GRAND RAPIDS, MINN. — Ten minutes before the start of a recent Human Rights Commission meeting here, there was chatter in the hallway of City Hall and then dozens of residents poured through the double doors — dozens more than usually attend this monthly meeting.
Some wore rainbow stickers, and one had wrapped a trans pride flag over her shoulders like a cape. When three rows of seats filled, some people took to the floor or stood against a wall.
Itasca Pride, an organization so new that its nonprofit status is still pending, is in the process of planning its first pride event, a day of vendors and family-friendly entertainment on June 23 at Old Central School.
But its plans were quickly countered with plans for a “straight pride” parade to “protect the children” at the same location on the same day. The walk downtown will “promote spouses and couples the way God intended; Male and female,” according to the event’s Facebook post.
So Itasca Pride’s treasurer Karter Starling took to the podium of the normally quiet Human Rights Commission meeting to introduce himself and the new organization.
“Our human rights are currently under attack, no matter who is in power, because hateful people choose on a daily basis — just in the limited time they have on this beautiful planet — hurting others,” Starling said.
Starling, 25, and his spouse moved to Minnesota in part because of its hate-crime protections, the accessibility of gender-affirming care and climate resilience. Grand Rapids edged out Vermont when they made their choice. He feels safe here, he said, but the local LGBT community has faced responses ranging from rock-throwing to death threats.
“As I’m sure many of you know, our existence as queer people, but especially queer people in the Itasca community, has consistently been met with hatred and resistance from a very loud, very hateful minority,” Starling said.