Couple Raise Pride Flag at Hospital, Praise Facility’s Inclusive Care
Dec 19, 2022
Ashley Boarman
Lolma Olson (pictured left) and Beth Reed (pictured right) stand in front of the hospital emergency entrance sign while holding rainbow flags in support of the LGBTQ community.

After noticing Novato Community Hospital needed a new rainbow flag, one Marin County, Calif., couple had a bright idea: get them a new one!

During a recent hospital stay, Sutter patient Beth Reed and her wife Lolma Olson observed the Sutter hospital’s pride flag looking a bit worn out.

“It needed a little help,” says Olson. The solution of donating a flag was an obvious one, she explains, and something the couple wanted to do to show their appreciation for the inclusive care they’ve received from Novato Community Hospital over the years.

“This is a hospital that welcomes all people with open arms,” says Olson, adding that staff have never questioned their relationship as a same-sex married couple. “We have always been treated with love, care, importance and respect,” she says.

ABC 7 shares the couple’s story here. 

Former Sutter patients Beth Reed and Lolma Olson work alongside a gentleman to hoist up a new rainbow flag underneath the American flag at Novato Community Hospital.

Beth Reed (L) and Lolma Olson (R) raise a new pride flag at Sutter’s Novato Community Hospital on Dec. 13, 2022.

On Tuesday, Dec. 13, the couple, along with hospital leadership and members of The Spahr Center, a Marin County-based nonprofit service for LGBTQ residents and people living with HIV, came together to raise a brand-new pride flag. The ceremony serendipitously took place on the same day as President Joe Biden signed a bill to enshrine gay and interracial marriage rights.

“I can’t believe we’re doing this today!” exclaims Olson. “It gives us so much pride to see this symbol of our community flying so prominently,” joins Reed.

Novato Community Hospital has flown the pride flag year-round since 2020.

As quoted in the Marin Independent Journal, Novato Community Hospital Chief Administrator Lisa Gammon said, “We decided it’s so important to represent this community’s diversity and inclusion that we decided to keep it up every day of the year. We are thankful to Beth and Lolma for this meaningful donation.”

Since 2017, Novato Community Hospital, within Sutter Health’s not-for-profit network, has earned recognition as a “Leader in LGBTQ Healthcare Equality” from the Human Rights Campaign Foundation,  the educational arm of the country’s largest lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) civil rights organization.

This annual survey, conducted by Healthcare Equality Index (HEI), recognizes facilities like Novato Community Hospital that meet key criteria, including foundational elements of LGBTQ patient-centered care, LGBTQ patient services and support, employee benefits and policies, and LGBTQ patient and community engagement.

Reed and Olson intend to replace the hospital’s pride flag whenever needed moving forward.

Olson says, “It means so much to us.”

A group of about 30 individuals hold rainbow-colored pride flags outside of Novato Community Hospital. It is a sunny day.

Lolma Olson and Beth Reed are accompanied by members of Marin County’s LGBTQ+ group The Spahr Center and Novato Community Hospital leadership to celebrate the couple’s pride flag-raising event.

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