Merger
between FreeState Legal and Equality Maryland is a good match
For the past six months, the
once prominent Equality Maryland organization was essentially moribund: cash-starved,
no office, and no executive director. Following
decades of being the principal advocacy organization for LGBTQ Marylanders, Equality
Maryland laid low hoping to eventually wake up from its tenuous existence.
That changed dramatically on
January 6, 2016, when FreeState Legal, the Baltimore-based non-profit
organization that serves the low-income LGBTQ community in Maryland through
direct legal services, announced that it was merging with Equality
Maryland.
“We are excited to better serve the LGBTQ
community across all of Maryland,” said Patrick A. Paschall, Executive Director
of FreeState Legal in a statement. “By combining FreeState Legal’s team of
attorneys providing direct legal services with Equality Maryland’s longstanding
history as the voice and political arm of the LGBTQ community, we are creating
a comprehensive LGBTQ civil rights organization that will work throughout the
state to end prejudice and discrimination based on sexual orientation and
gender identity.”
When Equality Maryland was
experiencing fundraising difficulties earlier last year, they attempted to
effect a merger with FreeState Legal, but according to Paschall, the timing was
not right for FreeState to undergo that change.
Now it can, and it’s a good fit.
FreeState Legal, which has
existed since 2008, has been on the upswing in both effectiveness and reputation. It recently moved to new headquarters located at 231 East Baltimore
Street, but it is unclear if that move is related to the merger.
Equality Maryland brings to the
table thousands of members statewide and a string of significant victories under
its belt especially the passage of marriage equality and comprehensive protections
based on gender identity. Equality
Maryland was a component of the Marylanders for Marriage Equality coalition
which withstood a referendum challenge to the newly passed law in 2012.Patrick A. Paschall Photo: Bob Ford |
While these major
accomplishments are noteworthy, there is much more work that needs to be done
especially for people of color and low income LGBTQ individuals.
Both Equality Maryland and FreeState Legal have enjoyed a working relationship in the past, so the merger should be a relatively seamless endeavor. One joint initiative that stands out is their work, as well as that of other partnering organizations, on the Youth Equality Alliance, which seeks to address the challenges of LGBTQ youth in Maryland education, foster care, and juvenile justice systems.
“Both FreeState Legal and
Equality Maryland receive calls on a daily basis from LGBTQ Marylanders who
continue to experience discrimination in housing, health care, employment, and
public accommodations, discrimination or harassment in schools and foster care,
or the risk of losing custody of their children,” said Jessica P. Weber, Board
President of FreeState Legal. Both Equality Maryland and FreeState Legal have enjoyed a working relationship in the past, so the merger should be a relatively seamless endeavor. One joint initiative that stands out is their work, as well as that of other partnering organizations, on the Youth Equality Alliance, which seeks to address the challenges of LGBTQ youth in Maryland education, foster care, and juvenile justice systems.
“Bringing together the expertise and experience of Equality Maryland and FreeState Legal will put us on the path to achieving the goal of full equality for all LGBT Marylanders,” said Lawrence S. Jacobs, Board Chair of Equality Maryland, Inc. in a statement.
“This merger creates a statewide
social justice organization that provides direct legal services to low-income
LGBT Marylanders, implements and defends legislative protections against
discrimination, engages in policy advocacy, organizes and empowers communities,
educates and trains individuals and groups on LGBT cultural competence issues,
and serves as a watchdog on behalf of Maryland’s entire LGBT community," he said.
The announcement on January 6 signals
a 6-month-long process that will involve strategic planning and community input
from all over the state to establish a combined mission and vision as well as a new name for the merged
organization. Paschall, who became
FreeState Legal’s executive director last March, will remain as the executive
director of the combined organization.
He said there will be no staff changes in the immediate future.
“For decades Equality Maryland
has led the fight for LGBTQ equality in the state legislature,” said Paschall.
“FreeState Legal could not be more excited to join forces with Equality
Maryland, an organization that has such a deep history and strong track record
of success serving Maryland’s LGBTQ community.”
May this marriage last.
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