Archive for May, 2009

Teens and Sex: Is the Internet Accurate?

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

Below the Belt: A Column by NOW President Kim Gandy

We live in a society obsessed with sex. Our relationship with sex, however, is conflicted and more than a little dysfunctional. Mixed messages abound. Popular culture and various institutions both glorify and demonize sex. And much of this is played out via the female body.

As young women attempt to navigate the sexual minefield laid out by the patriarchy, they need information that won’t steer them wrong. The stakes are high — unplanned pregnancy, sexually transmitted infections, a life forever altered, a future interrupted. So how do they get good information?

Enter the Internet — perhaps the most awesome research tool ever. With all that information at our fingertips and theirs, some of it’s bound to be wrong, right? Right. In fact, new research from the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital demonstrates that health websites often provide teens with factually-challenged and incomplete information about sex and sexuality.

Heading up the study was Dr. Sophia Yen, a specialist in adolescent medicine at Packard Children’s Hospital, a clinical instructor of pediatrics at Stanford, and a longtime NOW supporter and advocate (not entirely relevant, but I have to brag).

Yen warns: “Teens should be cautious about finding sexual health answers on the Web. . . . Even widely trusted sites like WebMD are not that accurate when it comes to adolescent reproductive health.”

In a review of 35 popular health websites, Yen and her team identified the top six sexual health myths lurking online. These myths are the result of websites leaving out key pieces of information altogether, or simply failing to update their sites to reflect changes in knowledge or clinical recommendations.

Two of the myths involve emergency contraception (EC). A number of websites had not been updated to indicate that, as of August 2006, women 18 and older could purchase EC without a prescription in the U.S., and additionally that minors can buy EC directly from authorized pharmacists in nine states (Alaska, California, Hawaii, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Vermont and Washington state). Within weeks of the release of Yen’s study, the FDA lowered the EC non-prescription age to 17, further underscoring the need for health websites to stay on top of such developments.

In addition, 29 percent of the sites neglected to note that EC does not cause an abortion if the woman is already pregnant when she takes it, and is not the same thing as RU-486, the early abortion pill. This is a common misconception that reproductive health sites would be wise to correct.

Sixty percent of the sites incorrectly stated that birth control pills can cause weight gain, even though recent research has shown that this is not true with modern oral contraceptives. And how many people know that IUDs are a safe form of birth control for adolescents? Not nearly enough, I’m sure, since only a fraction of websites providing information about IUDs even mention their use by adolescents, and several wrongly state that only women who have given birth should use IUDs.

While online information about sexually transmitted infections (STIs) was relatively accurate, less than half delivered the news that some STIs, such as Herpes, can be contracted through skin-to-skin contact or kissing. Finally, the study found that many sites had not updated guidelines for age and circumstances of first recommended pap test.

The prevalence of inaccurate information on trusted health websites is particularly alarming given other recent reports. Last year I wrote about a Centers for Disease Control (CDC) study estimating that one out of every four teenage girls — 3.2 million young women — “has at least one of the most common sexually transmitted infections.”

As if that weren’t bad enough, after a decade of declining teen pregnancy, birth and abortion rates, the birth rate for teens has risen for the past two years.

Surely misinformation is to blame, at least in part, for this troubling reversal. After all, we’ve just come out of eight years of aggressive funding for abstinence-only education programs (thanks, George W. Bush), which proved to be ineffective and riddled with falsehoods. President Obama has removed much of this funding from his 2010 budget, but abstinence-only proponents are working hard to maintain their funding in Congress.

And don’t get me started on crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs), which present a “compassionate” front to women who think they may be pregnant, but really exist to prevent women from obtaining or even considering abortion. Deception, misinformation, propaganda and shame are the tools of their trade. According to Legal Momentum, “CPCs are increasingly receiving federal and state funding for these activities — with dangerous consequences for women’s health and wellbeing. . . . the largest source of government funding for CPCs is federal abstinence-only program grants. This funding has brought inexperienced CPC employees and volunteers into schools to teach abstinence-only programs, replacing trained sexual health educators who had provided comprehensive sexual education.” Not to mention all of those “Choose Life” license plates that funnel money to these same groups.

Let’s face it, teens are curious about sex — sexual imagery is everywhere, and their hormones are surging. They want to know about sex, and many of them will engage in sex, whether or not their parents or some representative on Capitol Hill thinks they’re ready for it. To those who prefer that teens be unprepared to protect their reproductive health, who think that girls who dare to have sex should be punished with STIs or unplanned pregnancies, your reign will soon be over.

Let’s give girls and women full authority over their reproductive lives and the information to make sound choices about their sexual health. The iconic 1989 art piece by Barbara Kruger declared: “Your body is a battleground.” How satisfying it would be to see that come to an end at last.

Sam Waterston on Fair Elections Now Act

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Sotomayor champions campaign finance reform

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Nick Nyhart, Public Campaign Action Fund

This week’s nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court could add an ally of campaign finance reform to the nation’s highest judicial body. Sotomayor was a member of New York City’s Campaign Finance Board in its earliest days, helping establish the city’s successful system of publicly financed elections.

In a 1996 Suffolk Law Review article, co-authored with Nicole Gordon, the Board’s executive director at that time, Sotomayor writes:

“We would never condone private gifts to judges about to decide a case implicating the gift-givers’ interests. Yet our system of election financing permits extensive private, including corporate, financing of candidates’ campaigns, raising again and again the question what the difference is between contributions and bribes and how legislators or other officials can operate objectively on behalf of the electorate. Can elected officials say with credibility that they are carrying out the mandate of a ‘democratic’ society, representing only the general public good, when private money plays such a large role in their campaigns?”

Her confirmation would stand in contrast to the arrivals of Justices Roberts and Alito to the Supreme Court. Both have taken a negative stance towards the regulation of campaign money. There’s more to see in this article from Politico.

Network weighs in on broadband proposal

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

From The State, May 27, 2009

Panel: Bring in wireless firms

By GINA SMITH

South Carolina is edging closer to bringing the next generation of broadband technology, called WiMax, to every part of the state.

But residents will have to pay for the new WiMax technology — and that has some organizations upset.

A legislatively appointed study panel issued its recommendation Tuesday on what the state should do with capacity ETV no longer needs. Federal rules are requiring ETV to convert its current analog spectrum to a digital one, freeing up 95 percent of ETV’s capacity for new wireless technology.

The panel recommended the state should lease:

• Seventy percent of the extra capacity to Washington state-based Clearwire to create a WiMax network in the urban parts of the state. An alternative to cable or DSL, WiMax is a telecommunications technology that can deliver wireless broadband across long distances. Because WiMax can transfer much more data than other technologies, it allows new uses, including interactive tools.

• The remaining 30 percent of the capacity to Virginia-based Digital Bridge Communications, a provider of wireless broadband to small and medium-sized communities. Digital Bridge would serve rural communities.

In the future, if South Carolina needs some of the leased capacity for public safety, education or governmental purposes, the state could recapture up to 25 percent of the now-unneeded capacity by renegotiating the leases.

Both Clearwire and Digital Bridge would make money from the leases by providing the WiMax technology to individuals, companies and others. In exchange, the two companies would pump nearly $143 million over the course of a 30-year lease into the state’s general fund, including $7 million upfront.

“The proposal is a great opportunity for South Carolina,” said Neil Mellen, a study committee member. “State government will enjoy much-needed revenues for basic services, such as school teachers and public safety, while the lion’s share of the spectrum will be in the hands of those most capable of successfully building it out: dedicated commercial providers. That means broader access, expanded service and lower rates for Internet access throughout South Carolina.”

But Brett Bursey, director of the S.C. Progressive Network, said he is disappointed the committee did not choose to use the excess capacity to provide free or discounted wireless service to the state’s residents.

“This is taxpayer-funded,” said Bursey, referring to taxes the state’s residents have paid to help fund ETV. “The millions of dollars South Carolinians have put into building up the broadcast system could and should have resulted in the nation’s first statewide free wireless system.”

However, telecommunications companies said it would have been unfair competition for the state to offer free wireless access.

“We welcome competition, but we don’t want anyone having an unfair advantage,” said Jerry D. Pate, director of the S.C. Telephone Association, a group of 25 telecommunications companies.

Pate said his organization is fine with the agreement but doubts it will bring Internet prices down for South Carolinians.

“This industry is highly competitive already,” Pate said, adding 410 telecommunication companies operate in South Carolina.

After a review by the Joint Bond Review Committee, the State Budget and Control Board will have the final say on the proposal in June.

Victory in the SC State House!

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

Thanks to quick mobilizing among activists in the SC Progressive Network and our allies in the legislature, H 3543 – the teen dating bill that was amended to include language discriminatory to LGBTQ youth — did not advance before the session adjourned last week. (For a brief background on the bill, click here.)

Congratulations to our member groups SC Pride, Columbia-PFLAG, Sean’s Last Wish and SC Equality for a job well done. And thanks to Reps. Gilda Cobb-Hunter, James Smith, Chris Hart and Ken Kennedy for speaking against the amendment. 

Please take a moment to contact them and express your appreciation. They need to know they aren’t fighting alone.

Contact information

  • Rep. Cobb-Hunter: gch@schouse.org or 803-734-2809
  • Rep. Smith: RepSmith@JamesSmith.org or 803-734-2997
  • Rep. Hart: HartC@schouse.org or 803-771-7701
  • Rep. Ken Kennedy: KK@schouse.org or 803-426-2492

The bill may be taken up when the legislature reconvenes in January. We’ll keep you posted.

Help Connecticut abolish the death penalty

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Just after 4am this morning, the Connecticut Senate voted 19 to 17 to repeal that state’s death penalty.  This follows the unexpectedly overwhelming 90-56 vote in the House last week. The bill is now on its way to the desk of Gov. Jodi Rell, who in media reports is saying that she still supports the death penalty and is suggesting that she may veto the bill.

There is no time to lose! If you live in Connecticut, please call Gov. Rell at 860-566-4840.

If you live elsewhere, please think about who you know who lives in Connecticut and forward this action request to them.  Then call them to alert them to your e-mail and ask them to both call 860-566-4840.

Letters, blog posts and comments expressing a similar sentiment on the web pages of Connecticut newspapers would be useful as well.

Press event to oppose amendment to dating violence bill

Monday, May 18th, 2009

The public is invited to join legislators and social justice organizations at a press conference to speak against the discriminatory amendment that was added to H-3543. The event will be held tomorrow, May 19, at 11:45am in the upstairs lobby of the State House.

The original bill, which addressed violence between “dating partners” in grades 6-12, was amended on second reading to limit its application to “heterosexual dating relationship(s).”

“This well-intentioned bill has been subverted by legislators more concerned with scoring points in the culture war than in protecting the well being of this state’s children,” said Rep. Gilda Cobb-Hunter.

Rep. Cobb-Hunter and Rep. Ken Kennedy will be joined by Harriet Hancock of Columbia’s chapter of Parents, Family and Friends of Lesbians and Gays, and representatives of other Midlands social justice organizations to speak against the amendment.

The event is being organized by the SC Progressive Network. For details, call 803-808-3384.

SC’s LGBTQ community targeted again

Friday, May 15th, 2009

Enough already!

By John Patrick Dawkins

Midlands Coordinator, SC Progressive Network

We get the message: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans-gendered and Queer citizens of South Carolina deserve no protections in the state, no rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness — or, apparently, a safe learning environment in one of the worst-performing public education systems in the country.

In 2006, the citizens of South Carolina passed Amendment 1 and changed the state constitution to codify bigotry directed towards the LGBTQ community. We cannot get married and, more pressingly, have no domestic partnership rights to protect our families. No joint health care. Hospital visitation denied in all but a few cities. Double taxation on our households, lack of spousal benefits. The list goes on.

In 2008, the LGBTQ youth were targeted. Something as simple as starting a Gay/Straight Alliance in a local high school (a space free of homophobia, where youth of any sexual orientation can be themselves in an otherwise hostile climate) was labeled an attack on “traditional family values and parents rights.” The LGBTQ community and its leaders, heterosexual supporters and other organizations fought for three months to overcome bigotry and create LGBTQ safe spaces in our public schools — a small yet significant victory.

Now they’re at it again.

H 3543 started out as a simple, common sense bill to protect all students from relationship violence. Our governing body found “…when a student is a victim of dating violence, his or her academic life suffers and his or her safety at school is jeopardized.” H 3543 has since become a platform for some of our elected officials to promote yet more religious bigotry and discrimination.

On Wednesday, Rep. Greg Delleney, (R-Chester) introduced an amendment to the bill that defined a dating partner as exclusively heterosexual, thereby limiting the protections afforded to LGBTQ youth and, furthermore, legislating the way all Queer relationships are defined. We cannot marry or join together in domestic partnerships, and now our casual relationships are no longer seen as dating.

The amendment passed with little opposition.

Bill sponsor Rep. Joan Brady (R-Richland) told one reporter, “Traditional domestic violence occurs in a man-woman, boy-girl situation.” She claims that, statistically, the majority of abuse happens in heterosexual relationships. Now, open LGBTQ folks make up roughly 10-15 percent of the population, so statistically you will see more abuse in heterosexual-defined relationships. This does not mean the percentage of abusive relationships are not the same between either group, nor that any one group of people should be denied the protections that are offered another.

Using Rep. Brady’s logic, we should rewrite the bill to exclude protections to our straight male youth who are faced with dating violence because, statistically, female-on-male violence is much less prevalent. As much as I would like to say violence does not happen in the LGBTQ community, as happy as it would make me to think that we, as a community, have overcome relationship abuse, the truth is that same-sex relationship violence is every bit as much a day-to-day reality to LGBTQ youth as it is to heterosexual youth.

If we truly want to curb violence in schools — and in society as a whole — we cannot allow elected officials to use legislation whose original intent is to protect, as a soapbox for their personal sense of morality. To do not only puts our youth at risk, it reinforces the systemic problem of homophobia in our state, granting justification to the hatred already aimed at LGBTQ citizens of South Carolina.

The third and final reading of the bill is on Tuesday, May 19.

Too late for early voting

Friday, May 15th, 2009

By Brett Bursey

Director, SC Progressive Network

Bills for early voting took torturous turns in both the House and Senate in the last two weeks.

Rep. David Mack’s bill (H 3608), which was written by the Progressive Network, passed out of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Election Law but stripped of the provision that allowed citizens to register during the two-week early voting period.

What looked like a partial victory suffered further defeat when the full House Judiciary Committee amended Mack’s bill to a three-day early voting period and limited all absentee voting to mail-in ballots.

The bill that has gone to the House floor is more restrictive than the present law that allows 30 days of in-person absentee voting at the county election commission office, which caused long lines during the 2008 election. The current version, championed by Rep. Alan Clemmons, would not allow in-person voting at county offices by the elderly and infirm except during the three-day period when everyone else is trying to vote.

To add insult to injury, House rules prohibit Rep. Mack from removing his name from his  own bill that now restricts voting rather than making it easier.

In the Senate, early voting had four hearings in a subcommittee chaired by Sen. Chip Campsen that allowed much more debate. The Network’s bill (S 369 — a companion bill to Rep. Mack’s), sponsored by Sen. Phil Leventis, was supported by testimony from the director of Mecklenburg County’s Board of Elections, who told the committee that One Stop Vote Centers in the Charlotte area had bipartisan support and saved money.

The Network’s early voting bill, introduced in 2007, has been modeled after the NC practice that allows early voting at multiple locations and also allows citizens to register. Mecklenburg County is a good example for South Carolina, as it uses the exact same voting machines as we do.

In subcommittee, Campsen pushed for three days of early voting, restricted to the county office. When the vote was called, we were gratified by the vote of Sen. Ray Clearey, who voted with Sen. John Scott for 15 days of early voting at multiple locations.

This victory was tempered by the majority vote that photo IDs would be required of voters. This recommendation was passed out of the full Senate Judiciary Committee on May 14, over the objection of Democrat senators.

While debate on both the House and Senate versions of the bill are scheduled for May 19, legislation on early voting is not expected to pass this year.

As long as photo ID is tied to the early voting bill, Democrat senators are promising to kill the bill. While photo IDs would only prevent someone from impersonating another voter at the polls — a crime punishable by 10 years in prison and that has never happened in South Carolina — it has become the holy grail for Republicans.

The practical outcome of the early voting debate is going to be a trade-off for how many days of early voting we get for accepting photo IDs provision.

Democrats see voter suppression as the issue; Republicans see fraud as the issue. Sadly, partisan concerns are inhibiting reforms. The loser is, as usual, the citizens of South Carolina.

For more information on the Network’s voting reform initiatives, click here.

Anti-choice posters banned from State House

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

Columbia Christians for Life issued this press release today. Steve Lefemine (who often travels with large posters with photos of bloody fetuses) and Johnny Gardner (who prefers the doll-on-a-stick prop) for years have been fixtures at public gatherings and at the State House.

*****************

BANNED FROM SC STATE HOUSE:
“Jesus,” “Ten Commandments,” “Pre-Born” and other signs no longer “the people’s house”

Contact, Steve Lefemine, (803) 794-6273

On Wednesday, April 29, officers with the SC Bureau of Protective Services (State Capitol police) stopped two Christian pro-life ministry leaders, who for years have been lobbying the Republican-majority SC Legislature to pass SC Personhood bills to END abortion in South Carolina, from entering the SC State House with Biblical and Pro-Life signs, as had been allowed for multiple years (digital date-stamped photos going back to 2005 are available).

Johnny Gardner, dir., Voice of the Unborn was even prevented from taking a small baby stroller with two baby dolls, into the Capitol. Steve Lefemine, dir., Columbia Christians for Life was stopped from using two signs in the Capitol, one sign saying, “JESUS Saves, Forgives & Heals” and then the “Ten Commandments” with all 10 listed; and a second sign, with a photo of an 8-Week Pre-Born Baby and then “ABORTION KILLS CHILDREN” on one side, and on the other side, an enlarged House Roll Call budget vote in 2002 that funded abortion, birth control, and sterilization (as the SC House and Senate continue to do each year to this day).

Gardner and Lefemine were shown copies of SC Code Sec. 10-11-330 which prohibits disorderly conduct, and also prohibits anyone “to parade, demonstrate or picket within the capitol building.” Notwithstanding this statute, free speech expression in the form of signs has been allowed inside the State House in both the First Floor and Second Floor lobbying areas that are open to the public, for a number of years. The ban applies to all signs except those displayed at news conferences held in the Capitol.

Gardner and Lefemine have worked in the State House for years attempting to influence the Republican-majority SC Legislature to do their God-given duty and protect pre-birth humans from being murdered in the wombs of their mothers. Despite more than 50 bill co-sponsors in the SC House, and more than a dozen in the SC Senate, the Republican leadership in the SC House and SC Senate is not supporting the legislation. Neither is Republican Governor Mark Sanford. The 11-year-old personhood legislation to END abortion in SC was first introduced in the SC House and SC Senate in 1998.

Gardner and Lefemine were able to enter the Capitol Building on April 29 after leaving their items behind. Upon investigation, Lefemine learned that a number of parties had agreed to begin enforcement of the sign ban, including the Sergeant at Arms for the Senate, and the Sergeant at Arms for the House, the Field Commander for the Bureau of Protective Services, and others. Noticeably absent from the list of those involved in this decision to chill free speech in what has previously been known as “the people’s house” was the State House Committee chairman, who has scheduled a Tuesday, May 12 meeting in the Blatt Building, Room 318, to address the matter. (Time TBD est. approx. 2 PM) Comment by the public is planned.

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Safety issues revealed at SRS nuclear facility

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

Contractors used substandard materials
By James Rosen

jrosen@mcclatchydc.com

WASHINGTON — Contractors at the Savannah River Site — one of the country’s major nuclear-weapons complexes — repeatedly procured dangerous construction materials and components that failed to meet federal safety standards, according to a recently completed internal government probe.

One of the substandard materials revealed at the Savannah River Site on the South Carolina-Georgia border “could have resulted in a spill of up to 15,000 gallons of high-level radioactive waste,” the inspector general of the U.S. Energy Department found.

The five-month investigation also disclosed the purchase of 9,500 tons of substandard reinforcing steel at the SRS site near Aiken.

The faulty steel was discovered after a piece of it broke during construction of a facility that will convert spent weapons plutonium and uranium into mixed-oxide — or MOX — fuel for civilian reactors.

Replacement of 14 tons of the substandard “rebar” — the reinforcing steel — that had already been installed cost $680,000 and caused new delays in completing the $4.8 billion MOX facility, the investigation disclosed.

Among other questionable components identified in the probe were piping, steel plates, an unusable $12 million “glovebox” (used to handle contaminated materials), furnace module doors and robots used to eliminate human exposure to radiological and chemical materials.

In an April 23 memo to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, Inspector General Gregory Friedman said contractors and subcontractors that build, supply and install equipment at SRS facilities ignored safety regulations developed by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.

“We identified multiple instances in which critical components did not meet required quality and safety standards,” Friedman wrote to Chu.

The Savannah River Site produced tritium, plutonium-239 and other materials used to make nuclear weapons from 1954 to 1991, when the United States stopped making atomic bombs with the end of the Cold War.

(more…)