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Norman High School teacher resigns after accusations of violating HB 1775

A Norman High School teacher resigned Tuesday evening after a parent complained that she violated sections of House Bill 1775.

Summer Boismier posted a QR code to the Brooklyn Library Books Unbanned in her classroom, which provides free e-books to titles that are restricted across the country. Click to read more.

Madison Horn wins Democratic candidacy for US Senate seat, defeats Jason Bollinger

Madison Horn has defeated Jason Bollinger in the Tuesday Democratic primary runoff election for Sen. James Lankford’s seat in the U.S. Senate, according to unofficial results from the Oklahoma State Election Board. Click to read more.

Markwayne Mullin wins Republican candidacy for US Senate seat, defeats T.W. Shannon

Markwayne Mullin has defeated T.W. Shannon in the Republican primary runoff election on Tuesday for Sen. Jim Inhofe’s seat in the U.S. Senate, according to unofficial results from the Oklahoma State Election Board. Click to read more.

‘I wanted to do it for all the women that weren’t able to’: How Title IX changed the lives of OU community members

On June 23, 1972, “The Candy Man” by Sammy Davis Jr. was at the top of the charts in the United States. “The Godfather” was still dominating the box office. Iconic 70s fashion started to emerge, with the women’s liberation movement making pants on women mainstream. The public watched “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” “Emergency!” and “The Brady Bunch” T.V. Click to read more.

Norman Pride host first Pride weekend since COVID-19

On May 6 -8, Norman’s LGBTQ+ community gathered to celebrate Norman Pride’s annual festival. The festival featured local musicians, businesses, restaurants and drag performers. The weekend concluded with a parade down Main St. All photos were taken by Karoline Leonard.

Riding on top of an EMSSTAT vehicle, a paramedic holds a pride flag and passes out candy during Norman Pride’s parade. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
Listening to the music performance, a young couple shares an intimate moment at Norman Pride’s festival on Saturday. Norman Pride featured local musical artists and Drag performers for the event. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
At their booth, an artist paints a pride flag on a young boy’s face. Over the weekend, Norman’s LGBTQ+ community gathered in Andrew’s Park to celebrate Norman Pride. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
Kate Bierman, who is running for house district 44 representative, marches in Norman Pride’s parade to support the LGBTQ+ community. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
Waving to the crowd, the crowned King of Norman Pride passes out candy during the annual Pride parade. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
Sticking her hand outside of a limo, a member of Norman Pride’s parade waves a pansexual flag. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
During Norman Pride’s annual parade, a young girl gathers candy while holding a pride flag. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
While performing at Norman Pride’s festival on Saturday, a local performer interacts with the growing crowd. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
A member of the First Congregational Church of Norman waves and greets the crowd gathered for Norman Pride’s annual parade. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
A paramedic rides a mechanical bull while her coworkers cheer her on during Norman Pride’s festival in Andrew’s Park. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
Members of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church gather in a float for Norman Pride’s parade on Sunday. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
At Norman Pride’s festival, vendors set up booths to sell merchandise and support the LGBTQ+ community. The Gayley is an LGBTQ+ community-focused media outlet in Oklahoma. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
Paramedics laugh while their coworker falls off of a mechanical bull at Norman Pride’s festival. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
Members of Norman’s LGBTQ+ community parade down Main St. as part of Norman Pride’s annual celebration. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
During Norman Pride’s festival, a local musician sings both covers and original music to entertain the growing crowd. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
The Abbey Church leads the Norman Pride parade in downtown Norman. Multiple church congregations came out to support the local LGBTQ+ community. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
As organizers of the event, members of Norman Pride’s board and staff march in the annual parade last before heading to the afterparty at a local restaurant. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
The LGBTQ+ community in Norman gathered on Main St. over the weekend to celebrate Pride in the midst of recent targeted legislative attacks. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
Holding a bisexual flag, a young girl marches alongside her friends in Norman Pride’s annual parade. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
Sage Chanell, a local drag queen, hosts the annual Norman Pride parade on Main St. Photo by: Karoline Leonard

LGBTQ+ express mental health concerns following targeted legislation

LGBTQ+ people in the state of Oklahoma say they are feeling the effects of recent state legislation targeting transgender and nonbinary individuals, reporting a decline in mental health amidst the 2022 legislative session. 

Since February, Oklahoma has seen at least 15 anti-LGBTQ+ bills pass through the state house and senate. Gov. Kevin Stitt passed the “Save Women’s Sports Act” in early March, banning all transgender athletes from participating in women’s sports. Stitt also passed Senate Bill 1100 in April which effectively banned non-binary markers and changes to birth certificates. 

Kate Bierman, who is running for house district 44 representative, marches in Norman Pride’s parade to support the LGBTQ+ community. Photo by: Karoline Leonard

Nicole McAfee, the executive director for Freedom Oklahoma, said all of these bills are severely impacting the mental health of LGBTQ+ people across the state, leaving them feeling hopeless and alone. 

“Policy efforts that use anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric harm the mental health of LGBTQ+ young people, whether or not they pass,” McAfee said. “There’s the harms of passage, but there’s also the harms of giving them a platform. I think, even by introducing legislation like this, and treating these attacks as serious possibilities, we’re doing a lot of harm to young kids and their mental health.” 

Claire Phoenix, a music education major at the University of Oklahoma, said while she has very good mental health, the LGBTQ+ community as a whole is undergoing a crisis. 

The Trevor Project, a nonprofit focused on mental health and suicide prevention, found that 94% of LGBTQ+ youth in America were negatively impacted by recent politics in its 2021 national survey

Additionally, the survey showed that 72% of LGBTQ+ youth reported symptoms of generalized anxiety disorder, and 62% reported symptoms of major depressive disorder. For transgender and non-binary youth, these numbers jump; three of four experience anxiety disorder, and two of three experience depression. 

“Mental health is a huge crisis in the LGBTQ+ community, and I don’t think legislators understand how big of a deal it is that they’re impacting our lives so heavily,” Phoenix said. 

Listening to the music performance, a young couple shares an intimate moment at Norman Pride’s festival on Saturday. Norman Pride featured local musicians and Drag performers for the event. Photo by: Karoline Leonard

Several other states in the country have seen similar anti-LGBTQ+ legislation. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the “Don’t Say Gay” bill in March, and the state currently has at least 12 other bills this session targeting LGBTQ+ people. Other states with anti-LGBTQ+ bills include Tennessee with 31, Kansas with 9 and Missouri with 17.

Oklahoma House Bill 1074 is modeled after Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill, and it was filed alongside House Bill 1076 which would ban gender reassignment treatments or surgeries for minors. 

The Human Rights Campaign condemned Oklahoma government officials twice, once for the “Save Women’s Sports Act” and again when the state house passed a bill that would prohibit transgender youth from using restrooms aligned with their genders. 

“I wasn’t surprised to hear about (more bills) designed to stop progress. I fear that the passing of these bills would only reinforce lack of understanding, which leads to division, isolation (and) cruelty,” Michael Robertson, chapter president for PFLAG-Norman and the LGBTQ+ liaison for the Norman Police Department, added. 

“We don’t take lightly that trans and two-spirit kids are sacred.”

Nicole McAfee, executive director of Freedom Oklahoma, discusses anti-trans legislation in the country and its affect on LGBTQ+ youth. Oklahoma has seen at least 15 anti-LGBTQ+ bills in the 2022 legislative session. Video by: Karoline Leonard

McAfee believes these bills are trying to attack and reduce representation for LGBTQ+ people and will start a ripple effect. Because Oklahoma doesn’t offer opportunities for public testimony, these bills pass with very little resistance, according to McAfee. 

Phoenix hopes to work as a band teacher in the future to act as a resource for students questioning their identities in the same way she had while in school. Phoenix said despite knowing she is “going to be eaten alive,” she wants to be the teacher she never had in school.

“I thought back to myself in junior high and high school, and I didn’t have a single teacher who was open about (who they were), and as niche as a band teacher is, representation matters,” Phoenix commented. “I want to show students that you can be successful and be who you are.” 

Phoenix added that Pride events have greatly aided her mental state and the overall mental health of the LGBTQ+ community. 

“As much as they want to try and take our right to exist away, we’re never going to stop existing,” Phoenix said. “Coming together as a community and showing that we exist and are not going to stop existing, it’s so important.” 

Norman Pride’s celebration and parade took place over the first weekend of May, and Oklahoma City Pridefest will take place on June 24th-June 26th and is hosted by the Oklahoma City Pride Alliance.

Norman LGBTQ+ community celebrates Pride despite low mental health, targeted attacks

Norman Pride hosted its annual celebration over the weekend in the midst of the 2022 legislative session, which has seen at least 15 bills targeting LGBTQ+ community and in particular, transgender and nonbinary youth.

To view more photos from Norman Pride, click here.

a young girl protesting against abortion ban

Hundreds protest abortion rights following introduction of Oklahoma trigger bill

On April 5, protestors gathered on the steps of the Oklahoma State Capitol to protest an emergency bill that effectively banned abortion throughout the state, now known as one of the most restrictive abortion bans in the country.

All photos were taken by Karoline Leonard for JMC 3003 at Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication.

a young girl protesting against abortion ban
Standing on the steps of the state capitol, a young protestor joins her family to fight against the restrictive abortion bills moving through Oklahoma legislature. The bill, quickly signed by Gov. Kevin Stitt, makes the majority of abortions a felony in the state. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
a protestor draws on a sign at the beginning of the rally
As Planned Parenthood calls the rally together, a protestor creates a sign outside of the Oklahoma state capitol. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
a protestor chants on steps of the capitol
Holding a banner saying, “Bans Off Our Bodies”, protestors stand on the capitol steps to chant in unison against restrictive abortion bans in Oklahoma. Senate Bill 612 advanced on April 5 and was quickly signed into law by Gov. Kevin Stitt later that week. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
tamya cox-toure kicks off the beginning of the rally
Kicking off the rally, Tamya Cox-Touré, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union-Oklahoma, announces that the bill was just approved to the crowd. Cox-Touré previously worked as an attorney and lobbyist in the state, and she joined Planned Parenthood of Oklahoma to host the rally. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
an indigenous woman gives a land acknowledgement statement
As the rally comes together, an Indigenous woman gives a land acknowledgement statement before expressing her own feelings regarding the abortion bill, discussing the intersectionality for Native American rights with reproductive rights. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
a woman holds a pro-choice sign in front of the capitol
A female protestor lifts above the crowd her picket sign, which urges lawmakers to focus on reproductive rights and the right to privacy. Many protestor expressed their anger about the bill and others like it, especially since public testimony was not allowed. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
a couple of protestors listen in the crowd
Listening to directors and nurses from Planned Parenthood speak, two members of the rally stand together, chanting “her body, her choice.” Photo by: Karoline Leonard
a volunteer hands out shirts and flyers
After breaking for lunch, Planned Parenthood hands out shirts and banners for protestors to use outside of the state capitol. The protestors later moved inside to rally in the rotunda in protest of Oklahoma’s restrictions on public testimony for the abortion bill. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
a pro=women, pro=choice poster
Standing amidst the crowd, a protestor holds their sign and shouts alongside other members of the rally. Photo by: Karoline Leonard
protestors on the steps of the capitol
Outside the Oklahoma state capitol, protestors, volunteers and students hold a “hands off our bodies,” begging for state officials to vote against Senate Bill 612. Later, organizers of the event announced the bill had passed. Photo by: Karoline Leonard

Potential book restrictions leaves future of race, gender education in Oklahoma uncertain

Across the U.S., states are seeing an increase in school restrictions, particularly on books and critical race theory, with Oklahoma having at least 13 pieces of legislation since 2020 pertaining to the topic. Click to read more.

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