Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Sam Felker: Attorney. Activist. Athlete.

Well, it's been a couple years. I've missed posting my stories about interesting Nashville people and hope you've missed reading them. Now it's time to get posting again!

I'm (re-)starting with a piece I wrote for Unite Magazine about a great guy who doesn't ever seem to take a break. He's an inspiration...

SAM FELKER
Attorney. Activist. Athlete.

As a high school student in the 1970s, Sam Felker was mesmerized by the investigative reporting of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the two Washington Post reporters who doggedly covered the Watergate scandal which eventually led to President Nixon’s resignation. He was impressed with their unrelenting research, their dedication and their tenacity to get to the bottom of what was right. So this teenager from Brownsville, Tenn., about an hour northeast of Memphis, decided to pursue a career in Journalism.

This inspiration led him to become editor of the Mississippi State University school newspaper during a period of notorious NCAA pay-to-play capers. He really enjoyed the active process of investigating, researching and writing. It was his parents, though, who said he should take that talent and put it to good use as an attorney. And who was this good Southern gentleman to argue with his mother?

So off he went to one of the top 10 law schools in the nation at the University of Virginia, where he flourished, surrounded by a melting pot of stimulating and intellectual people. It was here that Felker realized that through litigation he could advocate for his clients and get the best results for them, much like he’d done with hard-hitting news stories before. “I enjoy solving complex problems” he says, noting that being an attorney suits him perfectly.

During law school, Felker served a summer clerkship at the Nashville law firm Bass Berry & Sims, where he was later hired, eventually becoming a partner. He’d never really been to Nashville before, but he fell in love with what he calls a “sleepy but thriving city” and knew he wanted to stay; he’s been here since.

CROSSING THE LINE

Outside the firm, when the suit and tie come off, the bike shorts and swimming goggles go on. Felker, you see, is also a competitive tri-athlete. He has competed in the international Gay Games four times, beginning with the competition in Amsterdam, Netherlands, in 1998. Much like competing in athletics, he says, “the practice of law is a marathon, not a sprint. Exercise releases stress, clears my head, and pays great dividends to my health and to my life.”

Felker’s husband, Keith Little, is a testament to this positive outlook. Little, who is a multiple Gold Medal winner in javelin at both the Gay Games and the Out Games, recently got news that he is cancer free after several months of intense treatments. The two were married in 2007 in Provincetown when Massachusetts was the only state with marriage equality. They’re now approaching their 20th year together and still enjoy exercising, training and traveling together, but now with an even greater appreciation. One summer soon, the two plan to participate in their second AIDS LifeCycle, a week-long, 545-mile bike ride from San Francisco to Los Angeles to raise money for AIDS/HIV programs. They also intend to compete at the 2018 Gay Games in Paris.

As with an actual marathon, it takes a lot of work to be the first person to cross the finish line. And while Felker has yet to do that wearing running shoes, he’s done it several times with his wingtips on. As the first openly gay partner at a large Nashville law firm, he paved the way for other LGBT attorneys to come out. He also served as one of the first presidents of NAPP – now the Nashville LGBT Chamber of Commerce – and helmed Nashville’s very first mayoral forum for an LGBT audience.

Felker is also president of the Tennessee Stonewall Bar Association, a group of nearly 100 LGBT lawyers and allies. Although he sheepishly claims that he’s “not really suited for being seen as a pioneer,” it’s a role he takes seriously and with a great deal of pride. As a result, he was recruited by the Baker Donelson law firm last year in large part due to his community activism. He is responsible for the cultural competency and diversity at Baker Donelson and even oversaw the firm’s booth at the 2014 Nashville Pride Festival, perhaps the very first law firm to have such a presence.

On a more national level, you can find Felker at the National LGBT Bar Association’s annual Lavender Law recruitment event, where some 150 law firms gather to actively recruit the nearly 500 law students in attendance. “It’s a sign that firms and corporations understand the importance of diversity in the workplace and the value of having LGBT employees by taking steps to hire them,” Felker proclaims.

WE ALL WIN

“We’ve come a long way,” Felker says, referring to LGBT acceptance and equality, “but we still have a long way to go.” He points out that as more high-level business people  come out in their professions and their lives, the better it is for everyone. He cites Apple CEO Tim Cook as a perfect example of that.

Many, however, see Sam Felker as the perfect example of an out, gay businessman who leads by example. Someone who works every day to assure the rights of everyone and who lives life to its fullest. A person with a healthy balance between work responsibilities and personal enjoyment. And someone who is a winner at both.

Reflecting on his rural childhood, Felker beams, “I was brought up with a service attitude for helping other people. I find it gratifying to help people with their legal issues.” And with overall equality and justice for everyone. Sam Felker has done a great deal to help move LGBT issues forward. Many thanks to his mother for encouraging him to attend law school so he could do just that.