January 11, 2024 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

Page 1

Sex shop workers seek union

Leather entrepreneurs get help

11

'Babes in Ho-lland'

11

ARTS

06

ARTS

03

David Bowie's queer roots

The

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

Vol. 54 • No. 2 • January 11-17, 2024

Gay Alameda County judicial candidate blasted for possible ethics breach by John Ferrannini

A Courtesy Law Offices of Justice Ojo

Lauren Ganderson is suing grantmaking nonprofit Groundswell Fund after she was terminated.

Trans woman sues SF-based nonprofit for retaliation by John Ferrannini

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transgender woman fired by a San Francisco-based nonprofit has filed a lawsuit alleging retaliation after she said that she was harassed by a supervisor and terminated after she complained. Lauren Ganderson is being represented by attorney Justice Ojo of the Law Offices of Justice Ojo. She is suing the grantmaking organization Groundswell Fund, where Ganderson worked from 2021 to 2023, according to a civil complaint filed in August in San Francisco County Superior Court. The complaint alleges six causes of action – including discrimination, harassment, retaliation, and wrongful termination. “Groundswell Fund is an organization that externally purports to advance the causes of marginalized people, including transgender people,” the complaint states. “However, internally Groundswell Fund furthers a hostile culture for marginalized people, including transgender people.” According to its website, Groundswell Fund operates several grant programs, including a Black Trans Fund, which it states is the “first U.S.-based national fund in the country dedicated to uplifting, resourcing, and building the capacity of Black trans social justice leaders.” The nonprofit also has a Birth Justice Fund, a Rapid Response Fund, and others, according to its website. “I’m filing my suit because I was attracted to this organization because of their mission statement,” Ganderson told the Bay Area Reporter on January 8 during a phone call where she was joined by her attorney. “I love the cause; I loved my position. I had worked my way up through the ranks.” Ganderson is alleging that she “has been subjected to a continuous pattern of severe and pervasive harassment based on her gender identity,” the complaint states. When she brought it up with her supervisor, IT director Robin Bundy, she was “consistently ignored,” the complaint alleges. See page 8 >>

gay Alameda County Superior Court commissioner who is running for judge said that he voted for District Attorney Pamela Price in 2022, a move that could violate judicial ethics and raises questions about impartiality. Price herself is under the threat of a recall, which could go before voters sometime this year. Mark Fickes made the pronouncement at a meeting of the Alameda County Democratic Party Central Committee on Wednesday night; a video (https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=lPWl1B5-7lg) posted by reporter Steven Tavares, who publishes the East Bay Insiders newsletter, shows a member of the committee – which decides the Democrats’ endorsements in county races, including for the bench – asking “can the candidates tell us who they voted for for district attorney in 2022?” Answered Fickes: “Well, I guess I’ll say I voted for Pamela Price.” Several people began to applaud and one shouted, “Yes!” Subsequently Price, who in addition to serving as DA is an elected member of the central committee, voted to endorse Fickes.

Courtesy the candidates

Alameda County judicial candidate Mark Fickes, left, told members of the county Democratic Party’s central committee that he voted for District Attorney Pamela Price last year, which could violate judicial ethics.

Fickes went on to receive the Alameda County Democratic Party’s endorsement with 30 votes, according to Tavares’ newsletter. Fickes did not return a message seeking comment.

Fickes’ opponent in the March 5 race, attorney Michael Johnson, told the Bay Area Reporter over the phone January 5 that he did not answer the question himself. See page 8 >>

Website, political initiative offer support for transgender community by Matthew S. Bajko

S

an Jose native Thomasine “Tamzin” Caroline Selvi has been a tech entrepreneur since graduating from UC Berkeley in 2014 with a degree in electrical engineering and computer science. Years later Selvi came out as a trans woman and began to transition her gender. She also became more vocal about being a trans advocate in the public sphere as she witnessed the transgender community come under attack in state legislatures across the country. “Unlike them, we have something serious to lose. Their livelihood is not at stake,” said Selvi, 34, who is demisexual and moved to the East Bay city of Richmond four years ago. “It is why trans people are going to step up and fight. It is why so many trans people are willing to join this effort and move forward. We are not going to let our rights be stripped away.” Wanting to put her professional skills to use in fighting back and benefitting the trans community, Selvi used her savings to buy the rights to the domain transgender.org last year for $10,000. Years prior she had first become familiar with the site, which had been owned by JoAnn Roberts, a well-known trans activist and website designer who died in 2013. In the late 1990s to mid-2000s, Roberts had

Courtesy Tamzin Selvi

Thomasine “Tamzin” Caroline Selvi bought the domain rights to Transgender.org.

co-owned 3-D Communications Inc. with two other trans women, Jamie Faye Fenton and Angela Gardner, and created several websites for the trans community. By purchasing transgender.org Selvi was ensuring one of the women’s legacy sites wouldn’t be used for nefarious reasons, such as duping trans people into buying fake drugs. “I really didn’t see what else I could spend my money on and was more important than owning that domain. If I buy this, I can guarantee

someone else will not buy it and use it for malicious purposes,” said Selvi during a recent phone interview with the Bay Area Reporter. “We share in the mission and goal to give transgender people better access to resources and a support network.” She took over the site last August and set about making it a trans resource repository, similar to its original purpose when it first went live online. See page 8 >>


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