August 13, 2015 Edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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SF Shakespeare Fest

Lush Life

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PAWS, Shanti merge

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

by Seth Hemmelgarn

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wo San Francisco nonprofits that work with people with AIDS and other illnesses are merging, the organizations announced this week. Pets Are Wonderful Rick Gerharter Support, which helps low-income people Shanti Executive who have disabling Director HIV/AIDS and other Kaushik Roy illnesses care for their pets, will merge with and become a program of the Shanti Project, which provides support to people living with AIDS, cancer, and other life-threatening illnesses. The organizations made the announcement in a news release Wednesday, August 12. “Improving the lives of people who depend on our services is paramount to Shanti’s mission,” Kaushik Roy, Shanti’s executive director, said in the release. “Combining our efforts with PAWS means we’ll make a more meaningful impact for those supported by both organizations.” Frank Petkovich, Shanti’s board chair, stated, “We’re thrilled to bring PAWS into the Shanti family, which will provide continuity and a strong financial base from which both organizations will benefit.” After the merger, Shanti’s 2015-16 budget will be $4.1 million. “PAWS’ work complements Shanti’s efforts to provide emotional and practical support to vulnerable individuals across San Francisco,” Petkovich added. PAWS will continue to serve clients from its Mission district building at 3170 23rd Street. Current, full-time staff members of both nonprofits will be offered jobs in the merged organization. Katherine D’Amato, PAWS’ director of client services, will serve as the PAWS program director at Shanti. Among other changes, both groups’ board members will be invited to join the new Shanti board, and the agency’s volunteer operations will be combined. As of December, PAWS had “630 active human clients and 812 companion animals,” interim Executive Director Sarah Cramer told the Bay Area Reporter earlier this summer. Its budget is $898,000. Shanti serves more than 2,000 people annually in all its programs. In an interview this week, Roy, who’s 37 and a straight ally, said conversations about the merger had been happening “in earnest” See page 9 >>

Vol. 45 • No. 33 • August 13-19, 2015

CA prison to provide surgery to trans woman by Seth Hemmelgarn

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tate prison officials have reached a groundbreaking settlement with a transgender woman held in a men’s prison and will provide gender-affirming surgery for her, while another imprisoned transgender woman who’s been seeking surgery from the state was paroled this week. The Oakland-based Transgender Law Center announced August 7 that the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation will provide surgery and other medical care for Shiloh Quine, 56. “After so many years of almost giving up on myself, I will finally be liberated from the prison within a prison I felt trapped in, and feel whole, both as a woman and as a human being,” Quine said in a Friday news release from TLC. “I’m just overwhelmed, especially knowing that this

Shiloh Quine Courtesy SFINX Publishing/The Women of San Quentin

will help so many other people. I know I can never truly make amends for what I’ve done in the past, but I am committed to making myself a better person, and to helping others so they don’t have to struggle the way I have.” Quine has been serving a term of life without the possibility of parole since 1981 after being convicted in Los Angeles County for first-degree murder, kidnapping, and robbery. She’s being held in Mule Creek State Prison, a men’s facility in Ione, California. Quine is one of several people profiled in

The Women of San Quentin: Soul Murder of Transgender Women in Male Prisons, a book by Kristin Schreier Lyseggen that’s set to be released in September. According to an unproofed galley of the book, Quine wrote to Lyseggen that she’d told police in 1980 “that the gun used to murder someone was hers, even though it wasn’t. She was serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole for a murder she said she did not commit.” See page 10 >>

Not much for LGBTs during GOP debate by Lisa Keen

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epublican presidential hopeful Rand Paul singled out Houston’s lesbian mayor for criticism, saying she had tried to “invade the church to enforce [her] own opinion on marriage.” Candidate Bobby Jindal said he’d sign an executive order on day one to ensure that “Christian business owners and individuals don’t face discrimination for having a traditional view of marriage.” And Mike Huckabee suggested that allowing transgender people to serve openly in the military would mean the government would have to pay for their gender change surgery. In short: There were no surprises on LGBT issues from the 17 Republican presidential hopefuls who took part in one of two August 6 debates sponsored and broadcast by Fox News. Only six of the candidates fielded a question that hit upon an LGBT issue. And only one of those six – Ohio Governor John Kasich – answered in a way that suggested a measure of respect for LGBT people. Kasich said he would love his own child even if she was gay. But his wording walked a delicate line between noble father and tolerant tongue-biter. “Kasich’s answer was far from perfect – the phrasing ‘if one of my daughters happened to be that’ was unfortunate, and in noting that he would love his daughters ‘no matter what they do,’ he indicated that he thought being lesbian was something that requires forbearance,” wrote June Thomas, editor of Slate.com’s

Getty Images

The Republican presidential candidates at last week’s main debate included, from left, Chris Christie, Marco Rubio, Ben Carson, Scott Walker, Donald Trump, Jeb Bush, Mike Huckabee, Ted Cruz, Rand Paul, and John Kasich.

LGBTQ section. “Nevertheless, his response was loving and humane. ...” The mainstream media and the audience at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland reacted favorably to Kasich’s comments. But other candidates showed no interest in walking a line

between flat out opposition and respect for anything LGBT. At best, some Republican candidates participating in the debates just seemed eager to slide off the topic whenever asked to

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