April 12, 2012 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

Page 1

3

Gays go to egg roll

4

A touch of Zen in the Castro

17

Whit Stillman on 'Damsels'

The

www.ebar.com

Serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities since 1971

Vol. 42 • No. 15 • April 12-18, 2012

Eatery below sober space to sell booze

Clients leave TL Health N by Seth Hemmelgarn

early a week after it was set to close, officials are working to ensure smooth transitions for Tenderloin Health clients. In March, officials announced that the financially troubled Jane Philomen Cleland San Francisco nonLance Toma profit would shut down Friday, April 6. The news came with a list of other agencies that Tenderloin Health’s clients would be sent to. The nonprofit served about 3,000 unduplicated clients. Asian and Pacific Islander Wellness Center is taking over administration of the Tenderloin Area Center of Excellence, which involves the city’s efforts to provide care and support to people living with HIV in the neighborhood. Tom Waddell Health Center has also been a partner in that work along with Tenderloin Health and API Wellness. Lance Toma, API Wellness’s executive director, said last week that his agency’s working with about 150 former Tenderloin Health clients. His organization’s been told it will see about 300 former Tenderloin Health clients over the course of a year, he said. Toma met with several clients in late March, and he said there were “a lot of questions and anxiety.” “They were concerned about service continuity,” he said. “They didn’t know who their case managers were going to be.” Clients were also worried “about what were the hours, and when they could access services,” he said, “so we’ve been trying to keep them engaged as we’ve had to make decisions very quickly.” API Wellness has done its best to maintain similar hours and days of operation, said Toma. API Wellness is getting about $540,000 annually from the health department that had been going to Tenderloin Health. The agency’s also secured some additional money that Tenderloin Health had received from the federal government. Those funds are being channeled through the health department and bring the total to about $565,000. Toma said the federal portion is about $25,000 and is only to cover a three- to fourmonth period. API Wellness has hired eight former Tenderloin Health staff, including a behavioral health specialist and three medical case managers. He said people have been “working See page 12 >>

by Matthew S. Bajko

A Rick Gerharter

It’s ‘Funky Jesus’ S

ean Lavelle, who wowed the crowd as “Funky Jesus,” won the Hunky Jesus contest at the annual Easter celebration in Dolores Park hosted by the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence Sunday, April 8. Lavelle crafted a functioning guitar onto a wooden cross, and played a few

riffs in his winning bid. The day also included children’s games, music and burlesque performances, and an Easter bonnet contest. In addition photographer Dan Nicoletta and community activist Kelly Rivera Hart were sainted by the Sisters.

new restaurant proposed to be housed in the same building as a Castro sobriety center plans to sell beer and wine. Local businessman George “Jorge” Maumer is seeking city and state approval to open a sausage grill in the garage space below the Castro Country Club. As part of the plan, Maumer intends to seek a liquor license for the new eatery. Maumer, who also owns Superstar Video on Castro Street, bought the property at 4058 18th Street in January for a reported $1 million. At the time he pledged to maintain as a tenant the Castro Country Club, which describes itself as “a safe haven for LGBT people in recovery from drugs and alcohol” on its website. The club has been housed in the 1901 Edwardian See page 3 >>

ACT UP tosses ashes at SF church by David Duran

A

dead gay man’s ashes were thrown over barricades at a Catholic Church in San Francisco on Good Friday, as activists staged a 25th anniversary march commemorating ACT UP. The protest went from the Mission to the Castro and touched on issues such as gentrification and the lack of affordable housing as well as the Catholic Church’s anti-gay teachings. Organizers estimated that 200-250 people participated in the April 6 march. The group began its protest outside a Mission district Wells Fargo branch. The bank was a target of Occupy activists last fall. The march then continued to the steps of Mission Dolores Basilica. ACT UP, the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power, began in New York in 1987, and has regularly targeted the Catholic Church. In December 1989, thousands of ACT UP protesters disrupted Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York over the archdiocese’s position against the distribution of condoms and its opposition to abortion – themes echoed during the anniversary protest. Active ACT UP chapters are still present in New York and a few other cities; the San Francisco chapters dissolved several years ago. ACT UP is credited with speeding up the time it takes for the government to approve new drugs and its direct actions called out the slow pace of the federal government in the early years of the epidemic.

Rick Gerharter

AIDS activists throw the ashes of ACT UP/San Francisco member Stephen Fish, who died in 1991 and wished his ashes to be used for a political purpose, onto the steps of Mission Dolores Basilica on Good Friday in a demonstration to mark the 25th anniversary of ACT UP, the direct action AIDS group.

Protesters had said they planned to arrive at the church at 5:30 p.m. But by 5 o’clock there were already at least 15 San Francisco police officers standing in front of Mission Dolores Basilica and the Old Mission, which is immediately adjacent to the south. Police had put up

{ FIRST OF TWO SECTIONS }

crowd control barriers in the gutters and the barricades prevented the demonstrators from their stated aim: to place the ashes of a man who died from AIDS on the church stairs. “The Catholic Church [has a] continued See page 12 >>


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.