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Bathhouse rule change delayed
SF revives LGBTQ panel
New D8 safety liaison
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Musical Grooves Pt. 2
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Postal panel will take up drag stamp request
Courtesy Ricardo Lara
California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara
Lara order supports trans youth accessing medical care
by Matthew S. Bajko
by Matthew S. Bajko
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postal service stamp advisory panel will consider issuing stamps honoring three deceased drag icons who have become heroic figures within the LGBTQ community. The trio would be the first drag performers to be honored in such a manner if the stamps are approved. Those being considered by the U.S. Postal Service’s Citizens’ Stamp Advisory Committee are JosÊ Julio Sarria, Marsha P. Johnson, and Sylvia Rivera, according to a December 9 letter the federal agency sent to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. On the last day of LGBTQ History Month in October, the 11-member board
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alifornia Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara is taking steps to ensure transgender youth are not denied access to medical care by their insurance company. Lara announced December 30 that he had directed the Department of Insurance to issue a General Counsel Opinion Letter clarifying that under exSee page 8 >>
Boudin under fire in hit-and-run case by John FerranniniÂ
Illustrations: Thomas Haller Buchanan
An artist rendered proposed postage stamps honoring drag icons JosĂŠ Julio Sarria, Marsha P. Johnson, and Sylvia Rivera.
became the first elected body to officially endorse the postage effort. In the letter thanking the supervisors for their resolution, the federal agency disclosed that the advisory committee would take under consideration issuing the stamps for the drag performers possibly in 2023 or a year later. The advisory panel recommends ideas for commemorative stamps, but it is up to the U.S. postmaster general to make a final determination. “Currently, stamps for 2023 and subsequent years are being considered. I understand that the Committee wiil (sic) be considering proposals to issue stamps honoring Jose Julio Sarria, Marsha P. Johnson, and Sylvia Rivera,� wrote Nadine Munson, the postal service’s government rela-
tions correspondence manager. “If they do not receive approval for issuance in the future, the announcement will be made publicly, in keeping with our standard practice. The Board of Supervisors’ support for this subject is being included in the Committee’s files.� San Diego resident Nicole Murray Ramirez launched the campaign in the summer after the Bay Area Reporter contacted him for comment about several stamps issued to commemorate the 80th birthday of Bugs Bunny depicting the animated rabbit in drag. It is believed to be the first time drag has been featured on U.S. stamps. Known as the Queen Mother I of the Americas and Nicole the Great within the Imperial Court See page 8 >>
Campos, now DA chief of staff, sees chance for ‘real reform’
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an Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin, who campaigned on a criminal justice reform platform, is facing heightened scrutiny in the wake of a parolee allegedly involved in a hitRick Gerharter and-run incident that San Francisco killed two pedestrians in the South of Market District Attorney Chesa Boudin neighborhood on New Year’s Eve. Those criticisms include a petition calling on Boudin to resign. Police arrested San Francisco resident Troy Ramon McAlister, 45, on December 31 for driving under the influence after a reported stolen vehicle he was driving allegedly struck Elizabeth Platt, 60, and Hanako Abe, 27, while they entered a crosswalk at Mission and Second streets. Boudin’s office charged McAlister with a series of felonies January 4 related to the deaths of Platt and Abe, including two counts of vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated (McAlister pleaded not guilty in court January 5) – but at issue for Boudin’s critics is the fact that McAlister was arrested several times in recent months, including for car theft and auto burglary, but was not charged. McAlister, who was paroled in April, was arrested again in June, August, October, November, and on December 20. Boudin said some of
Vol. 51 • No. 01 • January 7-13, 2021
by John Ferrannini
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he mileage on David Campos’ car’s odometer is not increasing as quickly since he took on the job as District Attorney Chesa Boudin’s chief of staff a little over two months ago – his previous role as a deputy county executive of Santa Clara County had him regularly driving between the South Bay and his San Francisco home. “I’d commute by transit from time to time but it was easier to drive since Santa Clara County is spread out and I oversaw a number of agencies and office locations,� Campos, a gay man, told the Bay Area Reporter recently in a wide-ranging phone interview. Campos, 50, is already familiar to San Franciscans from his eight years as the District 9 supervisor and now as the chair of the San Francisco Democratic Party. On the Board of Supervisors, he represented the Mission district and Bernal Heights. He hopes to add another job – as the B.A.R. recently reported, Campos announced December 21 that he is seeking the position of vice chair of the California Democratic Party. It was the opportunity to work with Boudin, however, which led him to return to San Fran-
Courtesy SF DA’s office
David Campos serves as chief of staff to San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin.
cisco government. He told the B.A.R. that he was inspired by Boudin’s November 2019 victory and the top prosecutor’s desire to be a progressive reformer. “I loved my job in Santa Clara County. I was overseeing operations at a number of agencies in the last few months, helping with COVID re-
sponse,� Campos said. “When the opportunity of working with DA Boudin came up, I thought that it was the right move for me. When you think about where criminal justice reform is possible, if it can’t happen here in San Francisco, it’s hard to see it happening anywhere else. “In San Francisco, with the leadership of this DA, it’s possible, and I wanted to be a part of it,� he added. Campos said that his roots as a gay man, and as an undocumented immigrant from Guatemala, from where he came to the United States as a teenager, inform his perspective as the number two person in the DA’s office. “The administration of justice in San Francisco – that’s a very serious responsibility,� Campos said. “So you have to have humility in this work. Being formerly undocumented, an immigrant, the experience of being an outsider shapes how you see things, and that’s an important perspective. I hope that the LGBTQ community knows we are dedicated to serving the diverse communities of San Francisco.� One way in which the DA’s office plans to serve those communities, Campos said, is through the appointment of liaisons to the various supervisorial districts. See page 8 >>
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