July 24 2014

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Panel: Gay wealth a myth

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ARTS

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Melissa Etheridge at DSH

Up Your Alley

The

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Vol. 44 • No. 30 • July 24-30, 2014

AIDS confab looks to future by Liz Highleyman

D

Rick Gerharter

Evicted tenants and partners Alison Panko, left, and Oona Hanawalt sit in their apartment on 25th Street in the Mission.

Queer SF couple fights eviction by Seth Hemmelgarn

A

San Francisco same-sex couple is fighting their landlords’ efforts to evict them from their apartment. Oona Hanawalt, 33, a special education teacher and tutor, and Alison Panko, 39, an unpaid psychotherapy intern, say landlord Irma Encinas is ousting them from their 25th Street home because Encinas claims they had illegal subtenants. A judge last week ruled against the couple, who identify as queer, and they have until August 1 to get out, according to Hanawalt. They’re appealing the judge’s ruling. “We are terrified, devastated, and entirely broke,” Panko said in an interview. Hanawalt and Panko are also suing Encinas because they say she failed to repair bad plumbing and other problems. Encinas formally sued the women for eviction in November 2013 after previously issuing several three-day eviction notices because she claimed “we had too many people living in our apartment and we had illegally replaced roommates.” Hanawalt moved into the apartment in 2008 with three other people. The rent on the four-bedroom apartment was $3,100 a month. She said all three of the others have been switched out “a couple of times.” Panko moved in in 2011. The couple has been together for more than seven years. Among other conditions, the 2008 lease says the tenants agreed “not to assign this See page 10 >>

Crowning achievement Jane Philomen Cleland

T

he annual AIDS Walk took place in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park Sunday, July 20 and first-time lead organization Project Inform said the event was a success. Some walkers wore crowns, and at least one person donned a costume. Dana Van Gorder, executive director of Project Inform, told the Bay Area Reporter that the agency had “tremendous support” from the 43

other Bay Area organizations that benefit from the walk. “Virtually all of the legacy sponsors returned this year, and we brought in a significant new corporate sponsor in Quest Diagnostics,” Van Gorder said. About 20,000 people took part in the AIDS Walk, on par with the past few years, and while fundraising totals aren’t yet complete, Van Gorder said that at least $2.3 million was raised.

elegates at the 20th International AIDS Conference, taking place this week in Melbourne, Australia, expressed optimism about progress made to date, but stressed that more remains Liz Highleyman to be done when it Bill Clinton comes to key populaaddresses the tions including gay International AIDS men, transgender Conference people, sex workers, and people who use drugs. The meeting opened on a somber note Sunday as attendees remembered six colleagues – See page 10 >>

Older lesbians gather in Oakland

by Matthew S. Bajko

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national organization for lesbians age 59 and older is hosting its biennial gathering in Oakland this weekend as it marks its 25th anniversary. Old Lesbians Organizing for Change expects more than 300 women to attend the gathering, which kicked off Wednesday and runs through Sunday, July 27 at the Oakland California Marriott Hotel and Convention Center in the heart of the East Bay city’s downtown. “I have been an activist all my life. To find a group that is lesbians in their 60s, 70s, and 80s still being activists, troublemakers, and looking for social justice makes me happy,” said San Francisco resident Carol Seajay, 64, who joined two years ago and is presenting two workshops at the gathering, including one about being hard of hearing. Known as OLOC for short, the group grew out of two California conferences older lesbians held in the late 1980s, according to an online “herstory” published on its website. The first was held at the California State University Dominguez Campus in Carson, California, in April 1987. In August 1989, lesbians in northern California sponsored a second conference. Out of that a group of lesbians came together to form OLOC. In 1992 it gained nonprofit status. “The founding issue of OLOC is to combat ageism in all of its forms and the invisibility

Jane Philomen Cleland

Old Lesbians Organizing for Change members Kaye Griffin, left, Chloe Karl, Christine Torno, and Ardys deLuxn promoted this weekend’s conference at last month’s Pride festivities.

of old lesbians and old women as lead actors in society,” said Oakland resident Elana Dykewomon, 64, who serves on OLOC’s organizing committee and heads the programming committee for this year’s gathering. “The other part about what OLOC is, it is committed to understanding the intersectional nature of oppression and works against racism, classism, able-ism, size-ism, heterosexism, and all of those -isms and works for a progressive and just world on every front we can,” added Dykewomon, whose partner,

Susan Levinkind, 72, serves on OLOC’s local steering committee. OLOC’s gathering comes as LGBT aging issues have gained greater attention from leaders in San Francisco and state lawmakers in Sacramento. As the Bay Area Reporter has detailed in a series of stories over the last year, the city formed a task force to examine the issues facing its LGBT senior residents, estimated to number upwards of 20,000, and suggest ways for how policymakers can address their concerns. See page 6 >>

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