Gays uncork wine country
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ARTS
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First Look
Lea DeLaria
The
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Serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities since 1971
Vol. 45 • No. 37 • September 10-16, 2015
Sex workers M protest Rentboy raid
by David-Elijah Nahmod
Jane Philomen Cleland
Oakland Pride banners, like this one at Franklin and 20th streets, promote Sunday’s parade and festival.
Oakland Pride expands
A demonstration against the recent federal raid of gay escort site Rentboy. com attracted about 100 people last weekend in the Castro.
by Matthew S. Bajko
H
aving pushed the event to a later date this year, Oakland Pride organizers expect to see the number of attendees increase to 50,000 at this Sunday’s parade and festival, an increase of at least 5,000 from the 2014 event, which was held over the Labor Day weekend. Oakland Pride has also raised a record $150,000 so far in sponsorships for the 2015 event. The total is $70,000 more than what the Pride board has raised in past years and has helped it retire the $40,000 in debt it was carrying from the 2014 event. “This year is the first year we actually have been in the black,” said Pride board Co-Chair Carlos Uribe. “It is due to the number of sponsors and the dollar amounts we have been able to bring in this year. We are also trying to keep costs down.” With many people out of town for the Labor Day holiday, the volunteer-run Pride board decided to throw the 2015 event a week later. And this year marks the second time since the annual LGBT event was revived in 2009 that there is a parade up Broadway to kick off the festivities. “For the past couple of years we’ve asked our audience what can we do to improve Pride. One of the things we heard from Oakland folks was, can you change the date so we can be there,” said Uribe. As of Tuesday afternoon, 60 contingents had signed up to march in the parade, which will commence at 10:30 a.m. from 14th Street in downtown Oakland. One of the larger entrants is expected to be Kaiser Permanente, whose chairman and chief executive Bernard J. Tyson is this year’s Pride Partner grand marshal of the parade. “They have come in as a major sponsor this year. Not just in terms of a cash donation but just a huge amount of support,” said Uribe, noting the company helped pay for banners promoting this year’s Oakland Pride that went up last week around the city’s downtown and Lake Merritt areas. See page 18 >>
ore than 100 sex workers and their supporters gathered in the Castro last weekend to protest the recent federal raid of gay escort site Rentboy.com. The escort and gay porn communities are still reeling in the aftermath of the August 25 raid on the New York City offices of Rentboy. com, a popular site for gay escorts to connect with potential clients. Rentboy CEO Jeffrey Hurant and six of his employees were taken into custody by agents from the Department of Homeland Security and the New York Police Department. The Rentboy site has since been shuttered. Reaction from the LGBT community was swift, with many decrying what they call a “war on sex” amid calls to decriminalize a profession that protesters say helps some sex workers to pay the bills. The raid came shortly after Amnesty International delegates from around the world adopted a resolution that authorized the global group’s board to develop and adopt a policy protecting the human rights of sex workers. Since then, several LGBT organizations, including the National Center for Lesbian Rights and the Transgender Law Center, have called for the decriminalization of sex work. Mark Sade, a member of San Francisco’s BDSM community, organized “Labor of Love,” a September 5 rally in support of sex worker’s See page 17 >>
Gay leader marks a decade at East Bay Jewish agency Rick Gerharter
by Matthew S. Bajko
T
en years ago Andrew “Avi” Rose, an outspoken leader in the fight against AIDS during the epidemic’s early years, was a stay-at-home dad raising two children with his husband and working parttime as a consultant when he was recruited to be the interim executive director at the Jewish Family and Children’s Services of the East Bay. Initially hired on a temporary basis, Rose, a licensed clinical social worker, and the agency clicked. A decade later the 61-year-old continues to oversee the 138-year-old provider of services not only to the East Bay’s Jewish community but a wide array of clients, both LGBT and straight, from children and minority families to seniors and refugees. “That combination of working within the Jewish community but also within our wonderfully diverse, multicultural East Bay world is really powerful and satisfying for me,” said Rose, who lives with his husband, Ron Strochlic, and their children Oren Rose-Strochlic, 13, and Aviva Rose-Strochlic, 12, in Oakland. Rose is about to preside over one of the biggest changes to the agency during his tenure. In October it will rebrand itself as the Jewish Family and Community Services of the East Bay and debut a new tagline of “Compassion in action. Commitment to all.”
Susan Freundlich
Jewish Family and Children’s Services of the East Bay Executive Director Andrew “Avi” Rose
Changing that one word in its name, which has been under discussion since the start of the year, will better reflect the vast array of services and people the agency serves, explained Rose during an hourlong interview with the Bay Area Reporter at the agency’s offices in downtown Berkeley. “It is one of the most challenging parts of our job to have the name we have and reach all the
people who we want to reach who can benefit from our services,” he said. “The new name honors our history, but even more clearly and emphatically, it emphasizes the breadth of who we are. Thirty percent of our clients are Jewish and 70 percent are not.” Rose’s ability to connect with people from disparate backgrounds, said Rabbi Yoel Kahn, a gay man who serves on JFCS/East Bay’s board and has known Rose for 30 years, makes him ideally suited to oversee an agency working with such a diverse client base. “Avi is one of these bridge building, connecting leaders,” said Kahn, now at Congregation Beth El in Berkeley. He noted that, “Jewish Family and Community Services of the East Bay is largely supported by and rooted in the Jewish community but its clientele is across the community.” The agency continues to serve a large number of Holocaust survivors, said Rose, while the majority of the refugees it has helped to resettle in the area over the last 15 years are Muslims from Afghanistan, as well as Iraq, Syria, and Bosnia. “We have our own history as Jews needing refuge and having a core value of welcoming the stranger. So we feel strongly about continuing to bring in refugees who need a home, to stand up for them, to stand with them,” said See page 17 >>
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