January 20, 2022 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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Candidates square off

Stuart Loomis dies at 102

ARTS

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Lady Camden

Since 1971

The

www.ebar.com

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

Vol. 52 • No. 03 • January 20-26, 2022

Gay Captain Del Gandio makes SFPD history by Matthew S. Bajko Courtesy Vitalant

Brian Custer, Ph.D., of Vitalant

Blood study seeks gay, bi men to challenge FDA ban by John Ferrannini

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pilot study that could lead to changes in federal rules prohibiting sexually active men who have sex with men from donating blood is seeking 200 more participants in the Bay Area before July. The study is called the ADVANCE Study, which stands for Assessing Donor Variability And New Concepts in Eligibility. The study comes as the American Red Cross declared a blood supply shortage January 11 and as 22 U.S. senators sent a letter to Xavier Becerra, the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, and Dr. Janet Woodcock, the acting commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, asking them to scrap decades of restrictions on gay and bisexual men donating blood. As the Bay Area Reporter has reported, in 1983 due to the AIDS epidemic, the FDA imposed a lifetime ban on blood donations by men who’d had sex with men since 1977. Under the Obama administration this was changed to a ban on men who’d had sex with a man in the past 12 months; and under the Trump administration amid a blood shortage caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, this period was reduced to three months. Brian Custer, Ph.D., a gay man who is a vice president of research and scientific programs at Vitalant, said that the blood donation nonprofit is conducting a study in eight cities that will be presented to the FDA in early 2023. Custer said he hopes the study’s results will guide the federal agency to consider changing questions about men who have sex with men specifically to questions about sexual health and safety across all orientations. “We are conducting a study asking gay and bisexual men to come in so we can collect a blood sample,” Custer told the B.A.R. “We are also going to ask them to complete questions that may be used on a future version of the donor history questionnaire.” The donor history questionnaire is what prospective blood donors must fill out prior to doing so. Custer said that the study is going to look into whether questions about the number of one’s sexual partners, for example, might be a good replacement. “Questions like that would create an individual risk data set in the future,” he said. “The thing is one or two questions might differentiate gay and bisexual men at risk of getting HIV and those who aren’t, and if we can do that, we may be able to achieve changes in the future.” There are two places in the Bay Area where people who want to give a blood sample for the study can go: the Vitalant Blood Center at Turk and Masonic streets in San Francisco, and American Red Cross Blood Services at 6230 Claremont Avenue in Oakland. “We ask people to schedule an appointment online,” Custer said. Enrollment will continue until July. Only HIVnegative men who have sex with men should sign up for the study, which is limited to people ages 18-39. “Enrollment has been slower than we’d hoped it’d be,” Custer said. “The COVID pandemic has made people less likely to be part of research studies, for obvious reasons.” Custer said that “people are compensated for their time and reimbursed for being part of the project.” A person can earn $10 from a screening interview, up to $25 if they are enrolled, and up to See page 7 >>

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aptain Christopher Del Gandio has made history as the first out gay man to make that rank with the San Francisco Police Department. He is also currently the highest-ranking out LGBTQ police officer in the department. Former police commander Teresa Ewins, a lesbian who had served with SFPD for 26 years, had that distinction until she left last year to become chief of police in Lincoln, Nebraska. At the moment the highest-ranking LGBTQ person in the department is Matt Dorsey, a gay civilian who is director of strategic communications and part of SFPD Chief William Scott’s command staff. In a phone interview with the Bay Area Reporter, Del Gandio said reaching the promotional milestone in the department “feels great.” “There may have been some gay men before me possibly who made it but didn’t feel comfortable being out and proud, so I may not be the first,” he noted. “But to be openly gay from the start, with the work I put in and representing the community and also working very hard at my job to get here, it feels like a milestone for sure.”

Rick Gerharter

San Francisco Police Captain Christopher Del Gandio stands outside the police department’s Central Station.

SFPD Lieutenant Lisa Frazer, a lesbian who at one time was a beat officer in the LGBTQ Castro district, hailed Del Gandio’s breaking through the glass ceiling at the department in an interview with the B.A.R. She and Del Gandio in 2017 were both promoted to the rank of lieutenant.

“He is a really nice guy. I am really glad he is the first,” said Frazer, who now works out of San Francisco International Airport. “It is the highest rank any gay man has been promoted to in the history of SFPD.” See page 3 >>

Hearing nears for Diamond Street family housing project

by Matthew S. Bajko

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et to take place in early February is the long-delayed hearing before the city’s planning commission about a controversial market-rate housing project proposed for the hillside at the intersection of Diamond Heights Boulevard and Diamond Street. In recent weeks an agreement was reached to allow for it to come up for review at the oversight panel between the project proponent and several neighborhood leaders who had opposed it. Developer On Diamond LLC is seeking approval to build 24 new luxury homes and intends to pay close to $3 million to the Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community Development so it doesn’t have to set aside some as affordable housing. Nearby residents had argued that the entire project should be affordable and voiced criticisms about its impact to the trees on site and views afforded by the hilly property. The planning commission was initially set to weigh in on the project in August. But in light of the controversy surrounding the development, city planning staff postponed the hearing to give the developer and neighbors more time to work out a compromise. The hearing is now scheduled to take place Thursday, February 3. One of the biggest changes made to the project is that the housing is being pushed back onto the hillside rather than fronting the sidewalk in order to preserve 10 of the existing Monterey cypress trees. There had been 16 trees of significance on the hillside but a Monterey pine toppled during a storm late last year; the five others will be removed. The number of driveways is being reduced from 15 to eight. A staircase will run the length of the hillside from Diamond Street up to Diamond Heights Boulevard in order to provide a pedestrian connection between the Upper Noe and Diamond Heights neighborhoods. A publicly accessible deck will also be built above one of the residences to provide views spanning from downtown San Francisco and the Bay Bridge south to the San Mateo Bridge.

Courtesy On Diamond LLC

A staircase, right, leads to a publicly accessible deck in a new rendition of the proposed Diamond Street housing project.

“This public deck is going to have monster views,” said developer Marc Babsin. The changes to the project design will result in a few less bedrooms overall but not require a reduction in the number of housing units. Babsin also told the Bay Area Reporter he has agreed to fund various pedestrian improvements in the area, from new crosswalks and sidewalk bulbous to funds for ongoing maintenance of plantings in the street median. “We basically, through these dozens of meetings over many months, we redesigned the project so that it delivers to the community their top priorities to preserve the Monterey cypress trees and the panoramic view and to reduce the number of driveways,” said Babsin. “Those were their three most important items.” Signing on to the agreement not to oppose the project are Betsy Eddy, co-president of the Diamond Heights Community Association; Diamond Street resident Steve Chaffin; and Olga Milan-Howells, president of the Upper Noe Neighbors residential association. They had formed the 1900 Diamond for All group that was organizing against the project and

had formed a website with a petition for people to sign opposing it. In a brief phone interview January 12, Eddy told the B.A.R. that due to the changes Babsin has agreed to make, the trio of community leaders will no longer oppose the development. She shared the statement they intend to email to the people who signed the petition to let them know about the compromise they have negotiated. “Although some may be disappointed, there has been a considerable investment in time and money in this effort. After 1.5 years pushing for a better outcome; addressing environmental, neighborhood and legal concerns at a cost of +$100k in legal, architects and expert fees, significant changes have been made by the Emerald Fund to the project which benefit the neighborhood,” it reads in part. If approved, the project will be the first sizeable family housing development to be built in that section of the city’s eighth supervisorial district in years. See page 6 >>


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