In 2016, a group of grassroots activists in Berkeley, California launched a campaign to introduce legal protections for polyamorous residents. They identified a sympathetic councilmember and worked together to draft and introduce a bill. In 2017, the bill passed City Council unanimously on first reading and was sent to the City Attorney for legal review. However, it never reappeared on the Council agenda for a second reading and final adoption. The activists were left in the dark about what had gone wrong and had little leverage to make another attempt.
In 2023, OPEN began working with this grassroots group to finish what they had started. Our first step was to find a new sponsor for the bill. We reached out to the original sponsor, still on city council, who informed us that while he would support the bill, his priorities had changed and he couldn't sponsor it. He directed us to another councilmember who might be receptive.
I met with Councilmember Terry Taplin over lunch that June to discuss the proposed ordinance. He expressed openness to sponsoring the legislation, and we ended the meeting with clear next steps.
A crucial task was for Councilmember Taplin to facilitate a conversation with the City Attorney to understand why the 2017 bill never returned to council. Due to the city's budget process and summer recess, this call didn't happen until late November. In the meantime, we brought in our coalition partners at PLAC, who provided model legislative language. We shared this with the City Attorney before our call, along with a memo clarifying differences between the 2017 bill and the new proposal.