St. Lawrence University: Chaplain's Office
GLBTQ

GLBTQ

GLBQT Student Group
GLBTQ Faculty and Staff
Local Resources
Supportive Religious Groups
Educational Resources
Advocacy Resources

In keeping with the Universalist values that underpin St. Lawrence University, the Chaplain's Office is committed to working for the full inclusion of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and queer (GLBTQ) in faith communities and in the society at large. We week to provide support, education, and advocacy for GLBTQ people and their families and friends.

GLBTQ Faculty and Staff

Margaret Kent Bass - English
Erika Barthelmess - Biology
Kathleen Buckley - Chaplain
Mark Denaci - Fine Arts
Danielle Egan - Gender Studies
Traci Fordham-Hernandez - Performance & Communication Arts
Kirk Fuoss - Performance & Communication Arts
Duriel Harris - English
Chris Hosmer - Music
Mary Hussman - English
Catherine Jahncke - Physics
Michael Kemper - History
Val Lehr - Government/Gender Studies
Elizabeth MacDougall - Psychology
Todd Moe - NCPR/WSLU-FM
Michael Popovic - Government
Matha Thornton - Residence Life
Ethan Townsend - Intercollegiate Athletics & Recreation
Eric Weinhold - Admissions
Shaun Whitehead - Associate Chaplain
James Wildman - Music

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Local Resources
Local PFLAG Chapter Contact:

PFLAG Canton/St. Lawrence County
Unitarian Universalist Church
3 1/2 East Main Street
Canton, NY 13617
315-386-3931 or 315-265-2422
National PFLAG Website

 

Local PRISM Group Contact:

315-265- 2422 (Reachout)
Local PRISM Website

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Links to Supportive Religious Groups

Unitarian Universalist Association's Office of Bisexual, Gay, Lesbian and Transgender Concerns

Religious Perspectives on Sexual Inclusivitiy  

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Educational Resources

The Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry

The Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) is a recently established center of Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley, California. The Center serves three distinct but overlapping constituencies: the world of academic religious scholarship; faith communities; and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered people and organizations. CLGS is purposed toward developing programming in each of four major areas: Research, Resourcing, Education for Leadership, and Community-Building/Advocacy.

All programming works to carry out the Center's fundamental mission: To advance the well-being of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered people and to transform faith communities and the wider society by taking a leading role in shaping a new public discourse on religion and sexuality through education, research, community building and advocacy.

Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance

 

This website deals with a variety of sensitive religious issues. To read more about a variety of issues related to GLBQT people, see specifically www.religioustolerance.org/homosexu.htm

National Consortium of Directors of LGBT Resources in Higher Education

 
Gay, Lesbian, Straight Educational Network

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Advocacy Resources

Human Rights Campaign

Our Mission Statement:
The Human Rights Campaign is America’s largest civil rights organization working to achieve gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender equality. By inspiring and engaging all Americans, HRC strives to end discrimination against GLBT citizens and realize a nation that achieves fundamental fairness and equality for all.

Lambda GLBT Community Services

LAMBDA Is a non-pofit gay/.lesbian/.bisexual/.transgender agency dedicated to reducing homophobia, inequality, hate crimes and discrimination by encouraging self acceptance, cooperation and non-violence.

Pride Agenda

The Empire State Pride Agenda is New York's statewide lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) civil rights and advocacy organization. Our mission is to win equality and justice for LGBT New Yorkers and our families. We recognize that while significant cultural, legal and governmental advances have led to greater equality for LGBT New Yorkers, we and our families remain highly vulnerable without the vast majority of rights and responsibilities that most New Yorkers take for granted.

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