Transgender Pioneer Award

 

2024 Transgender Pioneer Award Recipient

 

Since 2002, the Transgender Pioneer Award has honored trans leaders once a year at TransWeek and Fantasia Fair. It is a lifetime achievement award to those who have sacrificed their careers, their families, and their fortunes to change the world so trans people could begin to come together in safety and comfort. Without them, we would not be here; we would be at home, hiding in our closets. We meet to honor their work and thank them for all they have done for us and to give them back a little in return for their decades of work on our behalf.

The Board of Directors of International Transgender Education Organization is happy to announce the 2024 recipient of the distinguished Transgender Pioneer Award, Shannon Price Minter.

Shannon Price Minter is a native East Texan. He was born on February 14, 1961. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Texas at Austin and a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree from Cornell Law School. He is the long time Legal Director of the nonprofit National Center for Lesbian Rights. NCLR was established in 1977 by legal scholar Donna Hitchens and for nearly fifty years has been committed to advancing the civil and human rights of LGBTQ people via litigation, legislation, policy, and public education.

Shannon came to national attention in 2001 when he represented Diane Whipple, whose partner had died after being attacked by a dog. He won the case, which extended tort claims to same-sex domestic partners in California. Two years later, in 2003, he represented trans man Michael Kantaras in a child custody case featured on Court TV. In 2008, he successfully argued before the California Supreme Court on behalf of same-sex couples seeking the freedom to marry. When that victory was reversed by a ballot initiative, Shannon successfully defended the validity of existing marriages; Ken Starr was the opposing council. In 2015, he represented married same-sex couples from Tennessee in one of the four cases consolidated in Obergefell v. Hodges, which established marriage equality for LGBTQ individuals nationwide. Shannon has taught law at numerous universities and is the recipient of a 2006 Ford Foundation Leadership for a Changing World award. In 2017, Shannon successfully challenged President Trump’s transgender military ban. Today he continues to litigate on behalf of transgender people and their families including challenges to medical bans in Alabama, Florida, and Kentucky and to sports bans in Arizona and Utah.

When Shannon came out at age seventeen as a lesbian, his parents did not take it well. When he later told his family he was trans “they told me that I should not come home anymore.” Of this, Shannon said “During all those years when I was not able to be with my family, it was the worst pain I can imagine. Because I love them so much” (Funk, 2016). Other family members came to accept him, but it took the better part of a decade for his parents to come around.

In 2001, Shannon and his longtime partner Robin were married. They moved from the West Coast to the small Texas town where Shannon was born and managed to purchase his grandmother’s 1937 house.

On March 2, 2023, a tornado struck Shannon and Robin’s home, damaging it badly. Of immediate concern were the four dogs and ten cats they cared for, all rescued near their property; all were fine. The area’s residents, many of whom had known Shannon for his entire life, were wonderful. Friends started a GoFundMe campaign and raised $80,000, which went a long way toward restoration of the property. Without the fund, Robin told the Bay Area Reporter, it would have been impossible to save the house (Laird, 2023).

Despite it all, Shannon did not miss one day of work.

References
Funk, Mason. (2016, August 7). Interview with Shannon Minter. Outwords, (Accessed 23 May, 2024).

The Transgender Pioneer Award will be presented on October 26, 2024 in Provincetown during Transgender Week.

 

Past Transgender Pioneer Award Recipients

 

Angela Gardner (2023)

Jude Patton and Rupert Raj (2022)

Reverend Moonhawk River Stone (2021)

Marisa Richmond, Ph.D. (2019)

Aaron H. Devor, Ph.D. (2018)

Gwendolyn Ann Smith (2017)

Martine Rothblatt (2017)

Jennnifer Finney Boylan (2016)

Monica Roberts (2015)

Jamison Green (2014)

Mariette Pathy Allen (2013)

Joanne Roberts (2013)

Yvonne Cook-Riley (2013)

Mara Keisling (2012)

Monica Helms (2011)

Sandra Cole (2011)

Ethan St. Pierre (2010)

Dallas Denny (2009)

Alison and Dottie Laing (2008)

Stephen Whittle (2007)

Holly Boswell (2006)

Joanne Law (2005)

Nancy Nangeroni (2005)

Sister Mary Elizabeth / Joanna Clark (2004)

Judy Osborne (2004)

Phyllis Randolph Frye (2003)

Ariadne Kane (2003)

Merissa Sherrill Lynn (2002)

Virginia Prince, Ph.D. (2002)

Getting Started at the Fair

Sunday

Fair check in (@Boatslip 1-5 pm)
Review your welcome packet and Fair schedule for the week
Stroll around town and get your bearings
Attend the Welcome Reception

Monday

Check the day's schedule
Kick Off Brunch
Attend the Welcome Dinner/Dance

Tuesday

Check the day's schedule
Attend the Newcomers Lunch

You've settled in. You've got the hang of it.
Enjoy the Fair!

Daily

Afternoon Key Note and Workshops
Mingle in the courtyard at the Crown