Please Stand Up? asks PFAW |
Compiled by GayToday People for the American Way
People For the American Way Foundation (PFAWF) President Ralph G. Neas said the new fundraising campaign sends a false message to the public. "Either the Salvation Army is confused or it's trying to confuse the public," said Neas. "There's a huge gap between the claims of this direct-mail piece and the words and deeds of Salvation Army officials." Neas also noted that the late November mailing by the Salvation Army's National Capital and Virginia Division began arriving at the homes of potential donors only days after the organization's Nov. 12 decision to rescind a policy granting health-care benefits to the domestic partners of gay employees.
In July, Salvation Army spokesman George Hood told the Post that hiring gay employees "really begins to chew away at the theological fabric of who we are." And, according to an article on the Web site of Concerned Women for America-a Religious Right group-Salvation Army Commissioner Lawrence Moretz stressed last month that the organization "has not changed" its position on "homosexuality" or other "basic doctrines or moral positions." It isn't known if other divisions of the Salvation Army are distributing the "Equality" card with their fundraising appeals. A copy of the "Equality" card can be viewed below. Religious Right leaders had forcefully criticized the decision by the organization's Western Territory to grant domestic partner benefits. In a letter signed by American Family Association leader Don Wildmon and many others, the domestic partner benefits were criticized as an attempt to award benefits "to a sinful relationship." On Nov. 12, the Salvation Army's commissioners conference rescinded the domestic partner benefits and firmly established a national policy "to extend health benefit access to an employee's spouse and dependent children only." Nationwide, the Salvation Army has a workforce of about 55,000. |