Community Corner

How To Celebrate June Pride Month In Glen Rock, Ridgewood

Pride Month starts Thursday and continues through June, with several ways in the area to participate in the celebration of LGBTQ culture.

GLEN ROCK, NJ — Pride Month starts Thursday and continues through June, with several ways in Glen Rock and Ridgewood to participate in the celebration of LGBTQ culture, rights and identity.

Among them is the seventh annual Glen Rock Pride Flag Raising and Celebration at borough hall (1 Harding Plaza) on June 3. The event is set to take place from noon to 4 p.m. and feature a rainbow flag raising ceremony, keynote speakers, live music, arts and crafts, vendors, food and more.

"Glen Rock was the first town in Bergen County to raise the rainbow flag, and we continue to gather as a community to commemorate the importance of representation for our friends and neighbors," reads a statement from the borough's Facebook event page.

Find out what's happening in Ridgewood-Glen Rockfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Ridgewood's annual Pride Day will take place on June 10 from 1 to 2 p.m. at Van Neste Square, with local speakers and performers on the roster. The Ridgewood High School Sexuality and Gender Alliance (SAGA) will collect donations to benefit the Trevor Project at the event.

Pride Month occurs during June in deference to the Stonewall Uprising, a tipping point in the struggle for equality among people who identify as LGBTQ. New York City police raided the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar, in the early morning hours of June 28, 1969. Such raids were common, but patrons fought back, resulting in days of violent clashes across Greenwich village.

Find out what's happening in Ridgewood-Glen Rockfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The observance started as Gay Pride Day on the last Sunday in June, but soon grew to the point that June calendars are packed with pride parades, parties, workshops, symposiums and concerts across the nation and around the world.

In New Jersey, about 4.1 percent of the population — or 343,000 people — identify as LGBTQ, according to the Movement Advance Project, which tracks legislation targets. They represent 4 percent of New Jersey’s workforce, or 205,000 people.
The organization gives New Jersey 39.25 points out of a possible 43.5 points. Our state received 17.5 points out of a possible 20 for sexual orientation policy and 21.75 points out of a possible 23 for gender policy. The overall ranking was graded “HIGH.”

Pride Month 2023 occurs amid a historic surge in bills targeting LGBTQ rights, according to the American Civil Liberties Union. Nearly 500 pieces of legislation nationwide have been filed in state legislatures this year, according to the ACLU tracking.

Legislation introduced in New Jersey includes a bill that would give public school parents vouchers to nonpublic schools if they object to learning material that they consider harmful, which includes lessons on sexuality and gender expression.

Another bill would ban transgender female athletes from competing in women's sports in schools and would require all student athletes to participate in sports teams for their biological sex, though there is little evidence that trans women have any advantage in sports, according to a 2017 study.

Both bills were introduced and were referred to committee this past January.

Yet another bill would ban gender-affirming care for youth in New Jersey. This bill was introduced in January. Read more: Trans Youth Care Criminalized In NJ Bill; Lawmaker Won't Name Sources

LGBTQ people are under fire, unlike possibly ever before and across virtually every aspect of our lives,” Logan S. Casey, a senior researcher at Movement Advancement Project, told The Washington Post in April. “This is part of a very clear and identifiable national effort in state legislatures that is and has been going on for years — and it’s really culminating this year.”

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