Officials with Cirque du Soleil, under fire recently for firing a gay HIV-positive
gymnast, said it’s too early to judge the company that delivers popular
shows across the country, according to Renée-Claude Ménard, a Cirque
spokesperson.
“The reasons that motivated our decision have nothing to do with discrimination,
but safety,” Ménard said. “Being accused of discrimination
is biased right now. People are jumping to conclusions before the whole issue
is analyzed by the authorities.”
Cirque fired Matthew Cusick, an HIV-positive gymnast, in March after he spent
months preparing for an aerial act in the Las Vegas show, “Mystere,” according
to Cirque and Cusick.
“I was crushed,” Cusick told Southern Voice. “I saw a dream
that was happening, and now it’s not. Now it’s just something that’s
not coming true.”
The national attention for Cusick’s case and HIV discrimination escalated
with protests of Cirque shows in San Francisco on Nov. 20 and a subsequent
investigation into Cirque’s policies by the San Francisco Human Rights
Commission.
And on the verge of World AIDS Day on Dec. 1, the ACLU also sought to raise
awareness of “critical civil rights problems” by releasing a report
about the incidence of bias based on HIV status. At the same time, the civil
rights group announced that it filed lawsuits on behalf of an HIV-positive
woman in Nebraska fired from her job.
“We all expected that we would learn of discrimination persisting, but
we were surprised that it was as prevalent as it was,” said Leslie Cooper,
staff attorney with ACLU’s AIDS Project. “Almost everyone that
we interviewed had stories of discrimination.”
Officials from Cirque du Sol
eil met with attorneys from Lambda Legal Defense & Education
Fund for the first time Nov. 21 to negotiate a settlement for Cusick. The company
offered him a “considerable job” as a coach, Ménard said.
“We have offered a job for Matthew, but he has not agreed,” Ménard
said.
Lambda Legal, a gay legal group, picked up the case and assisted Cusick in
filing a complaint with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in
July on the basis of discrimination.
The case “continues, but isn’t settled,” said Hayley Gorenberg,
director of Lambda Legal’s AIDS Project.
“The employer doesn’t remedy discrimination by then handing our
client some other job that then happens to be available, if the employee who
was discriminated against can do the job for which he applied and for which
he was hired,” Gorenberg said.
In the EEOC complaint, Cusick said he disclosed his HIV status to the company
months before he was fired, and was twice cleared by Cirque physicians to perform.
But Cirque, which does not test its athletes for HIV, said the company couldn’t
risk infection of other performers or patrons, Ménard said.
“We have said all along that justice in this case could include reinstating
him, include training and education so this won’t happen again, and compensation
for what he has had to endure,” Gorenberg said.
Lambda does not have a specific figure in mind if Cusick and Lambda receive “a
right to sue letter” from the EEOC, a necessary step in proceeding with
the lawsuit.
On Nov. 20, the evening before officials with Lambda and Cirque met, protestors
holding signs, stickers and flyers gathered outside Cirque’s show “Allegria” in
San Francisco.
“The response from show-goers was extraordinarily positive,” said
Michael Adams, director of education and public affairs for Lambda Legal. “Many
chose to wear stickers protesting discrimination into the show.”
Adams estimated 50 protestors joined the event, while Cirque’s Ménard,
who also attended, counted “a maximum of 20 protestors.”
As part of the EEOC’s investigation to determine if Cusick should be
allowed to sue, Cirque submitted evidence that Cusick would be a safety hazard
to other performers and circus goers, Ménard said.
The EEOC investigation requires Cirque to show that Cusick, who was hired
to perform tricks on tall Chinese poles and in trapeze acts, posed a health
risk to others.
“We have a very good idea of the type of incidents that do occur with
artists in aerial acts,” Ménard said.
Cirque submitted to the EEOC a list of injuries that pose risks of HIV transmission
during aerial acts documented from the past, such as collisions and falls,
Ménard said.
But Lambda and Cusick point to policies at major athletic organizations, which
allow HIV-positive athletes to compete. Those groups include the National Collegiate
Athletic Association, National Basketball Association and the International
Olympic Committee.
“There is no case of transmission ever in the case of HIV in sports,” Gorenberg
said. “There is no reason to test or bar athletes from performing. We
don’t see any proof otherwise, and neither do any of these other American
or international organizations.”
The Human Rights Commission in San Francisco launched an investigation on
Nov. 21, after the protests, to assure Cirque complies with San Francisco city
codes that ban discrimination based on HIV status, according to the San Francisco
Chronicle.
If Cirque, which leases property from the Port of San Francisco, is found
to hold discriminatory policies, it faces fines, termination from its current
contract or no possibility for a city contract for up to three years, the Chronicle
reported.
Fear of job termination is just one of the many reasons why people at risk
of HIV do not get tested, and potentially spread the disease to others, according
to a report released by the ACLU AIDS Project earlier this month.
“Because of that fear, more people get infected, more people get sick,
and more people die,” according to the report.
The ACLU surveyed more than 40 AIDS service organizations across the U.S.
for the report, helping to paint “a clearer picture of the problems out
there,” said Cooper, director of the ACLU AIDS Project.
“Everywhere we went, clients of community-based organizations were facing
discrimination,” she said.
But there are no precise numbers documenting HIV discrimination cases, Cooper
said.
“Forty community based organizations represent a tiny fraction of the
people with HIV in the country,” Cooper said. “Given the prevalence
of discrimination we’ve seen just in those communities suggests that
much more discrimination is going on out there.”
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