We are the most effective way to get your press release into the hands of reporters and news producers. Check out our client list.



Is California the Next Houston?

Contact: Karen England, 916-233-8769

SACRAMENTO, Calif., Nov. 6, 2015 /Christian Newswire/ -- The people of Houston have spoken and defeated that City's proposed bathroom ordinance.  But it almost did not happen.  The voters were almost denied the right to vote on Proposition 1.

With a deceptive name, the elites of Houston tried to push through the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance (HERO) without a vote of the citizens.  But Houston residents had a different plan and went to court to place the matter on the ballot.  For Houston, the threat of men being able to use the women's bathroom, locker room and shower has been defeated for now.

Some in California believe citizens of that State should have the same chance to express their support for sex separate bathrooms and their objection to threats to privacy and safety.

"This is not a hard issue for most of us", said Karen England of Privacy For All.  "We do not want the unwanted exposure that is a guaranteed component of mixed use bathrooms.  Little girls do not want to be viewed by or forced to view physically opposite individuals."

In 2013, politicians pushed through AB 1266 in California without the support of the public.  A referendum challenge to that law resulted in approximately 620,000 signatures demanding a vote on AB 1266.  But one in five of those signatures were rejected, many improperly.  Just like in Houston, now referendum backers in California are in court in a continuing effort to put the matter before the voters.

But there is also an effort to gather signatures to place the Personal Privacy Protection Act on the 2016 ballot.  "We have compassion for individuals that believe that biology has betrayed them," said England.  "But this initiative will assure that public owned bathrooms are separated based on sex, not integrated based on professed identity."

Privacy For All needs to gather approximately 366,000 valid signatures of California voters to place the Personal Privacy Protection Act on the November 2016 ballot.  "Houston elites were afraid to let the voters vote, and they had good reason to be.  We think California elites have similar reason to be afraid," said England.

For more information, visit www.PrivacyforAll.com.