Phone:    (520) 429-7751

The wide diversity of the transgender community will be evident this week at the International Foundation for Gender Education’s conference in Tucson, Arizona, March 31 to April 5.  In keeping with the conference’s theme of “Toward a Greater Diversity,” the programming includes workshops presented by transgender people of color, sessions focusing on international transgender topics, and programming presented in Spanish or bilingually in Spanish and English.

Hosted by the Southern Arizona Gender Alliance, the IFGE 2008 conference is the first national transgender conference in Tucson and attendance is expected to exceed 400 — from Arizona, the southwest, the rest of the United States, and beyond.  The conference is held at the Doubletree Hotel at Reid Park, 445 S. Alvernon Way.

Social activities and local excursions kick off the week starting on Monday, March 31, and the conference programming begins on Thursday, April 3, with a welcome by Tucson mayor Bob Walkup and a plenary session by activist Jamison Green, author of the prize-winning book “Becoming a Visible Man.” Green’s international travel in service to the transgender community has introduced him to an amazing array of transgender expression, yet he has observed distinct similarities among diverse groups. In the plenary, he will reflect on the evolution of transgender communities and the meaning and importance of diversity for our movement.

At 2 p.m. on Thursday, Dr. Pauline Park’s workshop, “Making Diversity Real: Transgendered People of Color & the Transgender Movement” will examine the under-representation of transgender people of color within the transgender movement.  Dr. Park chairs the New York Association for Gender Rights Advocacy and was the first openly transgender grand marshal of the NYC Pride March in June 2005.

“Invisible Darkness: Transmen of Color in the Transgender Community” is a workshop to be presented by Theodore Michael Trimm at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 5.  This program explores what it means to be black and transgender, and how one’s ethnic community and culture affects one’s transition.

Trudie Jackson’s workshop, “Native American Transgender People and HIV,” will be given on Friday, April 4, at 10:45 a.m.  The Native American Pathways Prevention Project serves the Urban Native American Community within the Phoenix metro area and offers a safe place for transgender people to get HIV and syphilis testing, attend support groups, and get referrals to trans-friendly community organizations.  Also at 10:45 on Friday, Dr. Kenneth Dollarhide will examine various Native American traditions that transcend the binary of male and female, in the workshop “Native American Notions of Gender.”

Stephenne Rhodes will report on a recent large survey of the European transgender community in the session “Worldwide survey of Transgender People: European Results,” at 3:30 p.m. on Thursday.  Photographer Mariette Pathy Allen explores international attitudes toward transgender people with “The Gender Frontier: From Mainland USA to Hawaii, Thailand, and New Zealand,” at 2 p.m. on Friday.

Reflecting Tucson’s proximity to the international border, two workshops will be given in Spanish by presenter Dr. Miqqi Gilbert:  “¿Que es el Genero?” at 2 p.m. on Friday, April 4, and “Hay Más Que Lencería” on Saturday, April 5, at 9:15 a.m.  Other sessions, such as “Permanent Hair Removal” by Maria DeNicola, will be presented in both English and Spanish.

The International Foundation for Gender Education (IFGE) is a non-profit advocacy organization founded in 1987.  IFGE’s purpose is overcoming the intolerance of transgenderism brought about by widespread ignorance and outreach through education for the emancipation of all people from restrictive gender norms.
The IFGE 2008 conference is open to all — transgender, crossdresser, transsexual, transvestite, female to male, male to female, significant other, friend, helping professional, student, educator, or others. For more information on the conference, see http://ifge.sagatucson.org/.

The Southern Arizona Gender Alliance (SAGA) is a program of Wingspan, Tucson’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community center.  SAGA provides provides educational, support, outreach, and other programs for transgender, transsexual, and gender-variant people, as well as families, allies, service providers, employers, and others.  For more information on SAGA, see http://www.sagatucson.org/.

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Press Release: “Men to Take Major Role in IFGE 2008 Conference”

30 03 2008
(Originally released on Feb. 13, 2008)

In keeping with its theme “Toward a Greater Diversity” the IFGE Conference has successfully engaged many leaders and champions for the FTM community to take part in its 23rd Annual Conference. The conference, which runs from Monday, March 31, 2008, to Saturday, April 5, 2008, is being held in Tucson, Arizona at the Doubletree Reid Park Hotel. Wingspan”s Southern Arizona Gender Alliance (SAGA) is the local host committee. Past conferences have been decidedly transfeminine-oriented, but organizers made concerted outreach efforts for 2008 to transgender men, as well as people of color and allies of all ages, to ensure a broad range of issues, identities, and dialogues are represented in Tucson.

While pre-conference excursions and social activities start Monday, the actual conference program kicks off Thursday morning, April 3, with a plenary session featuring renowned activist Jamison Green, author of the prize-winning book Becoming a Visible Man. Green has served on numerous national and international boards and received many awards for his work. Following a welcome by Tucson Mayor Robert Walkup, Mr. Green will address the attendees on the Conference theme of diversity. His international travel in service to the transgender community has introduced him to an amazing array of transgender expression, yet he has observed distinct similarities among diverse groups. In this session, he will reflect on the evolution of the transgender community — or communities — and the meaning and importance of diversity for our movement. Later in the conference, Green will also present a workshop session titled “Identity Crisis”an open discussion about who we are.”

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