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Pocatello Latest Idaho City To Take Up Gay Rights In Absence Of State Action

Jessica Robinson
/
Northwest News Network

Thursday, the city council in Pocatello is expected to vote on whether to make it illegal to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. It’s one of several cities in Idaho that have taken up the cause of gay rights – an issue the Idaho Legislature has so far resisted. But even some gay rights supporters wonder if the local ordinance would change anything.

The last thing Richard remembers is the face of the girl in the car. She looked like she was afraid of what was about to happen. Richard remembers her face better than the face of the man jumping out of that car and coming toward him looking for a fight.

“The first thought I had was I can’t take this guy; he was big," Richard says. "And really that was 00 I kind of stepped in front of my friend and I don't remember seeing the punch coming to even brace myself for it.”

Richard asked to go by his first name. Both he and his friend are gay and were walking home from Pocatello's only gay bar that February night. His attacker cracked Richard's eye socket and fractured his skull. Richard's friend ended up in surgery.

“I believe this guy would have killed me," he says. I believe he would have continued to beat if somebody wouldn’t have stopped him.”

Police still haven’t found the man. The incident wasn't just chilling to Pocatello's gay community. Suddenly it gave new urgency to a local ordinance the city council had been mulling over for months. The beating seemed to be a real example of the fears that gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people had to live with.

When the city council took public testimony earlier this month, people in favor of the ordinance outnumbered those against by more than two to one. Many gays and lesbians, like Gloria Moncrief, spoke about having to hide their relationship.

“Since I was 16, I've paid the price and it's time I should not have to pay the price anymore," Moncrief said at the meeting. "Not have to worry that if the landlord finds out, I could be on the streets again.”

Another person who testified was Gloria Mayer. She was one of several people who used this meeting to come out publicly for the first time.

“And we are afraid," she said.  "We are afraid for ourselves and our partners but perhaps even more, we are afraid for our families.”

Pocatello is a university town situated squarely in the Mormon corridor of Idaho. The drive to create an anti-discrimination law here did not originate with a gay and lesbian rights group, but rather with a straight woman.

Susan Matsuura is the chair of the Human Relations Advisory Committee for the city of Pocatello. She started researching a local anti-discrimination ordinance shortly after a statewide effort died.

“But I think probably the real motivating fact... I don't know if I can do this without crying, I'm sorry,” Matsuura says.

Credit Jessica Robinson / Northwest News Network
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Northwest News Network
Susan Matsuura chairs the Human Relations Advisory Committee in Pocatello and has been advocating for an anti-discrimination ordinance in the city.

Matsuura says the real motivating factor was that in 2006 she met a gay person for the first time. It was her 17-year-old son.

“You know at that time, we were in Blackfoot, which is a population of about 10,000, very conservative and I said, 'Don't you tell anybody, don't tell anybody. Let's keep this quiet. I don't want anyone to hurt you.' Why should it be a mother’s fear that someone would hurt her child?” she says.

But the anti-discrimination ordinance Matsuura is pushing has generated a lot of opposition. Critics say it could end up violating the religious liberty of some business owners. Rick Larsen is a columnist for the local newspaper in Pocatello and, like about 50 percent of the county, a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

“I don’t think anyone should be discriminated for anything," Larsen says.  "But I just have a problem when we start modifying all of the conventions and rules and laws and ordinances to affirm the lifestyle.”

The city council vote in Pocatello is expected to be close.  In an interview in his office, Mayor Brian Blad said he was still undecided.

Credit Jessica Robinson / Northwest News Network
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Northwest News Network
Rick Larsen is a conservative columnist and critic of the proposed ordinance in Pocatello.

“I'm not confident that it is the city's responsibility," Blad says.  "I can discriminate in Chubbuck, but I can't discriminate in Pocatello. I can go to Coeur d'Alene and discriminate, but I can't go to Boise and discriminate. It doesn't make any sense. So it's a state issue if you ask me.”

Richard, one of the men who was attacked, has mostly healed now.

“Yeah, you have to look really – one side of my cheek is more indented than this ...” he says.

But here's the thing: Richard isn't convinced it was a hate crime because there were no gay slurs and he and his attacker had just been arguing about something else.

“I don't want to say it was because we were gay ... because I don’t know.”

But Richard says he's not positive a new ordinance would do much for gay rights.

"All my friends will hate me when I say: No. I don’t believe ... It’s a feel good law," he says.  "Maybe it’s a step in getting people’s acceptance. But I’m not sure.”

Richard is thinking about getting a concealed weapons permit so he'll be more prepared next time. The hardest part of reporting the attack to police, he says, was writing his name next to the line that said “victim.” He doesn't care if people know he's gay.

On the Web:

All Under One Roof
 

Stand Up Pocatello
 

Rick Larsen's columns

Copyright 2013 Northwest News Network

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