您现在的位置是:【微信950216】银钻公司客服联系方式怎么联系 > 百科
Olympia considers polyamorous discrimination protection ordinance
【微信950216】银钻公司客服联系方式怎么联系2026-01-27 02:54:36【百科】8人已围观
简介Facebook TwitterThreads FlipboardCommentsPrintEmailAdd Fox News on Google‘Radi
- Threads
- Comments
- Add Fox News on Google
‘Radical wokeism’ threatens American liberty: Dr Zuhdi Jasser
Arizona congressional candidate and American Islamic Forum for Democracy founder Dr. Zuhdi Jasser discusses the need to combat radicalism on ‘Life, Liberty & Levin.’
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!The Washington state capital city of Olympia is pursuing an ordinance that supporters say would protect polyamorous relationships and other non-traditional families from discrimination.
"With issues like this, you constantly find that, not that folks are underground, but it’s hard for folks to come forward about these things because it is a very private thing, and we want them to feel welcome in our community and not ostracized," Olympia City Council Member Robert Vanderpool told KOMONews.
The ordinance being considered would make "family or relationship structure" a protected category under Olympia’s current civil rights protections. Polyamory generally refers to relationships featuring multiple romantic partners, in contrast to typical monogamous relationships.
It would include, but not be limited to, "The composition of interrelationships within a household, involvement in intimate personal relationships between consenting adults, non-normative and non-nuclear family arrangements, including multi-partner and multi-parent families, blended, (step) families, multi-generational households, single-parents-by-choice, chosen families, and similar configurations," the city of Olympia said in information shared with Fox News Digital.
MASSACHUSETTS DROPS CONTROVERSIAL GENDER IDEOLOGY MANDATE FOR LICENSING FOSTER CARE PARENTS

The city of Olympia in Washington state is pursuing an ordinance that supporters say would protect polyamorous relationships and other non-traditional families from discrimination. (Getty Images)
"I think the biggest thing that comes up is housing, folks that are in polyamorous relationships or non-monogamous, or even chosen families – it’s hard in a chosen family to put someone on their mortgage," Vanderpool said.
According to KOMONews, city leaders are working with activists such as OPEN, the Organization for Polyamory and Ethical Non-Monogamy, based in Oakland, California, for help in drafting the ordinance.
"OPEN's research found that 60 percent of non monogamous individuals report experiencing stigma or discrimination on the basis of their family or relationship structure," Brett Chamberlain, executive director of OPEN, claimed in the article. "This can look like family rejection, social rejection, being denied promotion or even fired from a job, having Child Protective Services called, being denied medical care by a medical care provider, or stigmatized by a mental health care provider."
KOMONews reported that if the ordinance passes, Olympia would be "the first city in Washington state to address the growing number of families with diverse structures."
HERITAGE FOUNDATION WARNS AMERICA 'DANGEROUSLY CLOSE' TO FAMILY BREAKDOWN POINT OF NO RETURN

KOMONews reported that if the ordinance passes, Olympia would be "the first city in Washington state to address the growing number of families with diverse structures." (SrdjanPav via Getty Images)
Chamberlain told Fox News Digital in a statement, "These protections are critical because family and relationship structures have fundamentally changed. Only 18% of US households fit the ‘traditional’ nuclear family model, yet our laws haven't caught up with this reality. About 5% of adults are currently in consensually non-monogamous relationships, and 1 in 5 will be at some point in their lives."
He said he expects the ordinance to pass on Feb. 9, which he said would make "Olympia the first city in Washington and the fifth nationwide (following Somerville and Cambridge, MA in 2023 and Berkeley and Oakland, CA in 2024) to establish these protections."
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE MEDIA AND CULTURE NEWS

In a statement to Fox News Digital, Jason Rantz, talk show host and columnist at Seattle Red, said that "This proposal pretends it's about tolerance when it's really about the government elevating a lifestyle choice into a protected class and forcing everyone else to accommodate it." (iStock)
In a statement to Fox News Digital, Jason Rantz, a conservative radio host and columnist at Seattle Red, said, "This proposal pretends it's about tolerance when it's really about the government elevating a lifestyle choice into a protected class and forcing everyone else to accommodate it."
Rantz, who published an opinion pieceMonday on the proposed ordinance, added that, "Once you blur the line between immutable traits and personal romantic arrangements, anti-discrimination law stops being a shield and becomes a weapon against landlords, employers, and families. That kind of vague, activist-driven policymaking is what happens when the Radical Left runs a city."
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
The Olympia city manager told Fox News Digital that "Staff is working to prepare a draft ordinance that will come forward to the Council at a future date to be determined."
Fox News Digital reached out to Vanderpool for comment. The city is in left-leaning Thurston County, which went easily for Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election as she won the state.
很赞哦!(23959)
热门文章
站长推荐
友情链接
- 400味中药功效记忆顺口溜视频,中药功效口诀大全
- 综漫:女主角落难?我趁虚而入
- 自动开盖、杀菌的电子感应垃圾桶
- Stephen A Smith fired back at Joy Reid, Jasmine Crockett accusations
- Director Judd Apatow claims America 'in a dictatorship' at Golden Globes
- 爱吃海鲜容易得结石吗?
- dnf手游画面怎么设置 dnf手游怎么设置最高画质
- 国家统计局:推动CPI温和回升的有利因素在累积
- 闫学晶母子先后道歉,为何难获谅解?
- 阿富汗首都发生一起爆炸事件,有2名中国公民受重伤
- 创始人再出山 海底捞要第二次创业?
- 两连败!国乒无缘多哈挑战赛女双决赛 日本包揽冠亚军
- 环旭电子子公司环兴光电取得成都光创联科技有限公司控制权,推动光互连产业整合
- 鸣潮嘤鸣初相召任务如何完成 嘤鸣初相召任务玩法介绍
- 海澜国际马术俱乐部母公司海澜集团1500万物资驰援武汉
- 国手赛檀啸不敌金禹丞 范廷钰屠晓宇等晋级八强
- 3名中国选手晋级澳网资格赛决胜轮,还有2朵金花在激战
- 武夷岩茶铁罗汉的来源
- 小卡缺战哈登31+10巴恩斯24+7+6 快船加时擒猛龙
- Washington Post reporter’s home raided by FBI







