Eliza Byard: Last News

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The New Head of GLSEN on How She'll Protect Queer Kids

GLSEN has seen much success in its goal to make schools safer for LGBTQ+ students, but the job is nowhere near finished, says new executive director Melanie Willingham-Jaggers.“We’ve made incredible progress in recent years, and I’m eager to make more progress, but I know that too many of our students still aren’t safe,” says Willingham-Jaggers, who’s the first person of color, first nonbinary person, and first Black woman to head the organization.Willingham-Jaggers, who uses she/they pronouns, became executive director in January. They were named interim executive director a year earlier, when Eliza Byard stepped down after nearly 20 years leading GLSEN, and had been deputy executive director since 2019.Challenges facing the educational system and marginalized students include systemic inequities such as insufficient funding, along with legislation that seeks to erase LGBTQ+ content from the curriculum and discriminate against LGBTQ+ youth, especially transgender youth, she notes.
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21.02 / 14:33
lgbtq youth students featured LGBTQ students are under attack. GLSEN’s Melanie Willingham-Jaggers is ready to fight back.
METRO WEEKLY: Let’s talk about your earliest years and what your family was like as a child.MELANIE WILLINGHAM-JAGGERS: I was raised by a single mother. She was single by choice, and a mother by choice. There’s some complexity here, because I actually come from a really big extended family.
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