March 3, 2022 edition of the Bay Area Reporter, America's #LGBTQ newspaper

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Grace Cathedral deacon

Anna Damiani dies

ARTS

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Heklina Returns

Since 1971

The

www.ebar.com

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

Vol. 52 • No. 09 • March 3-9, 2022

Rick Gerharter

Rick Gerharter

Nearly 500 participants marched in the 2021 People’s March in San Francisco.

SF City Clinic director Dr. Stephanie Cohen

As COVID pandemic eases, STD epidemic on the rise

by John Ferrannini

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ates of sexually transmitted diseases rose in San Francisco in 2021, according to a year-end report released by the city’s Department of Public Health. Dr. Stephanie Cohen, a straight ally who is the medical director of DPH’s City Clinic in the South of Market neighborhood, told the Bay Area Reporter that “the impact of COVID-19 on sexual health services” led to statistics that were probably lower than the real rate of community infections. “In 2021, we fortunately saw an increase in engagement with sexual health services,” Cohen said. “With that we did more tests in 2021 and, because of that, we did see more cases. Paradoxically, that’s a good thing. The bump in cases was largely a sign of recovery of testing and screening.” But Cohen did acknowledge that the COVID-19 lockdown notwithstanding, STD diagnoses have been on an upward trajectory in the city, state, and nation for the last several years. Jorge Roman, director of clinical services with the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, told the B.A.R. it’s difficult to say which was a bigger factor in the rise in the reported rates. “As a baseline, unfortunately, there’s an uptick,” Roman said. “I think it’s both. Both of those factors were important.” Roman said that the AIDS foundation’s Magnet clinic at Strut in the Castro neighborhood keeps data on the positivity rate of the total number of tests it provides, which helps to paint a broader picture of the prevalence of infection among those accessing sexual health services. The B.A.R. obtained this data, which shows the positivity rate for gonorrhea, chlamydia, and syphilis at Magnet went down in 2021, after having risen 2020 from 2019 levels. In 2021, the positivity rate for gonorrhea at the clinic was 5.17%, compared to 5.26% in 2020 and 5.09% in 2019. These changes are more pronounced in the case of the other two major bacterial STDs. In 2021, the positivity rate was 3.56% for chlamydSee page 9 >>

SF to have 2 Pride parades by Eric Burkett

Gooch

Imperial SF royalty crowned

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he Imperial Court of San Francisco’s annual coronation took place Saturday, February 26, at The Midway. In back from left are Absolute Empress LVI Juanita MORE!, Emperor XLIX After Norton Mr. David Glamamore, and Emperor XXXVIII After Norton Stephen Dorsey. In

front, Absolute Empress XLI Galilea pins the crown on new Empress Ehra Amaya, who is next to new Emperor Brent Marek. The new empress and emperor now embark on a year of appearances and charity work on behalf of the Imperial Council.

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an Francisco is expected to have not one but two parades Sunday, June 26, as the Pride event returns after a two-year hiatus and will be joined by the third People’s March. And it’s not just San Francisco. As COVID-19 seems, once again, to be slipping into the background, numerous LGBTQ communities around the country are making plans to finally throw the in-person Pride parades they’ve had to put on hold for the past two years. Organizers are optimistic but, understandably, cautious. Everyone, however, is ready for a party. See page 10 >>

Calls for justice raised at SF vigil for gay man

by Adam Echelman

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ore than 80 people gathered in front of San Francisco City Hall February 26, calling for an investigation into the death of Jaxon Sales. Chants for justice echoed while, behind the crowd, visitors paid their respects to an altar of flowers and childhood photos of Jaxon Sales underneath a bare sycamore tree at Civic Center Plaza. Angie Aquino-Sales and Jim Sales organized the gathering for their gay son with the help of the GLBTQ+ Asian Pacific Alliance and API Equality Northern California in order to elevate their demands that city officials reexamine the circumstances around their son’s death and to provide mourners with a space to come together. The B.A.R. obtained a copy of Jaxon Sales’ autopsy report from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner stating that the 20-year-old had died on the morning of March 2, 2020 from an accidental overdose of an acute mixed drug intoxication, including gamma-Hydroxybutyric acid (GHB), cocaine, and methamphetamine. He was found naked at the Rincon Hill apartment of a 41-year-old white man. His parents are asking for a more thorough investigation after hearing inconsistencies about the events surrounding their son’s death and experiencing delays from police and medical examiner officials.

Adam Echelman

Angie Aquino-Sales, left, and her husband, Jim Sales, speak at a vigil in San Francisco Civic Center February 26 for their son Jaxon, who died nearly two years ago.

Their online petition asking the medical examiner and the San Francisco Police Department to reopen the case has more than 53,000 signatures. In the petition, his parents allege that an official with the medical examiner’s office said that further investigation was not warranted because the “gay community uses GHB.” When reached by the B.A.R. last month, a spokesperson for the medical examiner’s office neither confirmed nor

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denied the statement to Jaxon Sales’ parents but said that an individual’s sexual orientation does not influence their medical determination. While GHB is used recreationally by some gay men, it has also been linked to date-rape and murder. In a February 4 letter to SFPD Chief William Scott and Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Christopher Liverman asking them to more fully See page 10 >>


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