Cori Schumacher

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Cori Schumacher
Born (1977-04-23) April 23, 1977 (age 44)
OfficeFormer Member of the Carlsbad, California City Council
Surfing specifications
StanceRegular

Cori Schumacher is a world champion surfer, social justice advocate, scholar, and a former American politician.

Biography[]

Schumacher was born April 23, 1977, in Huntington Beach, California. Both her parents were avid surfers. The family moved to San Diego where Schumacher learned the practice.[1] Schumacher married her spouse, Maria De Jesus Cerda, in 2008. Schumacher is the first LGBTQ+ surfer to come out while a reigning world champion and is also the first LGBTQ+ member of the Carlsbad City Council.

Surfing[]

Schumacher has won multiple national and international surfing titles. She surfed as the #1 US female shortboarder on the 1994 and 1996 US Team for the ISA. Her most notable international shortboard title was the winner of the 1995 Pan-American Championships. But Schumacher is best known through her efforts in women's longboarding. She is a three-time Women's World Longboard Champion (2000, 2001, 2010), Women's Longboard Pipeline Pro Champion (2009) and two-time ASP North American Champion (2008, 2009). From late 2001 to 2008, Schumacher went on sabbatical from competition. She returned in 2008 to win the Linda Benson Roxy Jam at Cardiff, California.[2] After winning her third world title in 2010, Schumacher took a stand against the first professional surfing championship to be hosted by China, writing in an email to ASP administrators, “I have deep political and personal reservations with being a part of any sort of benefit to a country that actively engages in human-rights violations, specifically those in violation of women.”[3][4] Schumacher boycotted the world surfing tour and focused on founding social justice and diversity initiatives in surfing, including The Inspire Initiative (2012), The History of Women's Surfing (2012), and The Institute for Women Surfers (2014).[5][6][7]

While still a world champion, Schumacher came out as gay. She was the first sitting world surfing champion to do so. “Part of my coming out process was finding worth in myself,” says Schumacher. “I didn't have that for a very long time, and I knew that other women on Tour were going through that as well. So while at some point in my life I wasn't willing to defend myself and have healthy boundaries for myself, I was able to get to a point where I was 100-percent committed to ensuring that I would do my best so that other young surfers, women and men alike, would not have to go through the type of pain that I went through.”[4]

Activism[]

After boycotting the world surfing tour in 2011, Schumacher directed her focus to social justice work on gender equity and increasing LGBTQ+ and BIPOC representation in surfing. In 2013, she launched a viral online campaign demanding Roxy surf wear stop the sexualization of female professional surfers in their advertisements. The advertisement in question was made by Roxy as the main media for a world championship tour surfing contest in Biarritz, France—an event governed by the Association of Surfing Professionals, who up until the global push back had permitted contest sponsors to control media for professional surfing events.[8][9] 2013 saw a shift in the ownership of the Association of Surfing Professionals organization, the governing body of the professional surfing tour since 1983. The current owners of the world professional surfing tour, the World Surf League (WSL), subsequently made increasing investments in women's surfing a priority and no longer allowed event sponsors to manage competition content.[10]

In 2017, Schumacher published a chapter in the Critical Surf Studies Reader, a seminal anthology introducing the emerging academic field of critical surf studies. Her research focused on the gender pay gap, misogyny, and homophobia within the world of professional surfing.[11] This work was an extension of the research she published regularly on her blog and in various periodicals, online news agencies, and in conference presentations since launching the Roxy viral campaign in 2013 and co-founding the Institute for Women Surfers with Professor Krista Comer of Rice University, in 2014.[12]

In September 2018, the WSL announced they would be offering equal prize money to both male and female world championship tour athletes beginning in 2019.[13]

“The WSL is immensely proud of instituting equal prize money across all our owned and controlled events. It's an initiative that has been a long-term goal for the organization and one that has come to life after lots of internal and external conversations with individuals and groups. The WSL is committed to providing a platform for the best surfers in the world, regardless of gender, and recognize that prizing is an important factor in creating that platform. Since WSL came into existence under new ownership (in 2013) an immediate priority was to increase the investment in women's surfing in a commercially sustainable way. As part of our long-term plan, we are proud to be the first US-based global sports league to announce equal prize money across all WSL owned and controlled events starting in 2019.”[14]

In 2019, Schumacher worked with California Assemblymember Tasha Boerner-Horvath on Assembly Bill 467, California's "Equal Pay for Equal Play" legislation which emerged from conversations between the two.[14] Schumacher testified in support of the bill and organized support for the legislation from professional surfers, skateboarders, and champion cyclists. The bill was signed by Governor Gavin Newsom in September 2019 and went into effect January 1, 2020.[15]

Politics[]

From 2016 to 2021, Schumacher served as an elected official in Carlsbad, California.

In 2016, Schumacher was elected to the Carlsbad City Council as an at-large council member.[16] She received support from the Carlsbad community after her work opposing a contentious mall development plan that the community ultimately rejected in a special election in February 2016.[17][18] Schumacher was the first LGBTQ+ elected official in Carlsbad's history.[19]

In 2018, Schumacher announced her campaign for Mayor of Carlsbad. However, she lost the election to incumbent mayor Matt Hall.[20] As in 2016, her platform centered on creating a community choice energy program for Carlsbad.[21] Carlsbad began working toward a tri-city community choice energy program in 2019.[22] The Clean Energy Alliance was formed in 2019 and successfully launched in 2021.[23] Schumacher was appointed as the Clean Energy Alliance's first board chairperson.[24]

In 2020, Schumacher was elected to Carlsbad's District 1 seat directly before California went into lockdown due to the rapid spread of COVID-19.[25] She became the target of increasingly hostile attacks[26] after initiating a special meeting on January 5, 2021, to address Carlsbad's District 1 having become "ground zero" for restaurants defying California restrictions on indoor dining during the peak of COVID's impacts.[27]

"In her time on City Council, Cori has centered transparency and government access, responsiveness to community needs and concerns, and principled policy stances. However, being a leader in this space has made her a target for misogynistic and homophobic attacks. In the intense climate of the last few months, the attacks on Cori have escalated, and she has received extra bigoted anonymous emails and harassment online and in public forums."[28]

In 2021, Schumacher announced her resignation from the Carlsbad City Council to pursue her education, noting in her resignation letter that she would be attending "a university outside the county of San Diego."[29] She is currently studying at the University of California, Berkeley.

References[]

  1. ^ "Cori Schumacher Interview". Liquid Salt.
  2. ^ "About - Cori Schumacher".
  3. ^ Weisberg, Zach (March 26, 2011). "For Female Surfers, Challenges Out of the Water" – via NYTimes.com.
  4. ^ a b "The History of LGBTQ Surfing". October 6, 2020.
  5. ^ "About The Inspire Initiave". www.theinspireinitiative.org. Archived from the original on 5 March 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  6. ^ "The History of Women's Surfing". www.historyofwomensurfing.com.
  7. ^ "About IWS | Institute for Women Surfers". www.instituteforwomensurfers.org.
  8. ^ Times, Stuart Pfeifer Stuart Pfeifer is a former business reporter for the Los Angeles (September 13, 2013). "Surfer calls on Roxy to change ads". Los Angeles Times.
  9. ^ "21,000 People Sign Petition Against Roxy 'Surf' Video". HuffPost. September 27, 2013.
  10. ^ Woodsmall, Michael. "WSL in NYTimes as Model of "Successful Broadcast Strategy"".
  11. ^ "Duke University Press - The Critical Surf Studies Reader".
  12. ^ "About IWS | Institute for Women Surfers". www.instituteforwomensurfers.org.
  13. ^ Wamsley, Laurel (September 7, 2018). "Equal Pay For Equal Shreds: World Surf League Will Award Same Prizes To Men And Women" – via NPR.
  14. ^ a b Heyden, Dylan. "CA to Consider 'Equal Pay for Equal Play' Bill".
  15. ^ "Equal Pay for Equal Play Bill (AB 467) Signed Into Law | Assemblymember Tasha Boerner Horvath Representing the 76th California Assembly District". a76.asmdc.org.
  16. ^ https://votersedge.org/ca/en/ballot/election/42-20e57d/address/null/zip/92009/contests/contest/14241/candidate/133763
  17. ^ Puterski, Steve (February 3, 2016). "The Coast News Group".
  18. ^ "Developer Concedes Defeat in Carlsbad Special Election". San Diego Business Journal.
  19. ^ "LGBT Q&A with Carlsbad Council member Cori Schumacher" – via www.youtube.com.
  20. ^ "Here's Your Election Results Roundup Of Six North County Mayoral Elections". KPBS Public Media. 2018-11-07. Retrieved 2022-01-05.
  21. ^ Puterski, Steve (January 9, 2018). "The Coast News Group".
  22. ^ "Three-city energy alliance holds first meeting". November 4, 2019.
  23. ^ Aghor, Satyen (October 27, 2020). "Clean Energy Alliance". thecleanenergyalliance.org.
  24. ^ "Carlsbad-Solana Beach-Del Mar community choice energy program set to launch in 2021". January 10, 2020.
  25. ^ "Schumacher Wins Carlsbad District 1 City Council Special Election". OsideNews. April 3, 2020.
  26. ^ Ojeda • •, Artie. "'The City Hates You: Carlsbad Councilmember Targeted In Profanity-Laced Email".
  27. ^ "How Carlsbad Restaurants Became Ground Zero for Coronavirus Protests". Voice of San Diego. January 19, 2021.
  28. ^ County, PFLAG San Diego (April 12, 2021). "Virtual Rally in Solidarity with Cori Schumacher".
  29. ^ "Newsroom | Carlsbad, CA". www.carlsbadca.gov.

External links[]

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