The government is
claiming it's a coincidence that a federal Web site
containing health resources for gay men and lesbians
disappeared less than two weeks after the right-wing
Family Research Council complained to a top government
official, but LGBT advocates, including House member
Tammy Baldwin, aren't buying it.
Southern Voice reports that the Family
Research Council sent a letter January 11 to Michael
Leavitt, secretary of Health and Human Services,
complaining that pages on the agency's
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Web site contained "biased, politically charged
language such as condemnations of so-called
homophobia and sexual prejudice." The site was later
mysteriously removed.
HHS administrator Mark Weber said the site
should have been removed two years ago. But although
he claimed the timing of the deletion and the FRC
letter were not related, last month Weber told
Congressional Quarterly that it was only after
being contacted by the FRC that the agency realized the Web
site was an "LGBT pride site."
Baldwin, a Democrat who's the only out lesbian
member of Congress, is leading a House inquiry
into the removal of the site, calling it
"outrageous that an organization with a long track
record of attacks on the LGBT community can
successfully pressure a government agency to stop
providing preventative health care information to LGBT Americans."
Baldwin is also circulating a letter among her
colleagues condemning the actions of the government
agency. (Sirius OutQ News)