Springfield's investment in Bransford center disregards vulnerable LGBTQ youth | Opinion

On May 18, the City of Springfield granted $1 million to Bransford Community Center.

Twenty Tennessean articles have chronicled the precarious start-up trajectory of Bransford, which is projected to occupy the site of an historic but now demolished high school from which my grandmother graduated.

Its stated mission is to “instill hope in all Robertson County residents, regardless of their race, socio-economic status or age.”

Sounds inclusive and welcoming, right?

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Notably, Gardner, a retired engineer who now leads City of Faith International, attributed inclusion to a “Jezebel spirit” of false prophecy, and likened LGBTQ families to the Antichrist.

Recently, Pastor Gardner’s Men’s Conference featured David Perry, a Selma pastor who once withheld food from a dog for nearly two days to teach a Bible lesson.

“I believe that after you spend some time walking in dominion, everything around you should obey you. Now I know, Cowboy, I ain’t fed him in about two days just for this video,” Perry said in the video, according to The Selma Times Journal.

More: Tennessee lawmakers seek to cancel LGBTQ history and censor education | Opinion

City officials ignored my concerns or blocked me

The Bransford Gymnasium at the Bransford Community Center, 1519 John L. Patterson St. in Springfield, was being prepared for demolition in June 2016. The entire building was later razed after structural problems were detected during the demolition of the gym.
The Bransford Gymnasium at the Bransford Community Center, 1519 John L. Patterson St. in Springfield, was being prepared for demolition in June 2016. The entire building was later razed after structural problems were detected during the demolition of the gym.

Why should we care about complicit leadership in a town of just 17,000 people and 12.2 square miles?

Mayor Ann Schneider did not acknowledge my concerns about Robert Gardner, nor did Alderpersons Bobby Trotter or Emily C. Green. And Alderperson Lisa DiVirgilio Arnold blocked me from her public Facebook page.

On two occasions, I illustrated for all of these officials –– each of whom swore an oath to govern to the best of their knowledge – a snapshot of the structural trauma Tennessee’s LGBTQ children endure.

Let me paint a picture for you.

In Middle Tennessee, children who either come out as LGBTQ, or get stereotyped as LGBTQ, comprise 40% of homeless minors, and 78% of those experience further abuse in the child welfare system.

Considering that 80% of Tennessee is Christian –– and Pulaski is home to the cross-burning KKK –– surmising that religious extremism plays a role is not far-fetched.

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LGBTQ youth are a vulnerable population

Unsurprisingly, The Trevor Project –– the only around-the-clock crisis and suicide prevention helpline for LGBTQ youth –– recently told NBC that Tennessee youth contacted The Trevor Lifeline 2,400 times during the pandemic.

And only 9% of Tennessee's LGBTQ students described their school’s curricula as inclusive, according to a 2019 report by GLSEN (Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network) Tennessee.

Forty-four percent, however, reported overhearing staff disparage self-defined gender expression, and 25% reported witnessing heterosexist bias toward LGBTQ romantic orientations.

Even worse, the non-discrimination clause of Robertson County Schools, which governs Springfield’s schools, omits both LGBTQ students and educators as a protected class.

The final blow is that Bransford’s board includes state Sen. Kerry Roberts and state Rep. Sabi Kumar. Recently, Kumar and Roberts, both Republicans, voted in favor of HB 0580, a bill opposing public school lessons on systemic racism.

And in April, Roberts publicly opposed an LGBTQ-inclusive curriculum. Roberts has also voiced that eliminating higher education — a "liberal breeding ground" — would "save America."

Not to mention, the Tennessee General Assembly recently passed the most anti-trans bills nationwide.

Small-town America depends on the church, but it's not right refuge for all

I communicated to Springfield leaders that for some children, drop-in and educational spaces like Bransford serve as the only refuge and buffer from family and religious abuse, or community and school violence.

I warned of pastors failing to neatly compartmentalize fundamentalist bigotry strictly to the parameters of religious leadership. And I reiterated that advocates and educators who refuse to foster welcoming spaces of respect and safety traumatize their community at large.

Araya Baker
Araya Baker

Yet, in rural and small-town America, the pervasive dependency on church to cope with limited outlets and social mobility can deter local government officials from confronting pastors who disguise Bible-bashing as sensational, yet convincing, propaganda.

Elected officials often keep quiet for the sake of re-election. This governmental complicity, compounded by a widespread lack of diversity, can threaten constituents from marginalized groups, who often discover that their outward differences and hypervisibility render them vulnerable to collective scapegoating.

More: Anti-trans laws are based on puffery. When will lawmakers stop bullying children? | Plazas

While Springfield officials did not acknowledge my concerns — as their taxpayer-compensated positions should have obliged them to do — they did epitomize how complicity and denial perpetuate institutional bias and systemic injustice.

Their inaction and passivity can harm any minoritized population just as much as blatant prejudice and discrimination.

Tennessee needs leaders who will take a stand and support young LGBTQ people, especially young queer people of color, a demographic antagonized by myriad socially-constructed barriers and pitfalls.

On the whole, elected officials in Springfield may be good people. I would hope so. Nevertheless, niceness and sympathy — while consoling on a personal level — do not translate into protection on an institutional, legislative, or cultural level.

Araya Baker is a counselor, suicidologist, and policy analyst, originally from Springfield, Tennessee. Baker holds a M.Phil.Ed. in professional counseling from the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education and an Ed.M. in human development and psychology from the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Learn more at arayabaker.com.

This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Springfield's investment in Bransford center disregards LGBTQ youth