Founding The Nebraska Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Civil Rights was founded in 1981 to support a proposed amendment to a Lincoln city ordinance. The amendment would have outlawed discrimination in employment, housing, and
public accommodations on the basis of
sexual orientation and
affectional orientation. Coalition spokesman Scott Stebelman said that about fifty people were working together in the new Coalition. Fierce opposition to the proposed amendment was led by
University of Nebraska–Lincoln psychologist
Paul Cameron. Coalition members refused to debate Cameron, saying "the coalition's feeling was we would debate any reasonable psychologist, but did not believe Paul Cameron fell into that class." At election time, the amendment was defeated by a 4-to-1 margin. The Coalition refocused on community advocacy instead of elections. The organization that Cameron founded to oppose the amendment would become the
Family Research Institute, a nationally influential producer of
pseudoscience against homosexuality. The Nebraska Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Civil Rights argued against Cameron's publications conflating homosexuality with child abuse. Their arguments contributed to Cameron's eventual expulsion from the
American Psychological Association. In 1983 the Coalition sponsored an event, the Great Plains Conference of Gay Men and Lesbians. Attendees from the
plains states discussed recent failures to pass civil rights measures in the region.
The AIDS epidemic The Coalition distributed
brochures on
safe sex practices in the mid 1980s. The brochures sought to dispel the then-common myth that
AIDS is spread by casual contact. The Coalition partnered with the
Nebraska AIDS Project in 1986 to mail a survey to medical providers throughout Nebraska asking if providers would accept gay and lesbian patients or patients at risk for
HIV. The responses were used to create a referral list of safe providers.
The 1990s In 1993 the Nebraska legislature considered a bill, LB 395, to ban employment discrimination against gays and lesbians. California-based
Christian fundamentalist leader
Lou Sheldon was brought to Lincoln by the Nebraska chapter of the
Traditional Values Coalition to speak against LB 395. Sheldon claimed the bill was part of a nationwide anti-family "
homosexual agenda". The Nebraska Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Civil Rights coordinated a protest to counter Sheldon's statements. About fifty demonstrators appeared in front a local restaurant, the Green Gateau, chosen because of the belief that it had recently fired an employee for being gay. In the 1990s the Coalition sponsored poetry readings and dances that served as an alternative to socializing in gay bars.
The 2000s marriage fight In November 2000, seventy percent of Nebraska voters approved
Initiative 416, an amendment to the state constitution prohibiting same-sex marriage, civil union, domestic partnership, or other similar same-sex relationship. The Coalition opposed this new law and protested at the victory party held by the
Nebraska Family Council, the organization that had spearheaded the amendment. In April 2002, the Coalition staged a protest to raise awareness about ongoing discrimination against LGBT people in Nebraska by forming a
human chain of supporters around the
Nebraska State Capitol. They called on Nebraskans to uphold the state motto, "equality before the law," highlighting issues such as employment discrimination based on sexual orientation and the passage of Initiative 416. It was the first time since World War II that a human chain was formed around the building. Omaha Senator
Ernie Chambers, an advocate for LGBT equal rights, spoke at the event, urging the community to continue their fight for equality. but faded from existence shortly afterward. Same-sex marriage remained unlawful in Nebraska until the 2015
Waters v. Ricketts and
Obergefell v. Hodges court rulings. ==References==