NLGJA is an organization of journalists, media professionals, educators and students who work within the news industry to foster fair and accurate coverage of LGBT issues. NLGJA opposes all forms of workplace bias and provides professional development to its members.
Founded in August 1990 by the late Leroy (Roy) F. Aarons, then Executive Editor of The Oakland Tribune, NLGJA has grown from a handful of dedicated LGBT journalists to a 1,400-member, 25-chapter organization with four satellite chapters and affiliate organizations in Canada and Germany.
Today, NLGJA's National Board of Directors, chapter leadership and members come from rural to major metropolitan print, broadcast and online newsrooms, community based LGBT media, academic institutions and the public relations and communications profession. Our strength and respect in the industry comes from the diversity of our membership. All journalists are welcome to join in our work.
NLGJA is a 501 (c) 3 organization.

In April 1989, the American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE) mandated that ASNE conduct its first ever survey of gay and lesbian journalists in American newspapers. In April 1990, Roy Aarons presented the results of the landmark survey, Alternatives: Gays and Lesbians in the Newsroom , at ASNE's national convention in Washington, DC and simultaneously came out publicly.
Inspired by the report, LGBT journalists from across the United States and across media platforms expressed a desire to create a professional organization. Under Roy's guidance, NLGJA was formally incorporated in 1991 and chapters were formed throughout the country.
True to its founders' goals, NLGJA is a strong voice in the news industry, educating newsroom decision-makers about coverage of the LGBT community, promoting non-discrimination policies and the establishment of equal benefits, and creating educational opportunities to support the next generation of LGBT newsroom leaders. The dramatic positive shift in the quality and quantity of news coverage of the LGBT community is due to each member working within their newsrooms to educate peers about fairness and accuracy.
Click here to download a timeline created in 2005 to celebrate NLGJA's 15th anniversary.