Founded in 1973 as the
National Gay Task Force, the organization became the
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force in 1985. It adopted its current identity in October 2014. The founders of the National Gay Task Force included Robert L. Livingston and his husband, Tom Ellis; Dr.
Howard Junior Brown; Dr.
Bruce Voeller; Father
Robert Carter, a Roman Catholic priest;
Ron Gold;
Nathalie Rockhill; Dr.
Martin Duberman; and Dr.
Frank Kameny. Later board members included
Lani Ka'ahumanu, who was the first out bisexual to be invited and to serve on a national gay and lesbian board. The Task Force has acted to promote LGBTQ rights and acceptance. In 2005, the Task Force protested against the
Instruction Concerning the Criteria for the Discernment of Vocations with regard to Persons with Homosexual Tendencies in view of their Admission to the Seminary and to Holy Orders, prohibiting the
ordination of
Catholic homosexual seminarians. In 2010, Jaime Grant, then director of the Task Force's Policy Institute, introduced the idea of a bright pink sticker for people to stick on census envelopes which had a form for them to check a box for either "lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or straight ally", which her group called "queering the census". Although the sticker was unofficial and the results were not added to the census, she and others' goal was to include the statistic in the
2020 census. == Creating Change conference ==