March 24, 2016 Edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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LGBT historic sites proposed

ARTS

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Bill Graham

Lesli Margherita

The

www.ebar.com

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

Data shows increase in LGBT CA residents

Vol. 46 • No. 12 • March 24-30, 2016

No Pink Party this year

by Matthew S. Bajko

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ith relative frequency in recent years, news outlets have touted how more conservative areas of the U.S. are becoming home to growing populations Jane Philomen Cleland of LGBT residents. Whether it be the Gary Gates yearly list of the “gayest cities” compiled by LGBT magazine the Advocate, which often includes head-scratching locations most people couldn’t pinpoint on a map, to stories about San Francisco’s Castro district losing its LGBT residents, the impression given is that California and other liberal coastal states are no longer attracting as many LGBT people as they once did. The latest round of headlines cropped up earlier this month after the website ConsumerAffairs.com released a map it said showed “LGBT people are moving to traditionally red states.” The website Daily Beast mirrored many news outlets with its coverage that posited, “LGBT people are leaving urban, coastal hubs for conservative cities.” Ryan Daly, a content manager with ConsumerAffairs, told the Bay Area Reporter that the trend of where LGBT people are choosing to live mirrors that of millennials, which the map also tracked. “People are leaving big expensive cities in search of mid-tier cities because it costs a little less to live there, the commute is a little shorter, and there are plenty of jobs,” said Daly. “A lot of those cities happen to be in red states.” Yet the demographic data for LGBT people the map relies on tells a much different story, said Gary Gates, Ph.D., one of the most prominent researchers of the country’s LGBT community who recently retired from the Williams Institute, the LGBT think tank based at UCLA. “I don’t think it has anything to do with mobility,” Gates, who now lives in Seattle, told the B.A.R. “It has to do with visibility.” What the data is showing, said Gates, isn’t LGBT people moving to cities in more conservative states but that LGBT residents in socalled “red states” are more comfortable being out of the closet in both their day-to-day lives and when answering survey questions. “People often read it as the only way to get changes in LGBT populations is to get people to move there. That just isn’t true,” said See page 8 >>

by Seth Hemmelgarn

Castro Street was crowded during last year’s Pink Party as throngs of people turned out to celebrate Pride.

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here will be no Pink Party in the city’s gay Castro district the Saturday before the annual LGBT Pride parade this June, marking the first time in more than 20 years the event hasn’t taken place in some incarnation. As the Bay Area Reporter first reported on

its blog last week, following a March 17 meeting with key stakeholders, gay Supervisor Scott Wiener, whose District 8 includes the Castro, said that there will be no street closures this year. In previous years, the streets were closed for the unofficial party, which this year would have been June 25. See page 12 >>

Historical society gets new archive space Rick Gerharter

by Seth Hemmelgarn

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an Francisco’s GLBT Historical Society has a new site for its voluminous archives. Terry Beswick, the nonprofit’s new executive director, said the lease on space at 989 Market Street is expected to be signed this week. “Our history is so rich. We really need a much larger space,” Beswick said of the historical society, which also runs the GLBT History Museum in the Castro district. He said the Market Street site “is a big leap in the right direction for us to adequately represent our community’s diverse histories.” The archives hold about 800 collections of personal papers, photographs, audiovisual recordings, and other ephemera. The nonprofit is looking to move in to the new archives location by May 16. The space is in the climate-controlled basement of a building that has housed offices for the tech firm Zendesk and other companies. “It’s going to take us a while to settle in,” Beswick said. Getting everything set up “will probably take us until mid to late June. Our goal is to get it done before Pride,” which is June 25-26. Money was a major consideration for the historical society. Beswick said rent on the current archives space, at 657 Mission Street, was going from more than $10,000 a month to about $25,000. “We’ve got to get out,” Beswick said. The rent for the new location is $15,840 a month, with a lease of seven years. The new location has approximately 6,500 square feet

Gareth Gooch Photography.com

Terry Beswick, the executive director of the GLBT Historical Society, is surrounded by guests at the GLBT History Museum’s fifth anniversary party January 29.

for archives and about another 1,500 for offices and conference space, Beswick said. “It’s going to be a wonderful space for us to grow into. We’ve outgrown our old archives,” he said, and the historical society plans to expand its collections. While the new site will help the historical society, it comes with “a significant increase” in

monthly costs, such as utilities. Beswick said the group would soon launch a fundraising drive through an online crowdfunding site and increased mailings. Along with new space for its archives, the historical society has long been trying to im-

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Celebrate the Bay Area Reporter’s historic 45th Anniversary with us! 2016 Besties party at Oasis • Thursday, April 7 from 6pm to 9pm. With guest-host Shawn Ryan • Performances by Connie Champagne, Veronica Klaus, Kingdom!....

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BESTIES

The 2016 LGBT Best of the Bay

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