Castro looks to pop-ups
New comics store
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'Heartstopper'
ARTS
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ARTS
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Queering MTV
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Serving the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer communities since 1971
Vol. 52 • No. 19 • May 12-18, 2022
New SF Supervisor Dorsey is gay, sober, and living with HIV Rick Earl Stokes
Courtesy Steamworks
Rick Stokes, ‘the other gay man’ who ran against Milk, dies by Cynthia Laird
R
ick Earl Stokes, famously “the other gay candidate” who ran against Harvey Milk for San Francisco supervisor in 1977, died May 3. He was 87. Mr. Stokes died in San Francisco after a brief battle with congestive heart failure, according to an obituary prepared by Curtis Jensen, director of marketing and graphics for Steamworks, the gay bathhouse location in Berkeley of which Mr. Stokes was one of the founders. “Rick was a role model, leader, activist, philanthropist, and business owner who dedicated most of his life to LGBTQ equality and was an early pioneer in the LGBTQ civil rights movement,” Jensen stated. In that pivotal District 5 supervisors race, which Milk won, Mr. Stokes was viewed as the more establishment candidate. “Rick was from the older school of activism,” Jensen said in a phone interview. “Harvey and his group were more cutting-edge.” See page 6 >>
B.A.R.
ENDORSEMENTS U.S. Senate: Alex Padilla Governor: Gavin Newsom Lt. Governor: Eleni Kounalaki Secretary of State: Shirley Weber Attorney General: Rob Bonta Controller: Ron Galperin Treasurer: Fiona Ma Insurance Commissioner: Marc Levine State Sup. Public Instruction: Tony Thurmond
by Matthew S. Bajko
I
n naming Matt Dorsey as the new District 6 supervisor, San Francisco Mayor London Breed has not only appointed the second gay man living with HIV to fill a vacancy on the Board of Supervisors in recent years but also someone who has personal experience combatting a substance use disorder. An alcoholic who also overused a variety of drugs, including crystal meth, Dorsey has been clean and sober for 19 months as of May 7. “I was very honest about it,” Dorsey, 57, told the Bay Area Reporter about his discussion with Breed when he spoke with her privately last month about his interest in being named the supervisor for the city’s South of Market, Treasure Island, and Mission Bay neighborhoods. “I have spent most of my adult life in recovery.” Breed swore in Dorsey May 9 at Delancey Street, the nonprofit provider of services to substance abusers with a restaurant on the city’s Embarcadero in District 6. Brothers John and Bill Maher, the latter of whom served on the Board of Supervisors, co-founded the agency in 1970. According to a 1988 Los Angeles Times story, Bill Maher was himself “a former Delancey Street resident and reformed drug addict.” More recently, District 3 Supervisor Aaron Peskin admitted last summer that he had a drinking problem and sought treatment for alcohol use.
C A L I F O R N I A
PRIMARY ELEC TION
Jane Philomen Cleland
New District 6 Supervisor Matt Dorsey, left, is all smiles May 9 as Mayor London Breed swears him into office.
Dorsey will now serve alongside Peskin and gay District 8 Supervisor Rafael Mandelman, until now the lone LGBTQ community member on the board. In June 2018, Mandelman defeated former District 8 Supervisor Jeff Sheehy, a gay man who became the first person living with HIV on the board when the late mayor Ed Lee appointed him to the vacant seat in January 2017. “I hope it is meaningful to people who maybe have HIV or have a substance use disorder or are from the LGBTQ+ community,” said Dorsey of his now becoming a supervisor.
Dorsey will serve out the remainder of the term vacated by Assemblymember Matt Haney (D-San Francisco) last week and will need to run in November for a full four-year term under the newly drawn boundaries for District 6. The city’s redistricting task force pulled out the Tenderloin and most of the city’s Transgender District from District 6, except for the stretch of the cultural district that runs along Sixth Street, and moved it into District 5. Expected to seek the District 6 seat is queer See page 12 >>
Getting high and falling out on GHB by Adam Echelman
Board of Equalization Dist. 2: Michela Alioto-Pier
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Congress (Bay Area) Dist. 2: Jared Huffman Dist. 4: Mike Thompson Dist. 8: John Garamendi Dist. 9: Josh Harder Dist. 10: Mark DeSaulnier Dist. 11: Nancy Pelosi Dist. 12: Barbara Lee Dist. 14: Eric Swalwell Dist. 15: Kevin Mullin Dist. 16: Anna Eshoo Dist. 17: Ro Khanna Dist. 18: Zoe Lofgren
Remember to vote by June 7! We will have more endorsements in coming weeks.
SAN FRANCISCO PROPS No on: H
he fall is so quick that most people can only remember where they landed: in someone else’s bed, on a park bench, or in a hospital room. In fact, the process is so common with Gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB), or “G,” that it’s called “falling out.” If you take just a drop too much G, you become manic and then drop into an almost comatoselike sleep, wherever that might be. Colin, 53, who asked that his last name not be published, remembers the days of “party and play,” when friends would spill in and out of his apartment while mixing G with meth and sex. “I’d have one partner over. After a while, we’d both get bored of each other, go on to our phones, and scroll on to the hookup apps to see who else was there,” he said. In a week, he could have 19 or 20 men to his house over countless hours until the point of exhaustion. Colin figured it was fine because he never used See page 11 >>
Adam Echelman
After Franz Lao got sober from Gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB or G), he became interested in karate again. He sees the process of teaching karate akin to the sponsorship component of the 12-step process, where one recovering person guides another into sobriety.
MAY IS NATIONAL HOME IMPROVEMENT MONTH!
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4/8/22 11:08 AM