The battle for marriage equality
in Maryland was moving into high gear by July 3rd of last year. Polls indicated a tight contest on Question 6,
creating much uncertainty and apprehension among the state’s thousands of
same-sex couples and supporters who were hoping beyond hope that the bill that
Governor O’Malley signed into law in March legalizing same-sex marriage would
withstand a robust referendum attempt.
While trying to combat the efforts
from well-funded opponents seeking to overturn the law at the ballot box, most advocates
knew it would be a struggle to prevail. Every
possible vote was needed to be harvested.
It would be particularly important to register college students, as they
represent a large number of the state’s unregistered voters and, based on
polling data, would more likely to be supportive.Accordingly, on that July 3rd evening, a group of 20 folks from Baltimore and beyond gathered at the GLCCB’s edifice on Chase Street to be trained and certified as voter registration volunteers. The instruction was to have taken place inside the building but someone didn’t get that memo; the doors were locked. Undaunted, activist Mark Patro who was to deliver the training, held the session on the sidewalk outside the GLCCB on this particularly sultry, sweat-producing evening. Despite that speed bump, the voter registration drive was well underway.
Mark didn’t stop there. He bolstered the Question 6 effort by
organizing Light Brigade Maryland—whereby groups of people held battery-charged
lit panels that spelled out messages promoting marriage equality. They visited over two dozen road overpasses,
bridges and other venues around the state, but mostly in the Baltimore
metropolitan area, to gain the attention of motorists and pedestrians. It turned out to be a key component of the
superior and creative messaging the pro-equality forces crafted during the
campaign that helped sway people to vote our way.
This is what Mark Patro
does. Always forward thinking, always
strategic, always creative, Mark finds a cause that is clearly progressive and
manages to inspire others to reach a specific goal. He is not a fiery, rah-rah type; in fact, he
is rather soft-spoken. But Mark possesses
a lot of energy and passion, and people love to follow his brand of activism,
of which he’s had considerable experience.“My initial involvement in activism was with the impeachment of Richard Nixon; at seventeen I carried a petition for his removal from door to door in the Reisterstown suburb where I spent my teen years,” says Mark, a Towson University graduate and native of Baltimore who was educated in the Baltimore City and Baltimore County public school systems.
Mark decided to come out as gay in
the late 1970's and was seeking “community” at the GLCCB. In the early 1980’s he
volunteered as a photographer and worked on layout—a manual paste-up process—for
the Community Center’s Gay Paper prior
to the advent of computer-based page design programs.
Light Brigade, formed by Mark Patro, in action |
He continued his advocacy
through intense letter writing to advance LGBT civil rights. This, along with the efforts of many others, culminated
with the passage of statewide protections in 2001 for gays and lesbians.
Things changed dramatically for
Mark in 2005. “I attended my first PFLAG
meeting in Howard County, which was a 45 minute drive from my Baltimore County
home,” he says. “For a brief time I
drove 30 minutes in the other direction to Churchville where there was a second
PFLAG meeting group. While attending both meetings, I decided there was too big
a gap between Columbia and Churchville and decided to start the PFLAG chapter
in Lutherville.”
He remains as the president of
that PFLAG chapter, and the name was changed from PFLAG-Baltimore County to
PFLAG-Baltimore to reflect a broader reach.
“The PFLAG work that I’ve done is very near and dear to my heart; and
the direct advocacy work that I learned how to do while working with PFLAG has
become my new passion. I see my future more full of this kind of work on a
broader range of issues,” Mark says.
Mark stepped up that political advocacy
when passage of equal rights for same-sex couples was emerging as a top
priority. During the Maryland
legislative session of 2009 he testified in favor of the Inheritance Equality bill
written by Senator Rich Madaleno. This
bill passed and became law later that year.
Being one of only a handful of
LGBT advocates in his northeast Baltimore County legislative district, he
volunteered to become district coordinator for Equality Maryland’s annual Lobby
Day. With several other dedicated district voters he made this trip for each of
the last five years of that seven-year process.
“I grew comfortable with talking
to my senator and delegates to a point where I thought my conversations were
sometimes having a positive impact,” Mark points out. “When the law finally
passed [in 2012] and the opposition took the signed law to referendum I worked
to ensure we would hold on to the right to marry.”
While the battles for marriage
equality were being waged in Annapolis, Mark also turned his sights on
extending protections in employment, housing and public accommodations based on
gender identity and expression. And for
him, it was very significant.
“My proudest moment as an LGBT
advocate happened in January 2011,” Mark explains. “This is when the Baltimore
County Council passed by a 5-2 vote and amended language to the Baltimore
County Code to protect people in Baltimore County on the basis of sexual
orientation and gender identity. I was happy to work with a well-organized
coalition of groups including PFLAG, Gender Rights Maryland, Equality Maryland,
the Esimorp Network, The National Gay & Lesbian Task Force and many clergy
and citizen advocates. Councilman Tom Quirk led this effort and I, for one,
will be eternally grateful.”
His work with PFLAG, the
legislative conversations, and the referendum work resulted in an invitation in
the fall of 2012 to join the Moving Maryland Forward Network (MMFN), and in
January 2013, he was invited to join the board of the Unitarian Universalist
Legislative Ministries (UULM).
“As a member of PFLAG, MMFN
& UULM in 2013, I am proud to have worked side by side with folks like
Sharon Brackett, Matt Thorn, June Horner, Lea Gilmore, Charlie Cooper, Vinny
DeMarco, Lisa Ward and Betty Crowley.”
Mark’s work seems just to be
starting. As stated earlier, his
advocacy work brought on a desire to broaden the scope of issues. “We may have passed a very strong Fire Arm
Safety Act in Maryland this year but there is still work to do,” Mark reflects.
“The gender identity/expression protections bill still needs to pass on the
state level. I feel strongly that we need to understand and implement strong
regulations, if not an outright ban on fracking.
“The simple things in our life,
which are even more basic than our civil rights, are now being threatened.
Labeling genetically modified food should be considered such a right. People
need to be able to make a choice about what they eat and feed their
children. Fracking threatens our water
supply and our ability to grow food.”
Pride…passion…and limitless issues
to confront. That’s Mark Patro.
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