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August 22, 2024 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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Park webpages updated

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SF Queer Film Festival

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Mpox emergency

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SF Drag King Contest

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

Vol. 54 • No. 34 • August 22-28, 2024

Silicon Valley Pride parade, festival to cap weeklong celebration by John Ferrannini

From CSPAN

Former President Barack Obama delivered an address to the Democratic convention Tuesday.

In Chicago, SF makes outsize impact at DNC by John Ferrannini

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he Obamas put their rhetorical skills to work on behalf of Vice President Kamala Harris at the Democratic National Convention August 20, as the presidential nominee’s native Bay Area punches above its weight in shaping the week’s proceedings. See page 10 >>

Courtesy HRSA

HRSA Administrator Carole Johnson

Biden admin touts $1.4B for HIV programs by Matthew S. Bajko

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ederal health officials are touting $1.4 billion in funding for national programs that assist low-income Americans living with HIV in obtaining their necessary medications and health care. It comes as the 2024 National Ryan White Conference on HIV Care & Treatment kicks off in Washington, D.C. Timed with the start of the HIV confab that has drawn 6,500 people to the nation’s capital, the Health Resources and Services Administration Tuesday morning announced the new allocation in Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program funding for the AIDS Drug Assistance Program and HIV health care and support services under what is known as Ryan White’s Part B. See page 10 >>

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ilicon Valley Pride week is in full swing, as the South Bay prepares for its annual parade and festival celebrating LGBTQ liberation. This year marks the 49th annual event, and organizers want people to “Get Loud.” Leading up to this weekend’s parade, drag artist Kalypso won the Silicon Valley Pride Drag Queen Cooking Showdown Monday, which launched the week’s festivities. “Cooking in full drag, with long hair, huge lashes, and high heels, is not something I’d recommend – but it sure makes for an unforgettable experience,” Kalypso stated to the Bay Area Reporter on August 20. “It was truly an honor to participate in this showdown, with the SV Pride community cheering us on. Winning was just the cherry on top.” Programming Thursday, August 22, includes the Pobladores Night Market from 5:30 to 9 p.m. in downtown San Jose, featuring queer musician Lisa Dewey, said Saldy Suriben, a gay man who is chief marketing officer for Silicon Valley Pride. Concurrently, from 6 to 9 p.m., there will be a Silicon Valley Pride movie night showcasing “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” at the Pruneyard Cinemas in Campbell.

Sean Washington

The Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority’s contingent marched in last year’s Silicon Valley Pride parade.

Then, on Friday, August 23, from 6 to 11 p.m. there’ll be a Silicon Valley Pride kick-off party at the Continental Bar Lounge and Patio in downtown San Jose.

Weekend parade, festival

That’s all the prelude to the festival – Satur-

day, August 24, from 6 to 11 p.m. and Sunday, August 25, from noon to 6 p.m. – in downtown San Jose’s Plaza de César Chávez. The Sunday parade kicks off at 10:30 a.m. from Julian and Market streets and makes its way to the plaza. See page 10 >>

Retiring lesbian fire chief celebrates SFFD wins in her tenure by John Ferrannini

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esbian outgoing San Francisco Fire Chief Jeanine Nicholson said she is stepping aside amid health matters at a noontime news conference August 14 intended to highlight her trailblazing career. “I’m retiring because I have some health issues and that’s all I’ll say about it,” she said in the Fire Commission meeting room at the San Francisco Fire Department headquarters on 2nd Street. Later, in a media scrum outside, she elaborated. “I was just on all the time and, yeah, my body can’t do it anymore and I also know the department is in a really good place with the leadership that we have in place” to move forward, she said. Nicholson has been public about a previous fight with an aggressive form of breast cancer that occurred in 2012. In an interview shortly before she was sworn in as fire chief, she told the Bay Area Reporter that underwent a double mastectomy and 16 rounds of chemotherapy as she fought her way back to being healthy and able to return to work. “While I wouldn’t wish it on anyone, it was an absolute learning and growing experience for me to go through that and come out on the other side,” she told the B.A.R. in 2019. “So going through something like that certainly helped prepare me, you know.”

John Ferrannini

Departing San Francisco Fire chief Jeanine Nicholson, left, and Mayor London Breed shared smiles at a news conference highlighting Nicholson’s career.

Nicholson’s retirement was announced in late July. Mayor London Breed appointed Nicholson in 2019. Nicholson has been with the department since 1994. Running for reelection, Breed will now have the opportunity to select a new fire chief, though that was not on the agenda as she gave remarks praising Nicholson at the news conference.

“Who would have thought we’d be fighting a once-in-a-hundred-year global pandemic?” Breed asked, referring to COVID. “The fire department was part of that response and Chief Nicholson stepped up.” See page 5 >>


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