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GAPA early endorses SF mayor by Matthew S. Bajko
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club for gay Asian and Pacific Islander men in the Bay Area has come out with an early endorsement for San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee’s re-election bid. After Lee met with Rick Gerharter the board of the Gay Asian Pacific Alliance Mayor Ed Lee at its December 9 meeting, the members voted to back Lee’s 2015 mayoral campaign. “Mayor Lee has proven himself to be an effective leader, he has taken the city in the right direction,” Benjamin Leong, who stepped down this month as GAPA’s co-chair, told the Bay Area Reporter. “The economy is up and unemployment is down. And we would like to see this trend continue.” Leong added that since Lee became the city’s interim mayor in 2011, and then won a full four-year term that November, he has been a leader for both the LGBT and API communities. “He has been a leader for the San Francisco community,” wrote Leong in an emailed response. “Mayor Lee has been a leader for the Bay Area and the region and that is why GAPA has come out and gave an early, sole endorsement of Mayor Lee.” In doing so GAPA is the first major LGBT group in the city to announce its support of Lee’s re-election campaign, whose slogan is “Ed Lee. He’s for Me.” Neither of the city’s two main LGBT Democratic clubs – Alice B. Toklas and Harvey Milk – is currently looking to early endorse the mayor. In 2011 Alice gave Lee its third choice endorsement under the city’s rankedchoice voting system, and Milk altogether snubbed the mayor, who at first had insisted he would not seek election to a full term. Alice co-chair Zoe Dunning told the B.A.R. last week that it was “undetermined” if the more moderate political club would follow GAPA’s lead. No board member has yet requested that Alice consider early endorsing Lee. Should someone do so, the club’s political action committee, by a 66 percent vote, would then need to recommend that the membership hold an early endorsement vote, otherwise it would be rejected. The threshold for approving such a vote by the membership would then drop to 60 percent, and if met, the club would then consider early endorsing Lee. “No one has done so or indicated doing this right now,” said Dunning, a mayoral appointee to the city’s library commission who has yet to personally endorse Lee. “I am waiting to see where Alice goes first.” See page 14 >>
Courtesy SFO
San Francisco International Airport is decked out in holiday lights – and a miniature Golden Gate Bridge – as passengers arrive and depart.
SFO Milk terminal is in holding pattern by Matthew S. Bajko
Rick Gerharter
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his year 29 Castro merchants chipped in to drape 31 sidewalk trees from Sanchez to Castro in white LED lights to provide a festive, warm welcome to the
LGBT neighborhood. The tree lights joined the gold bows adorning the median palm trees for the holiday decorations, which were organized by the Castro Merchants group.
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ineteen months after he agreed to name a terminal at San Francisco International Airport in honor of gay
Sit/lie law still draws concern
See page 2 >>
by Seth Hemmelgarn
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our years ago, San Francisco voters passed the sit/lie law, which bans people from sitting or lying on the city’s sidewalks between 7 a.m. and 11 p.m. From the beginning, opponents have said the law amounts to harassment of homeless people, including LGBT youth. Supporters have said the ban is needed to keep the sidewalks open for businesses and residents. Since the law passed in November 2010, the discussion has died down, and there hasn’t been much analysis on data related to the ban. But the law is being enforced, and it still evokes strong feelings. “The biggest problem with sit/lie is we can keep ticketing and keep jailing, but it doesn’t end homelessness, so people have nowhere to go,” Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the city’s Coalition on Homelessness, said in an interview last week. Friedenbach said when people don’t pay their citations, they may get warrants, and then they can be blocked from getting into public housing or get arrested. According to Officer Grace Gatpandan, a San Francisco Police Department spokeswoman, from January through December 17 this year, there have been 514 warnings and 776 citations issued citywide. Data by district and historical figures weren’t immediately available. Data on how often people don’t pay their citations – $50 to $100 for a first offense – isn’t readily available from San Francisco County Superior
Rick Gerharter
Homeless people slept in front of Most Holy Redeemer Church in the Castro district in this 2012 file photo.
Court or other agencies, but longtime gay housing activist and sit/lie opponent Tommi Avicolli Mecca said it’s time for the law to go. “I really call on the leaders of the LGBT community to look at this law and to make it a priority to repeal this law, because it does affect the poorest of folks in our community,” said Avicolli Mecca, who works at the Housing Rights Committee of San Francisco. “It affects them by affecting their ability to get housing.” “What is the point of having this law in the first place?” he added.
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© Keith Haring Foundation
Vol. 44 • No. 52 • December 25-31, 2014
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Moving people along
Andrea Aiello, executive director of the Castro/Upper Market Community Benefit District, expressed support for the ban. “I think that there are some times, when people spend five or six hours in one spot sitting on the sidewalk, that it’s helpful for police to have a tool to move people along,” especially if someone is blocking the path, Aiello said. Captain Raj Vaswani heads the Park police station, which oversees part of the Castro neighSee page 11 >>
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Golden Gate Park • deyoungmuseum.org