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Community Corner

Local Residents Celebrates 25 Years of LA PRIDE

By Rick Scot

As the Los Angeles PRIDE parade approaches and the company I work for, Bank of America, prepares to once again have close to 400 participants marching down the streets in our red community volunteer t-shirts, I am reminded of my first pride parade.

The year was 1989, and I was a scared young man who didn’t have any friends in the LGBT community.  I walked to the parade from my house and stood at the barricade watching the sea of people partake in all the festivities. The following year I marched in my first parade and was glad I did! Since then, I have participated in every LA PRIDE parade and this year will mark my 25th year.

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LA Pride and the LGBT community have come a long way and have grown tremendously since the days of having large numbers of protesters on the street shouting and carrying signs with anti-gay rhetoric. I remember the hostility and the arguments. The parade felt less like a celebration and more of a way for the community to show solidarity.

Fast forward to today and I can say that LA PRIDE is truly a celebration, as the number of protesters diminished from a large group to two or three people while all kinds of people participate to show their support - including so many more families and children.  As a matter of fact, this year will be the first year that I get to march down the street with my parents! We’ve talked about it for years and I’m excited to have them by my side, especially my Mom who will surely have tears of joy and a wide smile walking down the street– my biological family and my community family together. 

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Lastly, there has been a significant increase in the corporate sponsorship and support from major companies like Bank of America and the Walt Disney Company. It was only a short time ago that we were fighting for job equality in most of corporate America. Every year as we prepare for this great event, I am overwhelmed with gratitude that I get to work for a company that offers a safe environment where I can bring my true self to work.

Over the years, thousands of Bank of America employees, friends and family members have marched in PRIDE parades across California alone, representing the bank’s commitment to diversity and inclusion.  I can honestly say that Bank of America takes pride in all its associates.

It truly has been amazing to see the tremendous strides we as a community have made in such a short amount of time- from issues of health benefits to marriage equality - as represented in the growth and tone of LA PRIDE. 

Rick Scot is a Senior Technology Manager for Bank of America and a member of the bank’s LGBT Pride Employee Network for Southern California. 

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