Saturday, September 09, 2006

Lawmakers listen to anti-bullying message

Lawmakers listen to anti-bullying message
Mack not ready to support federal help

By Larry Wheeler
Gannett News Service

Originally posted on September 08, 2006

WASHINGTON — Debbie Johnston got only a few minutes of face time with her local congressman Thursday, but the Cape Coral teacher and anti-bullying advocate said the time was well spent.

“I felt really good about it,” said Johnston, who for three hours led a group of Southwest Florida teachers and students through crowded and noisy halls of the U.S.
Capitol to raise awareness of teen suicide and student bullying.

The cramped office of U.S. Rep. Connie Mack IV, R-Fort Myers, was their first stop.

“I’m here to draw the connection between bullying and teen suicide,” Johnston said.
The Trafalgar Middle School teacher and everyone with her wore a red T-shirt bearing the likeness of her teenage son, Jeff, who committed suicide last year after enduring more than two years of cyberbullying by a fellow student.


Debbie Johnston, left, and Dr. Ruth Lohmeyer walk outside the Capitol.
After the meeting, Mack said he supported Johnston's goal of providing more resources for local school districts to prevent bullying and protect victims.

However, the congressman said he was not yet ready to endorse federal legislation that would mandate action.

"I'm more comfortable with this being handled on the state level," Mack said as he rushed from the meeting to cast a vote on the House floor.

In the year since her son's suicide, Johnston has become one of Florida's leading advocates for teen suicide prevention and school-based anti-bullying programs.

A bill named for her son, the Jeffrey Johnston Stand Up for All Students Act, passed Florida's House on a 116-0 vote but died in the state Senate when the relevant committees failed to act before the session adjourned.

To help make her case, Johnston was accompanied by local students who offered their own tales of encounters with school bullies.

"I was picked on by a girl," said Ashley Vetrano, a freshman at Bishop Verot High School in Fort Myers. "I switched groups. It was difficult."

Brytney Swazey, a ninth-grader at Ida Baker High School in Cape Coral, said teachers and counselors are aware of bullying and could do more to intervene.

"They think it's just joking around, and they don't take any action to make it stop," Swazey said.

Ida S. Baker High School Principal Joe Vetter said his was the first Lee County high school to present BullySafeUSA training to students last year. He plans for more training this school year, and added that the parent of a student with special needs has offered to put on sensitivity training, to help students be more sympathetic with their peers who might be different from them.

When the administration does become aware that bullying is taking place, Vetter said, the school acts immediately. Because bullying can take many forms, the school handles it on a case-by-case basis, sometimes using mediation and counseling, other times using discipline if the district's student Code of Conduct has been violated.

"I think in this case, the student is wrapped up in the excitement about going to Washington, D.C.," Vetter said. "What I would say is, are there situations? Absolutely. Do I believe the staff takes it lightly? No. We have such a well-disciplined environment, we don't take any situation lightly."

He added that he was disappointed the student would make a general statement.

"If there is a specific situation going on, I would be most appreciative if she would make our staff aware of it," Vetter said.

Nearly 5 million children are physically or verbally threatened by another student each year, and as many as half of all children are bullied at some time during their school years, according to the U.S. Department of Education.

There are at least two bills pending in Congress that would create a federal anti-bullying policy, but neither is likely to pass as lawmakers rush to complete other legislation before adjourning to campaign for re-election.

Johnston's group also met with U.S. Rep. Mark Foley, a Republican whose congressional district includes much of Port Charlotte.

Foley said he would like to see legislation that would address school bullying and teen suicide.

"It's a national problem," Foley said. "Members of Congress can't ignore the urgency of it."

— The News-Press staff writer Jason Wermers contributed to this report


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Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Bio: Karl loved gay stepdad

New York Daily News - http://www.nydailynews.com
Bio: Karl loved gay stepdad

President Bush's chief political strategist, Karl Rove, has cunningly used homophobia to score victories for the Republican Party. But Rove is said to have been far from fearful of the gay man he called "Dad."

According to a new bio, Rove "loved and adored" his stepfather, Louis Rove, even though the Getty Oil geologist abandoned Karl's mother, Reba, to live as a homosexual.

In their new book, "The Architect: Karl Rove and the Master Plan for Absolute Power," James Moore and Wayne Slater say some believe Louis' running off contributed to Reba's suicide. Nevertheless, Karl visited his stepfather in Palm Springs at least twice a year and often shared dinner with Louis and his pals, according to the book.

"He lived life exactly the way he wanted to live it,"
Rove said of Louis, who died two years ago. Louis'
friend Joseph Koons said that although Louis "was never the effeminate type," he "didn't hide the fact that he was gay."

Slater tells us that Rove, who obtained an early galley of the Crown book, had an intermediary press the authors to leave out the section about his father.
"We told him we have a couple of sources on that,"
says Slater. "We haven't heard anything since."

Slater says Rove himself called daily — "one day, six times" — to lobby against a chapter about his connection with indicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff. The book quotes Marc Schwartz, an operative for Texas'
Tigua Indian tribe, as witnessing a scene where Rove walked up to Abramoff's limo a few blocks from the White House. Schwartz says Abramoff explained that Rove arranged the sidewalk pow-wow to avoid entering a visit or phone calls in White House logs, and besides, "he's a fat f—, and he can use the exercise."

Schwartz claims Rove enlisted Abramoff to get "the fireman," Tom DeLay, to "clamp down" on a House member "who was not cooperating on a piece of legislation."

"Karl is very upset," says Slater. "He says [that meeting] was an accidental encounter. That's a bunch of junk."

Among other savories in the book:

* When Rove moved into the West Wing office formerly occupied by Hillary Clinton, he called in three Catholic priests to exorcise the spirit of the First Lady. "It was an actual liturgical ceremony," says Deal Hudson, who took part.

* Texas' then-Gov. George W. Bush once asked a reporter, "You know what I'm gonna tell those Jews when I get to Israel, don't you, Herman?" When the journalist, Ken Herman, replied that he did not know, Bush reportedly quipped: "I'm telling 'em they're all going to hell."

* Bush has little regard for his father's record, according to the authors. "Don't underestimate what you can learn from a failed presidency," he once told campaign media consultant Don Sipple.

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Saturday, September 02, 2006

Crist rejects Gallagher's call to disavow endorsement by gay publication

Palm Beach Post Staff Writers

ORLANDO — Tom Gallagher called on his Republican primary opponent Friday to reject an endorsement from a biweekly gay and lesbian publication, saying it doesn't reflect the party's values.

Attorney General Charlie Crist was picked as the "hands-down favorite" between the Republican candidates running for governor, largely because of Crist's support of civil unions, according to a recent endorsement by Watermark Online.

"While he unsurprisingly dislikes gay marriage, Crist supports civil unions for same-sex couples," the endorsement in the Aug. 24-Sept. 6 issue reads. "He's charming, decisive — and moderate. That simply cannot be said for state Chief Financial Officer Tom Gallagher, who trails Crist in the polls. This may be the reason why Gallagher talks so often about his opposition to gay marriage in his ads. He doesn't want us to forget it."

Gallagher's campaign issued a press release Friday with a headline that called on Crist to reject the endorsement. The two-paragraph body of the press release then called the endorsement a "reward for not defending traditional values" and noted that Crist was the only Republican in the governor's, Cabinet or U.S. Senate races who was endorsed by the group.

Gallagher said the endorsement is "one that normally Republicans aren't interested in having."

"I don't think you'd ever see Jeb Bush get that endorsement," Gallagher told reporters during an Orlando campaign stop. "You won't see me get that endorsement."

Crist, campaigning in Bartow, responded to Gallagher's press release, saying: "I don't reject support. I'm in the business of trying to get support. I got an election Tuesday and I want to get all the support I possibly can. You know, I'm not trying to be discriminating."

Watermark covers Central Florida from the west coast to east coast, according to its Web site. In addition to appearing online, the publication is distributed at bookstores, local colleges and universities, retail outlets and restaurants. Its Web site says it is the "best way to reach the I-4 corridor's estimated half-million gays and lesbians."

Drawing attention to the endorsement is in keeping with Gallagher's political strategy of presenting himself as the conservative in the campaign and Crist as a liberal. Playing to the extreme of a party is often a successful strategy in a primary, but Gallagher remains far behind in the polls to Crist, who also describes himself as a conservative.

With four days until election day, both candidates were out on the campaign trail in Republican-heavy Central Florida Friday.

Crist spent the morning waving signs at cars on State Road 60 in Valrico, then traveled to Bartow, where more than 30 volunteers were calling Republican voters, urging them to vote for Crist.

Crist made about a dozen phone calls himself while sitting at a small desk with a picture of Nancy Reagan behind him and life-size cardboard cutout of President Bush looking over his shoulder. On the desk was a list of names and phone numbers.

"Hi, I'm Charlie Crist and I'm running for governor," he told Alice Diller. "I want you to know how much it would mean to me if you vote for me for governor."

She told him she had voted early and voted for him.

Joan DiPetro was not home, so Crist left a message, adding at the end, "By the way, this is not a recorded call. This is actually me calling you."

Crist then traveled to Orlando, where he spoke to the Florida Medical Association, which has endorsed him. There, he made it clear that he believes winning the GOP nomination is in his grasp.

"We're at the 5-yard line and we have to score," said Crist, reminding the crowd that he is a former high school and college quarterback. "Let's punch it through."

Gallagher, meanwhile, continued to attack Crist's support of civil union, as he has done in his television ads and their debates.

"Our Florida values do not want civil unions for same-sex couples," Gallagher said Friday in Orlando, a stop on his three-day statewide bus tour.

There, after a tour of the Center for Pregnancy in Orlando, he picked up the endorsement of Sen. Daniel Webster, R-Winter Garden, who called him the "best conservative choice in this race."

Webster said his decision on whom to vote for was made, in part, after watching the debates.

"I wanted to sort out in my own mind a changed Tom Gallagher, which he is," Webster said, referring to Gallagher's reputation as a moderate during previous gubernatorial runs and when he was a lawmaker. "Absolutely in my mind, I'm convinced he is different than the Tom Gallagher that I knew in the House of Representatives. And I'm thankful for that."

"So am I," Gallagher said.

Earlier in the day, Gallagher's campaign stopped at the headquarters of Florida for Marriage Leadership in Orlando.

Gallagher has emphasized his pro-family stance, noting that he and his wife, Laura, were among the first who signed the petition supporting a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriages. Crist also has signed it, but has said he would support allowing people to enter into civil contracts that would allow them to visit their partners and handle their funeral arrangements.

John Stemberger, president and general counsel of the Florida Family Policy Council, said the effort is only 50,000 signatures shy of the 611,009 needed to put the marriage amendment on the ballot in 2008.


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