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Palm Springs is going strong
The 'Best' are unveiled
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Jean Paul Gaultier
The
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Serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities since 1971
Layoffs, food changes hit Open Hand by Seth Hemmelgarn
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acing a second year with a deficit, Project Open Hand’s executive director told the Bay Area Reporter this week that he has eliminated four staff positions and most clients with HIV will Jane Philomen Cleland soon have to choose Kevin Winge between delivered meals or picking up groceries. The agency, which provides meals and groceries to people living with HIV/AIDS, the critically ill homebound, and seniors, will implement the food changes July 1. The staff were let go this week, said Kevin Winge, executive director. The agency is facing a deficit of as much as $728,000 of a $9.8 million budget. “We’re not hemorrhaging,” Winge, who began work at the agency in January, said in an See page 16 >>
Vol. 42 • No. 14 • April 5-11, 2012
At 30, SFAF works on financial fixes by Seth Hemmelgarn
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hirty years after its founding, the San Francisco AIDS Foundation – which is marking the anniversary this year – is the largest HIV/AIDS-based nonprofit in San Francisco. With a budget forecast to be just over $24 million this year, the agency, which provides services ranging from HIV testing to syringe exchange, has a lot of money to work with as it strives to drastically reduce new HIV infections in the city. As of late 2011, about half of the funding the city’s HIV Prevention Section was providing through contracts was going to the AIDS foundation and smaller agencies with which the AIDS foundation is working. The foundation serves approximately 14,000 clients. (An unduplicated count isn’t available.) But the nonprofit, where several staff earn $100,000 and up, receives less-than-stellar rankings on how much it spends on programs versus fundraising and other areas, and officials there are working to change that. “We are investing like never before in San Francisco in regards to reducing HIV infections, getting people tested, and getting people into care,” said AIDS foundation CEO Neil Giuliano, a gay man who joined the agency just over a year ago after a stint leading the national
Rick Gerharter
San Francisco AIDS Foundation CEO Neil Giuliano said the nonprofit is working to lower the costs of fundraising amid a tough economy.
Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation. Giuliano said that when he evaluated the AIDS foundation after his arrival, what struck him was that to invest more in the community, “we were going to have to adjust things internally.”
That’s included what SFAF spends on fundraising. According to its most recent tax documents, 21 percent of the foundation’s total expenses during fiscal year 2010-11 See page 16 >>
Medical pot rally draws noisy crowd Chung named to health panel O by David Duran
by Seth Hemmelgarn
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an Francisco Mayor Ed Lee has appointed Cecilia Chung to be the first out transgender person to serve on the city’s Health Commission. Chung, who’s 46 and HIV-positive, works as a consultant and served Cecilia Chung on the city’s Human Rights Commission for seven years. She submitted her resignation from that commission Monday, April 2. In a Tuesday, April 3 statement, Lee said, “The Health Commission will greatly benefit from Cecilia’s experience in community health policy and human rights and her understanding as a person living with HIV.” Chung’s appointment restores an out LGBT presence to the seven-member panel, which oversees a health department budget of about $1.6 billion. Lee had recently opted not to re-appoint the commission’s two out gay members, Jim Illig and Steven Tierney. Belle Taylor-McGhee was recently sworn into her position on the oversight body.▼
n the heels of a raid by federal authorities of a marijuana teaching facility and dispensary in Oakland, about 500 people attended a noisy rally in front of San Francisco City Hall Tuesday imploring the feds to back off medical cannabis. Elected officials were in attendance to lend their support; out Supervisor David Campos said he and the other LGBT supervisors were working to protect the rights of medical marijuana patients. “I am so proud that the three members of the LGBT community who serve on this board sent a letter to the Department of Public Health to say that we in San Francisco need to protect the rights of patients and we in the LGBT community, especially, need to make sure that the rights of patients are protected in this city,” Campos said. The Monday raid in Oakland included Oaksterdam University, established by marijuana legalization advocate Richard Lee; a related dispensary; and Lee’s apartment. No arrests were made, although Lee and others were briefly detained. “Yesterday’s events were a chilling reminder of what our activists have been up against for over the past 10 years,” said Steph Sherer, executive director of Americans for Safe Access. Sherer, who led the rally on Tuesday, told the crowd that this was a movement about compassion and truth. The rally also drew support for a legislative hearing in Sacramento next week. On Tuesday, the first hearing of AB 2312, the Medical Mari-
David Duran
Medical cannabis patient David Goldman spoke to protesters at Tuesday’s rally.
juana Regulation and Control Act, will take place. The bill, introduced by gay Assemblyman Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco), not only allows for medical marijuana sales it also makes it clear that dispensaries are allowed under state law. California voters passed Proposition 215, the Compassionate Use Act, in 1996. If passed, Ammiano’s bill would allow “collectives, cooperatives, and other business entities to
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cultivate, acquire, process, possess, transport, test, sell, and distribute marijuana for medical purposes.” The bill also makes it a misdemeanor for a doctor to give a bad recommendation, and would limit dispensaries to one per 50,000 residents in a city. It also creates a medical marijuana bureaucracy. Under the proposed legislation the governor, the Assembly speaker, and the Senate Committee on Rules would appoint nine people to the Board of Medical Marijuana Enforcement, a new body within the Department of Consumer Affairs. This body would be in charge of the Medical Marijuana Fund, which would be funded with state fees and fines. Ammiano, who met with Melinda Haag, the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California last December to discuss what was happening with the federal crackdown, was critical of her in a statement read at the rally. “It was clear at that time that she did not appreciate the history, she didn’t understand the issue, and she did not know what she was getting into,” read Ammiano’s statement. Campos is asking the health department to expedite the permitting process for dispensaries that were shut down so that they can re-open as quickly as possible. “There is not time to waste, patients are waiting,” said Campos. Board President David Chiu also spoke at the rally. See page 17 >>