June 12, 2025 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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SF, Oakland, raise Pride flags

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Gail Ann Dorsey

ARTS

Pink triangle shines at 30

ARTS

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Frameline49

The

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

Vol. 55 • No. 24 • June 12-18, 2025

LGBTQ veterans, electeds slam Milk ship renaming by John Ferrannini

Courtesy NCLR

Imani Rupert-Gordon is the president of the National Center for LGBTQ Rights, formerly the National Center for Lesbian Rights.

SF-based LGBTQ legal organization changes name by Cynthia Laird

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he National Center for Lesbian Rights, which has long served the broader queer community, is changing its name to reflect that. The San Francisco-based nonprofit is now known as the National Center for LGBTQ Rights. The change became official June 9. NCLR, which will keep its well-known acronym, has been discussing the name change for over a decade, a news release noted. The agency was founded in 1977 by attorney Donna Hitchens, who went on to become the first openly lesbian judge elected to the bench in the U.S. when she served on the San Francisco Superior Court, and lesbian attorney Roberta Achtenberg, who became the first LGBTQ person appointed to a position requiring U.S. Senate confirmation when she took a post in the Clinton administration. Imani Rupert-Gordon, a queer Black woman who has led the agency for five years, said in a June 6 phone interview with the Bay Area Reporter that the name change was overdue. “We didn’t really have a choice,” she said. “This isn’t going to change the work we do. This will make it crystal clear to everyone.” Shannon Minter, a trans man, is vice president of legal at NCLR, where he has worked for decades. He told the B.A.R. that he is excited about the name change. “I’ve been wanting us to do this for a while,” he said in a phone interview, “to make it clear that we represent the whole community.” NCLR’s original name reflected that it was founded by lesbians and specialized in legal advocacy for lesbians, particularly around family law cases. Over the years, however, NCLR helped establish new areas of civil rights law that would benefit the entire LGBTQ community, the release noted. Rupert-Gordon reiterated that in the interview. The agency has long worked with gay men, those living with HIV/AIDS, immigrants, and transgender people. In fact, the Transgender Law Center, now its own nonprofit based in Oakland, was born out of NCLR years ago. See page 10 >>

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GBTQ veterans and local elected officials expressed their opposition to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s renaming of a Naval vessel for the slain San Francisco gay supervisor and civil rights pioneer Harvey Milk, calling it an insult. They also emphasized the matter is a distraction from cuts and other issues at the United States Department of Veterans Affairs. Zoe Dunning, a lesbian and former naval commander who fought against “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” and was the only out person to have remained on active duty after coming out under the policy, was one of those who spoke during a news conference at Jane Warner Plaza in San Francisco’s Castro LGBTQ neighborhood June 6. “This is an affront to every LGBTQ veteran and servicemember who wears the uniform or has worn the uniform,” said Dunning, who retired from the Navy in 2007. Dunning was a naval officer in 1993 when she declared she was a lesbian at a rally in support of another gay service member. She appealed a decision to be discharged, and the Navy administrative board agreed her remarks did not violate the rules as they were written at the time, because she did not reveal her sexual orienta-

John Ferrannini

Retired Navy Commander Zoe Dunning, at podium, spoke at a June 6 news conference in San Francisco’s Castro neighborhood about Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s reported plan to strip Harvey Milk’s name from a navy vessel.

tion to the armed forces, and because she did not engage in “homosexual conduct.” (The rules were later updated to close this loophole before DADT – the military’s ban on open service by LGBQ people – was lifted in 2011.) Dunning said those days were dark, saying

investigators would take down license plate numbers at gay bars to try and find closeted servicemembers. Of one lesbian colleague she said, “her diary was confiscated and she was forced to resign.” See page 10 >>

San Francisco sees 1 queer bar 2017 0 change Media a Kit open, others owners by John Ferrannini

“Drink Masters” some years ago. Entree dishes are between $16 and $20 and include a smash burger, fish and chips, and meatloaf his year’s Pride Month in San Francisco is with a side of mashed potatoes. seeing a new women’s sports bar open in the Lurie said he showed up to thank Yergovich and LGBTQ Castro neighborhood. Meanwhile, Thoe “on behalf of a grateful city.” two queer watering holes in other parts of town have The Los Angeles Blade covers Los Angeles and California news, He added, “You can expect to see me here watchseen ownership changes. politics, opinion, arts and entertainment and features national and ing women’s sports. Sports bring us together. They Rikki’s, a women’s sports bar, had its ribbon cutting unite us.” reporting Tuesday with Mayor Daniel Lurieinternational attending the cere- coverage from the Blade’s award-winning team. Be part of this exciting publication serving LGBT GayLos BoardAngeles of Supervisors President Rafael Manmony. It officially opened Wednesday, June 11. As the from the team behind the Washington Blade, the nation’s first LGBT delman, who as District 8 supervisor represents the Bay Area Reporter previously reported, queer womnewspaper. From the freeway to the Beltway we’ve got you covered. Castro on the board, gave the pair a certificate. He en Sara Yergovich and Danielle Thoe, business partexpressed optimism and gratitude for a greater lesners and friends, have spent the last several months bian presence in the Castro. working to open Rikki’s at 2223 Market Street, the “It is wonderful to have a bar opening in a neighformer location of Copas, which closed in 2024. Rick Gerharter borhood that, I think we all know, is everybody’s The bar is named for Elizabeth “Rikki” Streicher, San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie, queer neighborhood, but not everybody queer althe late longtime lesbian activist, bar owner, and center, was joined by Rikki’s sports bar ways feels totally welcome here and so having an exFederation of Gay Games co-founder. It is a few co-founders Sara Yergovich and Danielle plicitly women’s sports bar is so great,” Mandelman doors down from the gay-owned sports bar HiThoe, holding scissors, during a June 10 said. “I want to congratulate the visionaries who Tops at 2247 Market Street. ribbon cutting ceremony. made this happen.” “There’s no better time to open a women’s sports Thoe thanked Mandelman and the city’s Office bar than right now.” Yergovich, who also identifies “It should not be this hard to watch women’s of Small Business for help “in navigating city buas lesbian, said at the June 10 news conference. The sports, so Danielle and I thought, why don’t we do reaucracy and helping us get open in just over six Golden State Valkyries just started playing in the something about it? … Now, every day can be a months’ time from when we signed the lease.” The WNBA this season. Bay Football Club in the Nawatch party at Rikki’s,” she said. first time business owners, she said, “learned a lot tional Women’s Soccer League began play last season. The menu includes cocktails crafted by Christian throughout this process.” Yergovich said the idea for the bar came after hav“Suzu” Suzuki, who, as general manager at the Mising tried, with mixed success, to watch professional sion district bar Wildhawk, competed in Netflix’s women’s sports elsewhere. See page 11 >>

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June 12, 2025 edition of the Bay Area Reporter by Bay Area Reporter - Issuu