June 9, 2016 Edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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Pride prez reaches out

ARTS

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Gockley gala

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Gay love in the Haight

The

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

Vol. 46 • No. 23 • June 9-15, 2016

10 out candidates win legislative primary races by Matthew S. Bajko

O Rick Gerharter

Construction crews worked on the roof of the 55 Laguna project earlier this year.

SF residents get priority for senior housing by Matthew S. Bajko

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reference will be given to seniors living or working in San Francisco for the city’s first affordable housing development aimed at LGBT elders, under a significant change from what was previously announced. Those 55 and over will have until next Thursday to turn in their applications to be entered into the lottery that will select residents for the See page 16 >>

Strut director resigns by Seth Hemmelgarn

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he executive director of Strut, the San Francisco AIDS Foundation’s gay and bi men’s health center in the Castro district, is leaving. Tim Patriarca, 47, Liz Highleyman who joined SFAF in 2013, before Strut Tim Patriarca opened, submitted his resignation last week. It will be effective July 1. Patriarca, who doesn’t have a new job lined up, said Monday it’s been “a complete and utter honor” to lead the center, which provides free services, including HIV and other sexually transmitted disease testing, to thousands of people a year, but with the facility established, “It seemed like a great time to leave.” Patriarca’s resignation comes just a month after Joe Hollendoner started as SFAF’s new CEO, but he said he hasn’t had any trouble with his new boss. “I’m really happy we have a permanent CEO,” Patriarca said, adding, “Joe’s on board, See page 5 >>

f the 14 out California statehouse candidates running this year, 10 survived Tuesday’s primary, where the top two vote-getters, regardless of party, advance to the general election in November. As expected, gay San Francisco Supervisor Scott Wiener was in first place in his bid for the 11th Senate District seat. The current officeholder, gay state Senator Mark Leno (DSan Francisco), is termed out this year and has endorsed Wiener to succeed him. Based on unofficial returns Wednesday, Wiener was leading with 46 percent, or 83,310 votes. But his Democratic opponent, Supervisor Jane Kim, made a strong showing, likely boosted by the endorsement of presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, whom she campaigned with in the Mission district this week. Kim took second with 44 percent, or 79,682 votes. Republican candidate Ken Loo was in third with 9.9 percent, or 17,927 votes. In a statement he posted to Facebook, Wiener took a swipe at the support Kim received from Sanders, the independent senator from Vermont. “We will continue to work hard toward November in our deeply grassroots local campaign. Unlike my opponent, who needed a lot of outside, non-Bay Area support and money to stay competitive in this race, our campaign is fueled by local supporters – community members,

Rick Gerharter

Supervisor Scott Wiener celebrates his state Senate primary win with Assemblyman David Chiu.

Supervisor Jane Kim is all smiles after advancing to the November election against Scott Wiener.

elected officials, and donors,” wrote Wiener. At her election night party Tuesday at gay nightclub Oasis, Kim criticized Wiener’s support from independent expenditures financed by corporate interests who, she claimed, want to “abolish rent control” throughout the state. She asked her supporters to continue to campaign for her over the next five months as “we fight our way to Sacramento.”

vanced past Tuesday’s primary and will now compete in November. All four of the incumbent out Democratic lawmakers seeking re-election this fall landed in first place in their contests. The group includes gay Assemblyman Evan Low of Campbell; lesbian Stockton lawmakers Assemblywoman Susan Talamantes Eggman and Senator Cathleen Galgiani; and Senator Ricardo Lara, who is unopposed for his Los

Other out candidates advance

A number of gay and lesbian candidates ad-

See page 7 >>

Clinton clinches Dem nomination analysis by Lisa Keen

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illary Clinton made history Tuesday when she became the first woman in U.S. history to secure the presidential nomination of a major party. Clinton unofficially secured the Democratic presidential nomination June 6, a day before votes were tallied in the six states that held primaries June 7. She convincingly won California, 55.8 percent to Senator Bernie Sanders’ 43.2 percent, according to unofficial returns from the secretary of state’s website. Speaking from her campaign headquarters in Brooklyn, New York, Clinton linked her nomination to the historic movement to gain the right to vote for women and promised to help “write the next chapter” in American history. In another historic first, California voters on Tuesday advanced two Democrats, both women, to contend in November for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by longtime LGBT supporter Barbara Boxer. It is the first time the state’s general election ballot will include two candidates of the same party for a Senate seat and is the result of California’s jungle primary, in which the top two finishers, regardless of party, advance to the general election. State Attorney General Kamala Harris and Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez (Garden Grove) were the top two vote-getters. Both are strong supporters of LGBT civil rights. Sanchez scored 100 percent on the Human Rights Campaign’s Congressional Scorecard for the 113th

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Jane Philomen Cleland

Hillary Clinton, shown at a May rally in Oakland, clinched the Democratic presidential nomination Tuesday.

Congress, and 85 and 88 for the previous two sessions. The lesbian political action committee LPAC endorsed Harris, as did Equality California. The Human Rights Campaign did not endorse a candidate in the race. Harris has the early lead, as she finished with 40.3 percent of the vote, while Sanchez received 18.5 percent, based on preliminary returns.

Clinton reaches delegate goal

The Associated Press reported Monday night that Clinton had secured enough delegates to win the Democratic presidential nomination. Counting delegates she won in primaries and superdelegates who have committed to voting for her at the convention, Clinton could count

on more than the magic number: 2,383. The Sanders campaign was upset with the AP story because it feared people wouldn’t vote in California if the race had been called. It’s unclear what affect the early call had on voting in the state. In the six states that voted Tuesday, Clinton won four: California, New Jersey, New Mexico, and South Dakota. According to a New York Times tally, that gave her a total of 2,184 delegates earned in the primaries. Adding in 571 superdelegates, she now has 2,755 delegate votes. Sanders won the Montana primary and the North Dakota caucus on Tuesday, and now has a total of 1,852 – 1,804 earned in primaries plus 48 superdelegates. While Sanders blamed Clinton’s lopsided superdelegate support on her “establishment” status, it may also be due, at least in part, to the fact that he was not a member of the Democratic Party during his terms in Congress. In a speech to supporters in Santa Monica, California, at 10:45 p.m. Tuesday, Sanders said his campaign would “continue the fight” in the next, and final, Democratic primary, June 14, in Washington, D.C., and would continue to fight for “every vote and every delegate.” Sanders sent mixed messages Tuesday about how vigorously he would continue his fight for the nomination. He surprised many when he said during his speech Tuesday that he had called Clinton “and congratulated her on her See page 16 >>

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