valkyrieza: (Firefly - Mal bonnet comment)
valkyrieza ([personal profile] valkyrieza) wrote2007-03-29 08:42 pm

Discrimination and stupidity...makes me so mad!

FROM NEWS19: A gay couple looking to rent a hotel room say they were turned away because of their sexuality.

"She wasn't discreet about it," said Jason Pickel, referring to a hotel employee. "She was not apologetic. She just said, 'We do not rent to gay people.'"


For the past two and a half years, Pickel and Darren Black Bear have been in a committed relationship. During a search for a temporary home, the couple says it went to Affordable Suites of America, a long-term stay hotel located on Gion Street in Sumter.

"We were inquiring about the price, deposits, extra person fee, and she asked who the room was going to be for, and I said for my partner and I, Pickel said. She said, 'Oh we don't rent to multiple people of the same sex.' I said, so you don't rent to gay couples? She said, 'No, we don't rent to gay people at all.'"

The website for Affordable Suites of America states the company does not allow children or pets in its suites, but there is no mention of same sex couples.

News19 contacted the hotel, posing as a potential renter, and inquired about two men staying in the same room. The receptionist who answered the phone told us the following: Our policy is we don't rent to two people of the same sex if we only have one bed.If that  is your policy, we asked. That's corporate policy because they only have one sleeping area. We then asked, Okay, but they can't share the bed "I suppose they could, but most men don't want to," she said.

However, when News19 called the owner of the hotel, Carroll Atkisson, he says there had been some confusion. He says any couple can come to the place and they will rent to them, period. Atkisson says the policy was not mean to target homosexuals. He says they were just trying to stop two single people from being in the same bed.

Pickel and Black Bear say they still plan to seek legal action. "Everyone is floored, shocked and outraged," said Pickel. "We have contacted some of our friends who are activists."

Currently, there is no state law preventing a hotel from refusing service to a same-sex couple. However, it is illegal to discriminate on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, gender, disability, or marital status.

"If they have a policy, it has to be maintained fair and equitably," says Tom Sponseller, President of the Hospitality Association of South Carolina. "At the beach, for example, because there are different bike weekends at the beach, that policy has to be enforced, and consistent."

There is currently a bill in the State Senate that addresses this issue. The measure, proposed by Charleston Democrat Robert Ford, would expand the Lodging Establishment Act to include prohibition of discrimination because of sexual orientation or gender identity.

I think that in addition to being mad that such discrimination constantly rears its head, I also have a problem with the economical side of things. It is so typical in any service industry, hire the insensitive barely educated person as your front line, making this kind of an impression on potential customers, because it is so much cheaper then hiring a hospitality industry professional. This is not about just about discrimination, at least from the side of the hotel itself, just from the bigoted receptionist, masking her prejudice under the: "It's corporate policy." banner. It's also about being smart in business and profiting from it. If that includes doing a bit of screening of your future personnel attitude-wise go for it, it is better to pay more to a better employee, then to pay lawsuit damages.

.All the nice greedy business was doing is trying to make sure that two people don't get charged only for one. So what is the official stance? They are trying to 'stop two single people from being in the same bed.' Because only bad people do that, oh and those darn cheapskates! The fact that if one want to rent a single room for two people? Charge them per person per room or for an extra bed in the room. If they are a couple, make it a corporate policy to charge couples for a double room, not a single one. Bank accounts do not care about your gender, religion, sexual orientation, colour or martial status, they just like to increase in size.

Personally, they should change just sue the hotel association, they'll be making a point where it counts: the shareholders' pockets.

I feel there should be a Dilbert cartoon about this, or at least a post in the Dilbert blog.