Remember
back in the day when black people couldn’t swim in public pools because white
people didn’t want to catch being black?
Luckily
that doesn’t happen any more. Well, save a minor incident where 60 black kids
were kicked out en masse from the Valley Swim Club in Philadelphia after being
told that there were no minorities allowed in the club. There was a fear, as
expressed by the club president that the "kids would change the complexion ...
and the atmosphere of the club."
But hey,
that was a long time ago, way back in 1959. Oops, I mean 2009. But hey, you
know how society is. Two steps forward one step back, am I right?
Which
brings us to 2011 at The Pavilion in Hazard, Ky. where Kim Haynes, a Pavilion
employee, was brave enough to finally speak the truth about gay people swimming
in public pools: it’s against God. Of course, everybody knows that. Well, good
Christians who apparently liberally interpret Bible do at least.
On June
10 two gay men, described by the Lexington Herald-Leader as having
"intellectual and developmental disabilities," were visiting the pool along
with a caregiver from Mending Hearts, Inc., a social service group.
Reports
vary about what the two men were doing. A Pavilion lifeguard says they were
kissing and hugging. Their caregiver says they were only sitting on each
other’s laps. Haynes says they were "fondling" each other, though not each
other’s private parts. And so he told them to get lost.
According
to Mending Hearts Executive Director Shirlyn Perkins, "They were informed that
‘gay people’ weren’t allowed to swim there."
"This
is completely outrageous, The Pavilion is owned by the City of Hazard and paid
for by our tax dollars," said Kentucky Equality Federation President
Jordan Palmer.
"My
clients, whom already feel ridiculed and different, left the city-owned
facility crying and embarrassed for trying to participate in 'normal'
activities that everyday 'normal' people do," Perkins said.
When
their caregiver said that they were being discriminated against, Hayes said,
"You need to read the Bible more often, we don't tolerate that down
here."
It is,
of course, true. "Thou shall not swim whilst gay in a public pool in Kentucky"
is a little known commandment, probably because the only place it exists is
scribbled in red ink in the margins of Hayes’s very own Bible.
Hayes
isn’t the only class act working for the city of Hazard. In a press release the
City Manager apologized "to CNN and to the staff of Anderson Cooper 360"
because Charlotte Pearlman, the Pavilion manager, used "language which was
disrespectful toward the public, including insulting and obscene language" when
an Anderson Cooper 360 staff member contacted her. According to the press
release, "In the course of handling the large volume of media requests for
comment and the many phone calls and messages from persons who supported or
opposed the actions taken (on June 10), she became frustrated and used
inappropriate language in the course of a telephone conversation with a staff
member of the CNN show Anderson Cooper 360 while declining to comment on the
pending story."
Um, no
comment? I think the fact that she used "insulting" and "obscene" language kind
of speaks for itself.
To the
City of Hazard’s credit, Hayes has been suspended (though only for 5 days),
they plan to post signs at The Pavilion that include "sexual orientation" as
part of their non-discrimination policy, and they plan to get their employees
some diversity/sensitivity training. Apparently the Pavilion does have an
unofficial no grab-assing policy for gays and straights alike, which they now
plan to officially post and enforce regardless of whether the grab-assers are
gay or straight.
