The QSA

SAISD offers plus-one insurance for employees with domestic partners

SAISD offers plus-one insurance for employees with domestic partners

The San Antonio Independent School District has sent a letter to its employees announcing it is expanding its group health benefits to include plus-one coverage so that employees can insure one additional adult living in their household who meets all the required criteria. The plus-one plan permits SAISD employees in same-sex relationships to insure their

Rosie Gonzalez hired as Von Ormy city attorney

Rosie Gonzalez hired as Von Ormy city attorney

San Antonio lawyer and activist Rosie Gonzalez was recently hired as city attorney for Von Ormy, Texas, a small municipality located about 15 miles southwest of downtown San Antonio on IH 35. Gonzalez is a native of Brownsville who has lived in San Antonio for almost 30 years. She attended St. Mary’s University where she

State Rep. Villalba backpedals on ‘exercise of religion’ bill

State Rep. Villalba backpedals on ‘exercise of religion’ bill

State Rep. Jason Villalba (R-Dallas) announced on March 9 that he has “reconsidered” filing a bill he authored (HJR55) that proposed a state constitutional amendment to the Texas Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) which would have eroded the rights of LGBT Texans. Villalba’s now defunct bill is similar to a bill (SJR10) submitted by state

Treat all Texans fairly, equally and without bias

Treat all Texans fairly, equally and without bias

State Rep. Rick Miller Texas House District 26 P.O. Box 2910 Austin, TX 78768 Dear Representative Miller, I’m writing to express my very serious concern about your proposed bill (HB 1556) undoing LGBT protections that have passed in cities with a combined population of more than 7.5 million, including Austin, Dallas, El Paso, Fort Worth,

Taylor and SA corporations AWOL on marriage equality briefs to SCOTUS

Taylor and SA corporations AWOL on marriage equality briefs to SCOTUS

San Antonio Mayor Ivy Taylor and the city’s business community are not among those who signed amicus briefs asking the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down state laws that make same-sex marriage illegal. On March 6, 225 U.S. mayors, including six from Texas, signed an amicus brief urging the Supreme Court to strike down states laws

Taylor to appoint human relations liaison, initiate Dept. of Diversity & Inclusion

Taylor to appoint human relations liaison, initiate Dept. of Diversity & Inclusion

San Antonio Mayor Ivy Taylor announced this afternoon that she is appointing a human relations liaison who will handle complaints made under the city’s nondiscrimination ordinance and head up a proposed Department of Diversity and Inclusion. According to an email Out In SA received from Leilah Powell, the mayor’s chief of policy, the new liaison

Three S.A. writers elected to Texas Institute of Letters

Three S.A. writers elected to Texas Institute of Letters

Three San Antonio writers have been elected to the prestigious Texas Institute of Letters, an Austin-based non-profit that promotes Texas literature and recognizes literary achievements by Texas authors. The San Antonians selected for induction are Gregg Barrios, Nan Cuba and William Jack Sibley. Barrios was featured in an article on the Out In SA web

State senators introduce nondiscrimination bill

State senators introduce nondiscrimination bill

On March 2, Texas Independence Day, five Democratic state senators introduced Senate Bill 856 that would prohibit discrimination in the areas of employment, public accommodation, housing, and state contracting based upon sexual orientation, or gender identity or expression. Senator Jose Rodriguez, along with co-authors Senators Rodney Elllis, Sylvia Garcia, Kirk Watson, and John Whitmire, introduced

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