The City of West Hollywood has received a score of 100 on the Human Rights Campaign’s 2022 Municipal Equality Index (MEI), a nationwide evaluation of municipal laws affecting the LGBTQ community. The City received bonus points in recognition of specific services such as those to LGBTQ youth, seniors, and homeless people; services to people with HIV/AIDS; and services to transgender people. The City also received bonus calculations for its single-occupancy all-gender facilities, for its employee domestic partner benefits, and for its openly LGBTQ elected municipal leaders.
The Human Rights Campaign launched the MEI in 2012 and rates cities yearly. The MEI examines the laws, policies, and services of municipalities of various sizes from every state in the country and rates them on the basis of their inclusivity of LGBT people living and working in those cities. This year’s score once again places the City of West Hollywood at the top of rated municipalities in the nation. HRC rated a total of 506 cities. The City of West Hollywood has received a score of 100+ on the MEI for many consecutive years.
A city’s MEI score is based on its non-discrimination laws, its recognition of relationships, its fairness and inclusiveness as an employer, its municipal services, its law enforcement, and its relationship with its LGBTQ community. Detailed scorecard information is posted on the HRC website at www.hrc.org/mei. A PDF scorecard for the City of West Hollywood’s 2022 MEI is available at https://hrc-prod-requests.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/MEI-2022-West-Hollywood-California.pdf.
Since incorporation in 1984, the City of West Hollywood has become one of the most influential cities in the nation in regard to its stance on LGBTQ issues — no other city of its size has had a greater impact on the national public policy discourse on fairness and inclusiveness for LGBTQ people. The City of West Hollywood is a community with a sizeable LGBTQ population. According to a 2019 Community Study survey, 43 percent of West Hollywood residents identified as part of the LGBTQ community, with 33 percent identifying as gay male, four percent identifying as lesbian, three percent identifying as bisexual, and three percent identifying as sexually fluid. The City has advocated for nearly four decades for measures to support LGBTQ individuals and has been in the vanguard on efforts to gain equality for all people on a state, national, and international level. The City was also the first city to create a domestic partnership registry as well as to offer benefits to City employees for same-sex couples.
As the largest civil rights organization working to achieve equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender Americans, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) represents a force of more than 1.5 million members and supporters nationwide — all committed to making HRC’s vision a reality. Founded in 1980, HRC advocates on behalf of LGBTQ Americans, mobilizes grassroots actions in diverse communities, invests strategically to elect fair-minded individuals to office, and educates the public about LGBT issues.
For additional information about the Human Rights Campaign’s 2022 Municipal Equality Index (MEI), please contact press@hrc.org.
The Municipal Equality Index (MEI) is a rating system that evaluates the laws, policies, and services of cities of varying sizes across the country, based on how welcoming they are to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and questioning (LGBTQ) residents and workers.
…and scored lowest in public safety, cleanliness and a city council with common sense.
No Comments? Not surprised, as it is all talk, talk, talk and very little action yet everyone can win an award.