February 4, 2016 Edition of the Bay Area Reporter

Page 1

SF park reopens at last

ARTS

3

17

29

Oscar nominees

Jinkxed

The

www.ebar.com

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

Lesbian to head SF General by Seth Hemmelgarn

A

n out lesbian has been selected to lead the Priscilla Chan and Mark Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center. Dr. Susan P. Ehrlich, a longtime physician whose appointment Dr. Susan P. Ehrlich follows a nationwide search, will start her new post as chief executive officer April 25. The county-run hospital is known for providing care to poor people who otherwise may not be able to get treatment, including many people who are living with HIV and AIDS. Ehrlich, who declined to share her age and what her salary will be, will lead a staff of 5,400 and manage a $1.1 billion budget. In response to emailed questions, she said, “The biggest challenge for any health care provider today, large or small, public or private, is to provide the highest quality care at the lowest cost and with the best experience for patients and staff.” To achieve this goal, the hospital uses what’s known as Lean, “a philosophy and set of tools” that comes “from Japanese management practice,” Ehrlich said. She said she’d join staff “in continuing this improvement journey.” Ehrlich comes to the hospital from the San Mateo Medical Center, where she’s been the CEO since 2009. There, she’s overseen a staff of about 1,500 and a budget of $270 million. In her 14 years at the center, she’s also served as chief medical officer, vice president, and medical director. Ehrlich, who continues to work as a physician, has also been budget and planning director for the San Francisco Department of Public Health. “We are very proud to welcome Susan to Zuckerberg San Francisco General, a critical component of the San Francisco Health Network,” Health Director Barbara Garcia, also a lesbian, said in a January 28 news release announcing Ehrlich’s hiring. “Dr. Ehrlich joins us at a moment of unprecedented activity and excitement, as the entire environment of health care is changing, as the needs of our community continue to grow, and as we prepare to move into our new state-of-the-art acute care and trauma center in spring of this year,” Garcia said. “We know our hospital will be in great hands.” Ehrlich said staff and patients would be moving into the new center by June. “My first priority will be to support the staff and providers in moving our patients safely and effectively into the building,” she said. EhSee page 14 >>

Vol. 46 • No. 5 • February 4-10, 2016

SF Pride names GM nominees T by Sari Staver

en local community leaders have been nominated for grand marshals for the 46th annual San Francisco Pride parade, and public voting started this week. The nominees, a diverse group of queer and straight people, were “selected for their contributions to the LGBTQ communities,” according to officials with the San Francisco LGBT Pride Celebration Committee Inc. SF Pride officials said that there were 50 people nominated, which the board whittled down to 10. The board also announced nominees for organizational grand marshal and for the pink brick, given to a person or group that has caused significant harm to the LGBT community. This year’s individual grand marshal nominees are Race Bannon, Queen Cougar, Pamela H. David, Deana Dawn, Bevan Dufty, Janetta Johnson, Joanie Juster, Mercedez Munro, Mia Satya, and Larry Yang. Organizational grand marshal nominees are AGUILAS, Black Lives Matter, St. James Infirmary, Transgender Gender Variant Intersex Justice Project, and UNITE HERE Local 2.

Individuals

Bannon, a gay man, has been an organizer, writer, educator, speaker and activist in the LGBT, leather/kink, polyamory and HIV/STI

Race Bannon

Queen Cougar

Pamela H. David

Deana Dawn

Bevan Dufty

Janetta Johnson

Joanie Juster

Mercedez Munro

Mia Satya

Larry Yang Courtesy SF Pride

prevention realms since the early 1970s. An author of two books and currently the leather columnist for the Bay Area Reporter, Bannon has been credited with creating the world’s largest kink-friendly psychotherapist and medical referral service. In an email to the B.A.R., Bannon said he’s especially proud of the work he did “to begin changing the perceptions of kinky people in the world of psychotherapy.” Bannon, 61, said he led the first project of its kind that helped change the diagnostic criteria in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM), which he calls the “bible of

psychotherapy.” The result, Bannon said, is that therapists “no longer assume that people into BDSM and other related sexualities were mentally ill.” “I have always worked hard to ensure that people from all walks of life could feel secure and informed in their sexual identity, erotic practices, and relationship choices,” he added. Cougar, also known as Colleen Small, co-chaired the Leather SM Roundup, a nowdefunct clean and sober group for people in the SM community, in 1991 and has traveled See page 13 >>

Latest Castro housing projects cause concern by Matthew S. Bajko

Several have been well received while Spiers’ Linea has been one of wo mixed-use developthe most derided for its geometric ments in the Castro’s upper design and, according to some Market Street corridor will critics, unappealing retail spaces. be taken up this month by the The latest batch of proposed decity’s planning commission amid velopments is drawing unusually concerns about their designs and strong concern from the Duboce complaints they include too few Triangle Neighborhood Assounits of affordable housing. ciation. It has voiced objections to On Thursday (February 4), the the designs of not only the projArquitectonica-designed 62-unit ects for the Home and Sullivan’s building at 2100 Market Street is up sites but another in-fill project at for a vote before the oversight body. 2201 Market Street (at Sanchez) The redevelopment of the corner where 14 units of housing is being restaurant space, last operated as proposed to replace an existing Home, and attached parking lot is commercial building currently ocfrom local developer Brian Spiers, Courtesy Brian Spiers Development cupied by a real estate firm. who owns nearby bar Lucky 13 and A rendering of the apartment building at 2100 Market Street, the DTNA has labeled all three of built the cube-like Linea develop- site of a former restaurant, shows a flatiron-inspired look. the designs as “generic and uninment, designed by the same architeresting” and blames the plantects, a block north on Market. ning department’s design review Market Street to go before the planning comThe following week, at its Febprocess for rejecting the architects’ bolder plans mission in nearly two years. ruary 11 meeting, the planning commission is for each site. Another five more redevelopment proposals slated to vote on the Prado Group’s revamp of In addition to pushing to see more cuttingslated for Market Street between Duboce AvSullivan’s Funeral Home at 2254 Market Street edge architecture, DTNA has joined with a enue and Castro Street are in the pipeline, with number of other neighborhood groups to deand its adjacent parking lot. The developer has proposed incorporating the existing structure several expected to also seek approval from city mand that the new projects set aside 20 percent officials this year. into a new building containing 45 apartments of their units as affordable. And it is pressing to Over the last three years a number of new see that any ground floor retail spaces be limand a townhouse with two units constructed on housing developments with retail spaces at the property’s 15th Street side. ited in size so the leases are not so astronomical street level have been built along the main thorBoth projects include ground floor retail in price that only chain stores can afford them. oughfare in the city’s gay district. All have been spaces and plan to set aside the required 12 perIts concerns are so great about the coming situated at prominent corner sites and feature cent of below-market-rate units on site. They See page 7 >> modernist designs. are the first new housing proposals for upper

T

{ FIRST OF THREE SECTIONS }

Homes, Sweet Homes The City’s Best Serving San Francisco Since 1956

Noe Valley Office 415.824.1100 Marina and Pacific Heights Offices 415.921.6000 Follow us on Facebook or Twitter, or read our daily blog at SFCitysBest.com

www.hill-co.com


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.
February 4, 2016 Edition of the Bay Area Reporter by Bay Area Reporter - Issuu