GSBA Vision & Mission

MISSION: To combine business development, leadership and social action to expand economic opportunities for the LGBT Community and those who support equality for all.
Showing posts with label King County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label King County. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Get out the Vote!

As of Wednesday morning, only 12% of Seattle and King County voters have returned their ballots. It is time to fill our your ballot, put a stamp on that envelope and send it back in! It's a long ballot for us this year, so make sure you know what you are voting on.

GSBA has officially opposed Initiative 517. Read more about our decision here.

Still confused about some of the candidates and positions on the ballot? There are a lot of ratings and voter information guides out there:

Voter Information:
Living Voters Guide (CityClub)
2013 General Election Voters Guide (Office of the Secretary of State)
Profiles of GSBA-member candidates: Sally Bagshaw, Dow Constantine, Ed Murray, Albert Shen

Candidate Ratings and Endorsements:
SEAMEC - rating candidates on LGBT issues since 1977; also available in the Seattle Gay News
Municipal League
The Stranger Election Control Board
Civic Alliance for a Sound Economy (CASE)
Seattle Times
Progressive Voters Guide
NARAL Pro-Choice Washington

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Candidate Profile: Dow Constantine

GSBA has invited all of its members who are running for office to provide a profile to share with the rest of the membership. We have given each of them a set of questions to respond to so that you can get to know them better. We are posting the profiles as we receive them. GSBA does not endorse candidates, but we are happy to let those candidates who are part of our organization introduce themselves to the rest of our growing membership. Don't forget to vote and mail in your primary ballots before August 6!

Executive Dow Constantine
Running for re-election as King County Executive


1.    What are the top 3 reasons why you are seeking reelection as King County Executive?

1. I want to ensure King County continues to invest in the infrastructure - human, natural, and physical - that allows people to fulfill their potential; invest not only in our roads, but also in educating the next generation of King County residents, and in protecting the environment that draws so many people to our region.

2. We must continue to improve government to be its most effective. By continually improving government to help families and small businesses, we increase public confidence and sustain quality services.

3. I want to continue setting the stage for prosperity that is not only great, but also broad. The parks and open spaces, businesses and entrepreneurs, cultural diversity, and boundless spirit of the families and communities of this forward-thinking region can only exist if we set the stage for a future prosperity accessible to all.


2. What do you consider your top 3 accomplishments and/or achievements in your past term as King County Executive?


1. In 2011, I secured temporary funding authority from the Legislature, and a supermajority of the County Council, to preserve Metro Transit during the recession.

2. After more than a dozen years fighting the massive expansion of the gravel mine on Maury Island, I was able to complete the County’s purchase of 250 acres of upland forest and a mile of undeveloped Puget Sound shoreline.

3. I put new leadership in place and worked with our employees and volunteers to create the new Regional Animal Services of King County. The animal shelter, which once had a shameful euthanasia rate of over 40 percent, now has a euthanasia rate of under 14 percent.


3. What are your top 3 priorities for the 1st year of your new term in office?

I will ensure King County makes the investments in transportation necessary to keeping our regional economy—and the people who live here—moving forward. I will continue to find solutions to preserve Metro Transit, ensuring greater mobility on our roadways.

I will continue to deliver on difficult environmental issues, protecting sensitive shoreline from destruction, refining land use regulations to protect people and wildlife, and expanding public investment in forests, farmlands, and open space.

I will continue to build a culture of innovation and continuous improvement to make government operations as efficient and sustainable as possible, protect workers’ security, and ensure that those who need a helping hand are able to get it.


4. What LGBT issues will you address in your first 6 months in office?

As County Executive, my goal is to ensure that all people, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity are accorded equal protection of the laws, and that we do all that we can do to hasten the day when bigotry has been driven from society. I will continue fighting for the LGBT community and basic American values, ensuring that everyone in King County receives equal treatment from their government.

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Can I Get a Witness?



by Rachael Brister, GSBA Deputy Directory

You have picked the venue, figured out what to wear, purchased the rings and then you realize you need two witnesses. One problem…you are getting married hundreds of miles away from your home. Who you gonna call? GSBA! 

At the recommendation of Judge Eileen Kato that is exactly what multiple same-sex couples have been doing when traveling to Seattle to take advantage of our newly and fabulously legal same-sex marriage. When I received the first call requesting wedding witnesses, I was a little surprised, but could not help smiling from ear to ear. Since that first call, GSBA staff has been witness to ceremonies at the King County Courthouse for couples hailing from California, Texas, Oklahoma, Georgia and Montana. And that is just in the last month. They have aged in range from 20-somethings to couples in their 60s. 

At first this may sound odd or intrusive. We are strangers to these couples and they strangers to us. But these ceremonies are not the lavish events that take months to plan. They are the ceremonies so many in our community never thought we would see…legal marriages performed by a judge in a courtroom. But they are also not the stereotypical sterile image conjured when thinking of a courtroom wedding. Judge Kato takes the time to meet with the couple in private and discuss their vows and thoughtfully places the couple in a bright spot by the windows in her courtroom. “People seem to like this spot, especially for photographs.” Judge Kato offers. Then the ceremony begins and we sit quietly in the second row pew officially witnessing the nuptials. And we are not just witnesses, but also double as wedding photographer and videographer… one instance with an iPad firmly balanced on the back of the pew in front of us. Then about 10 minutes later, vows and rings have been exchanged and we clap and say congratulations as Judge Kato pronounces the couple married. The pertinent paperwork is then signed and we say goodbye to the happy couple. But not before recommending at least 5 GSBA member bars and restaurants they should visit during the rest of their stay in Seattle. From wedding witness to photographer to concierge…...just doing my gay civic duty and enjoying every minute of it. 

Witnessing the marriage of Lois & Karen from Montana