| .THE
EARLY DAYS
Bisexuals
have been part of the modern Lesbian and Gay Civil Rights
and Liberation Movement since at least the mid-1960s.
For a variety of reasons bisexuals have also organized
separately while continuing to be active in gay, lesbian
and other progressive movements.
Throughout
the 1970s while popular press articles focused on "bisexual
chic" in the club scene and among celebrities such as
Elton John, David Bowie and Patti Smith, bisexual groups
formed in several large US cities signaling the birth
of the modern Bisexual Civil Rights and Liberation Movement.
1972
- The Quaker Committee of Friends on Bisexuality issues
the "Ithaca Statement on Bisexuality" which appears
in The Advocate, a national gay and lesbian news magazine.
The statement announces a new bisexual consciousness
to gay readers.
1972
- The National Bisexual Liberation Group forms in New
York. Within three years, more than 5,500 members in
10 US chapters receive what is probably the earliest
bisexual newsletter, The Bisexual Expression.
1975
- Bi Forum, a social, educational, and support group,
forms in New York "to encourage awareness of bisexual
issues in a non threatening and non judgmental environment."
At its peak in 1980, BiForum has more than 200 active
members and a mailing list of several thousand.
1976
- The San Francisco Bisexual Center, the longest surviving
bisexual community center, opens its doors. A social
and educational organization, it offers counseling and
support services to Bay Area bisexuals and publishes
a newsletter, The Bi Monthly, from 1976 to 1984.
1977
- Alan Rockway, a psychologist and bisexual activist,
co-authors the nation's first successful gay rights
ordinance put to public vote, in Dade County, Florida.
When former Miss America and orange juice spokesperson,
Anita Bryant, initiates her viciously homophobic "Save
Our Children" campaign in response to the ordinance,
Dr. Rockway conceives of and initiates a national "gaycott"
of Florida orange juice. The Florida Citrus Commission
cancels Ms. Bryant's million dollar contract as a result
of the "gaycott."
1977
- The San Francisco Bisexual Center, in coalition with
members of the gay and lesbian community, sponsor a
press conference with lesbian activists Del Martin and
Phyllis Lyon, and pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock to
protest Anita Bryant's "Save Our Children" campaign.
1978-79
- Grassroots bisexual communities grow with the formation
of midwestern groups such as One To Five and Bi Women
Welcome in Minneapolis, The Bi Married Men's Group in
the Detroit suburbs, and Bi Ways in Chicago.
1979
- A. Billy S. Jones, bisexual founding member of National
Coalition of Black Lesbians and Gays, helps organize
the first black gay delegation to meet with President
Carter's White House staff. Jones is also a core organizer
of the 1979 March On Washington for Gay and Lesbian
Rights.
CHANGES
IN THE 1980s
In
the 1980s, bisexual groups mushroomed around the country
and the world. Throughout the 1980s bisexuals organized
significantly in the US, Canada, Europe, New Zealand,
and the UK. In addition to the various social and support
groups arising locally across the nation, by the mid-1980s
umbrella groups formed to consolidate resources and
facilitate regional organizing.
While
the groups of the 1970s were often predominantly male,
in the 1980s bisexual women took the organizational
lead. Many of these woman had been working in the Lesbian
and Women's Movements and the groups they formed often
reflected their feminist politics.
Also
among the new groups were those formed specifically
for bisexual political activism. By the late 1980s,
AIDS activism and service became the focus for many
bisexuals in response to the impact the epidemic was
having on the community.
1983
- The Boston Bisexual Women's Network (f. 1983), the
oldest extant bisexual women's group, begins publishing
their bi-monthly newsletter, Bi Women. The longest-lived
bisexual newsletter in the US, more than 600 people
currently receive Bi Women.
1983
- BiPOL, the first and oldest bisexual political organization,
forms in San Francisco. Founded on progressive feminist
principles, BiPOL "educates, advocates, and agitates
for bisexual rights, visibility and inclusion."
1984
- After a two year battle, BiPOL activist, AIDS educator,
and therapist Dr. David Lourea persuades the San Francisco
Department of Public Health to recognize bisexual men
in their official AIDS statistics. This acknowledgment
sets the standard for health departments nationwide
which previously had recognized only gay men. This acknowledgment
is significant because it forces health care providers
to recognize the existence of bisexual men, their potential
risk for contracting HIV, and their need to be targeted
for HIV prevention education.
1984
- BiPOL sponsors the first Bisexual Rights Rally outside
the 1984 Democratic National Convention in San Francisco.
The rally features nine speakers from civil rights groups
allied with the Bisexual Movement.
1984
- The First East Coast Conference on Bisexuality is
held at the Storrs School of Social Work at the Univ.
of Conn. About 150 people participate in what is the
first regional bisexual conference in the US.
1984
- The Boston Bisexual Men's Network (BBMN) forms to
address the social and support needs of bisexual men
in the greater Boston area. At its peak in 1988, about
150 people are receiving their newsletter, Boston Bisexual
Men's Network News.
1985
- The Bisexual Connection, a social and support organization
serving the greater Twin Cities Area forms in Minneapolis.
Currently 350 people receive their newsletter, Bi Focal.
1985
- Bisexual organizing on the East Coast reaches a new
level of sophistication as the East Coast Bisexual Network
forms. ECBN sponsors annual regional conferences and
retreats between 1985 and 1989 that draw from 150-250
people representing 10 eastern states.
1986
- BiPOL's Autumn Courtney is elected co-chair of San
Francisco's Lesbian Gay Freedom Day Pride Parade Committee.
This election marks the first time an openly bisexual
person holds this or a comparable position in the US.
1987
- A contingent of 75 bisexuals marches in the 1987 March
On Washington For Gay and Lesbian Rights. This event
proves to be the first nationwide bisexual gathering.
The first national bisexual organization is conceived
at this gathering, The North American Bisexual Network.
NABN would later change its name to BiNet USA. The article
"The Bisexual Movement: Are We Visible Yet?" appears
in the official Civil Disobedience Handbook for the
March.
1987
- The New York Area Bisexual Network (NYABN), a tri-state
regional group which forms in 1987 spearheads an anti-defamation
campaign that carries into the 1990s. For example, in
response to an October 1989 Cosmopolitan magazine article
that maliciously stereotypes bisexual men as dishonest
spreaders of AIDS, NYABN initiates a letter writing
campaign. Cosmopolitan has printed no articles defaming
bisexuals since the campaign.
1987
- The Bay Area Bisexual Network (BABN) forms in the
San Francisco Bay Area. BABN publishes a newsletter,
sponsors monthly educational forums, and coordinates
a speakers bureau. Currently BABN has about 1000 members.
1988
- Members of the Philadelphia-based group, Bi Unity
(f. 1987), successfully lobby the Philadelphia Mayor's
Commission on Sexual Minorities to form a work group
on bisexual issues.
1988
- Gary North publishesBisexuality: News, Views, and
Networking, the first national bisexual newsletter.
1988
- The Seattle Bisexual Women's Network (f. 1985) works
with Seattle city agencies throughout the late 1980s
to educate service providers and policy makers about
bisexual issues. For example, in 1988 SBWN testifies
at the Seattle Commission On Children and Youth Public
Hearings On Gay and Lesbian Youth and at the Seattle
Women's Commission of the Mayor's office . Both appearances
result in increased bisexual recognition in Seattle
government agencies. SBWN has published a bi-monthly
newsletter, North Bi Northwest, since 1988.
1988
- The Bisexual Committee Engaging in Politics (BiCEP),
a bisexual political/educational group forms in Boston.
BiCEP's most enduring contribution are many of the educational
pamphlets currently available through the Bisexual Resource
Center.
1989
- Openly bisexual veteran Cliff Arnesen testifies before
the US Congress on behalf of gay, lesbian and bisexual
veteran's issues. Arnesen is the first veteran to testify
about gay, lesbian and bisexual issues and the first
openly non-heterosexual veteran to testify on Capitol
Hill about veteran's issues in general.
1989
- Seattle Bisexual Men's Union (SBMU), an anti-sexist
men's education and support group, forms. Members organize
a support presence at the annual Women Take Back The
Night marches. As a result of continuing testimony by
SBMU, the current draft of Seattle's city plan (which
includes housing codes) now recognizes families headed
by same-gender partnerships.
1989
- BiPAC, the New York-based Bisexual Political/Public
Action Committee which forms in 1989, challenges biphobia
in the lesbian and gay community with a national letter
writing campaign in 1990. The campaign successfully
persuades an educational institution to remove an offensive
workshop it offers called "Bisexual Men: Fact or Fiction?"
NATIONAL
AND INTERNATIONAL CONSOLIDATION-1990s
In
the 1990s, the bisexual political community expands
and consolidates with national and international coalitions.
Regional conferences strengthen smaller and newer communities,
especially in the Midwest and the South. Bisexual groups
continue to form as awareness and discussion of bisexuality
broadens. Although the list is incomplete and growing
daily, according to The Bisexual Resource Guide (published
by the Bisexual Resource Center) there are currently
more than 1300 bisexual groups in 48 US states, Washington,
DC and 19 countries.
JUNE
1990 - BiPOL sponsors the first National Bisexual Conference
in San Francisco. More than 450 people attend from 20
states and 5 countries. The mayor of S.F. sends a proclamation
"commending the bisexual rights community for its leadership
in the cause of social justice," declaring June 23,
1990 Bisexual Pride Day. The North American Bisexual
Network (NABN) is formalized as the North American Multicultural
Bisexual Network (NAMBN) at this first meeting of its
members. The conference inspires attendees from Dallas
to create the first bisexual group in Texas, BiNet Dallas.
FALL
1990 - Susan Carlton offers the first academic course
on bisexuality in the US at UC Berkeley.
WINTER
1991 - The Bay Area Bisexual Network begins publishing
the first and only national bisexual quarterly magazine,
Anything That Moves: Beyond The Myths Of Bisexuality.
OCTOBER
1991 - The First International Conference on Bisexuality
is held at Vrije University in Amsterdam. About 250
people attend from nine countries.
FEBRUARY
1992 - The Bisexual Connection (Minnesota) sponsors
the First Annual Midwest Regional Bisexual Conference.
BECAUSE (Bisexual Empowerment Conference: A Uniting,
Supportive Experience) draws close to 150 people from
at least five midwestern states each year.
APRIL
1992 - Minnesota amends its State Civil Rights Law to
grant the most comprehensive civil rights protections
for bisexual, lesbian, gay, and transgender people in
the country. Minnesota's bisexual community unites with
lesbian, gay, and transgender groups to lobby for this
statute.
NOVEMBER
1992 - The South Florida Bisexual Network (f. 1989)
and the Florida International University's Stonewall
Students Union co-sponsor the First Annual Southeast
Regional Bisexual Conference. Thirty-five people from
at least four southeastern states attend.
OCTOBER
1992 - The 2nd International Bisexual Conference is
held in London. More than 130 people attend from 13
countries. German bisexuals announce the establishment
of a national bisexual network in Germany.
NOVEMBER
1992 - Colorado votes to deny civil rights protection
for bisexual, lesbian, and gay people by passing Amendment
2, the first such amendment to pass by popular vote
in the US. The Colorado Supreme Court declares the measure
unconstitutional in October, 1994. The case is bound
for the US Supreme Court.
FEBRUARY
1993 - BiNet USA, the Seattle Bisexual Women's Network
and the Seattle Bisexual Men's Union sponsor the First
Annual Northwest Regional Conference, in Seattle. Fifty-five
people representing Washington, Oregon, Alaska, Montana,
and British Columbia attend.
SPRING
1993 - The East Coast Bisexual Network revises its mandate
and changes its name to the Bisexual Resource Center
(BRC). As an international resource on bisexuality,
the BRC provides educational services and materials,
publishes The Bisexual Resource Guide annually, and
maintains an international bisexual archive.
APRIL
1993 - BiPOL (San Francisco) mobilizes a successful
nationwide lobbying campaign for visible bisexual inclusion
in the March On Washington. Openly bisexual people take
key leadership roles in local and regional organizing
for the 1993 March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay and
Bi Equal Rights and Liberation. As a result, for the
first time bisexuals are included in the title of the
March and are represented on the stage by bisexual activist
and author Lani Ka'ahumanu. More than 1000 people march
with the bisexual contingent in addition to the uncounted
bisexuals who marched with other groups. This event
signifies the national recognition and growing awareness
of bisexual issues and the increasing grassroots power
of the bisexual community.
APRIL
1993 - In an unprecedented coalition of national and
nationally-recognized bisexual groups, BiNet USA, the
Bisexual Resource Center (BRC), and the Washington,
DC-based Alliance of Multicultural Bisexuals (AMBi)
sponsor the Second National Conference Celebrating Bisexuality
in Washington, DC to coincide with the March On Washington.
More than 600 people attend from the US and Europe making
it the largest Bisexual Conference to date.
OCTOBER
1993 - San Diego, CA based BiForum (f.1982) hosts BiWest
1993, a western regional bisexual conference. More than
250 people attend from at least five states and three
countries.
FALL
1993 - Sheela Lambert writes, produces, and hosts the
first television series by and for the bisexual community.
Bisexual Network successfully airs for 13 weeks on NYC
Public Access Cable.
JUNE
1994 - Bisexual communities based in Fayetteville, Raleigh,
Chapel Hill, and Charlotte unite to form the North Carolina
Bisexual Network (NCBN). In October 1994, NCBN sponsors
the Second Annual Southeast Regional Bisexual Conference.
Approximately 100 people attend from 11 states.
JUNE
1994 - New York hosts the Third International Bisexual
Conference in conjunction with the celebration of the
25th anniversary of the Stonewall Rebellion, the symbolic
origin of the Gay and Lesbian Rights and Liberation
Movement. About 400 people attend from at least five
countries. The visible bisexual presence at the celebration
signifies our link to the past: bisexuals fought in
the Stonewall Rebellion of 1969, and celebrate the changes
it has inspired in the present
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