May 26, 2016 edition of America's longest continuously published and highest weekly circulation LGBT

Page 1

Ptown is ready for summer

ARTS

10

17

29

Judy Kuhn

Bob Ostertag

The

www.ebar.com

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

Vol. 46 • No. 21 • May 26-June 1, 2016

3 men sue SF Pride over shootings Rick Gerharter

A construction worker saws at the site of 55 Laguna.

Senior housing lottery delayed by Matthew S. Bajko

T

he process to select the first residents of an affordable housing development in San Francisco aimed toward LGBT seniors has been delayed by several weeks. The project sponsors had hoped that by late May applications would be made available for those interested in applying for 39 rental units being built inside Richardson Hall at 55 Laguna, with the lottery to select the residents being held sometime in late June. Now it is expected that the applications will be ready sometime in early June and that the lottery will be held in early July. The exact dates have yet to be finalized. The $16 million renovation of the former college building is the first stage of an estimated $40 million project that will result in 119 units of affordable senior housing split between two buildings. There will also be a senior services center on-site named after Bay Area Reporter founding publisher Bob Ross, who died in 2003. The complex at the corner of Laguna and Hermann just off Market Street is a joint venture between Openhouse, a nonprofit LGBT senior services provider, and Mercy Housing California, which develops below-marketrate housing. Officials of the two agencies met Tuesday afternoon to discuss the application and lottery process, but did not reach any concrete decisions. “No date yet set for running the application, beyond what we already knew, which is that it will be early June,” Joel Evans, Openhouse’s director of development and marketing, informed the B.A.R. following the meeting. Set for completion by September, the first building of low-income senior housing will have a total of 40 apartments, one of which will be set aside for a resident manager and eight will be designated for people living with HIV at risk for homelessness. Any senior, whether LGBT or straight, who is at least 55 years of age and meets the income requirements for the below-market-rate units can apply. As the B.A.R. reported last month, 16 of the units will be available to seniors who live in District 8 due to a rule the city adopted that sets aside 40 percent of the units in new affordable housing developments for people who live in the supervisorial district the project is located in, or within a half mile of the site. The other 15 units will be awarded to eligible seniors whether or not they live or work in the city. Openhouse would like to see at least 3,000 LGBT seniors apply to live in the building and will be providing assistance next month to those who do on how to complete the application. See page 14 >>

The crowd heads toward the LGBT Pride festival in Civic Center following the 2013 parade. Rick Gerharter

by Seth Hemmelgarn

O

ne man who was shot and two brothers who were injured in recent San Francisco LGBT Pride celebrations are suing organizers, claiming that the organization overseeing the event has “knowingly and willfully failed to take adequate steps to prevent violence.” Among other things, attorneys are asking for the San Francisco LGBT Pride Celebration Committee to be prohibited from holding this

year’s festival, which is set for June 25-26. But communications strategist Sam Singer, who’s working with the Pride Committee, told the Bay Area Reporter Wednesday, “Yes, Pride is happening as scheduled. We firmly believe the court will reject this attempt to intimidate San Francisco Pride, and we will be victorious.” The injunction would not apply to the parade. Complaints were filed May 18 in San Francisco Superior Court saying that the annual celebration, which draws hundreds of thousands of peo-

ple, has “devolved into a violent shooting gallery.” Freddy Atton, of San Francisco, was shot June 27, 2015, after “a large fight broke out” on Fulton Street west of Hyde, which was inside the festival perimeters. He claims in his lawsuit that the Pride Committee allowed someone “to bring a handgun into the celebration.” “There was no security in sight to address the fight, to dissipate it, or to eject the combatants,” the complaint says, and the celebration See page 4 >>

Homeless youth agency holds open house by Seth Hemmelgarn

A

San Francisco nonprofit that provides basic medical care, syringe access, and other services to homeless youth in the Upper Haight district recently invited neighbors to discuss concerns about its new office space. More than two years ago, Homeless Youth Alliance had to move out of its drop-in center at 1696 Haight Street after the landlord decided not to renew the lease. Since then, the agency has continued providing services, but without a building in which it could welcome clients. A supporter has allowed staff to use her home for office work. In recent months, HYA has been working on moving into 607A Haight Street in the Lower Haight to use as office space. The location formerly housed the Vapor Room medical marijuana club. The nonprofit held an open house at the site Wednesday, May 18 to address concerns that the space would draw young homeless people. Monday, the Lower Haight Merchants and Neighbors Association asked the planning commission to review HYA’s permit application through the discretionary review process. A handout made available last Wednesday says the office will be used for staff meetings and trainings, office work, outreach preparations, and similar activities. “It is written into our lease that we cannot allow participants to enter the office for any reason,” the organization said. “All of our inter-

actions with participants will continue to take place, as they always have, in the Upper Haight close to Golden Gate Park, an area that has been an epicenter for youth experiencing homelessness for the past 40 years.” The handout includes language from the lease that says HYA “is strictly prohibited from carrying out any of [its] services at the premises. ... The premises may only be used by employees and agents of the tenant to carry out the administrative tasks of the tenant.”

See page 11 >>

B.A.R. election endorsements SAN FRANCISCO RACES

Congress (Bay Area)

State Senate

Dist. 2: Jared Huffman Dist. 3: John Garamendi Dist. 5: Mike Thompson Dist. 11: Mark DeSaulnier Dist. 12: Nancy Pelosi Dist. 13: Barbara Lee Dist. 14: Jackie Speier Dist. 15: Eric Swalwell Dist. 17: Mike Honda Dist. 18: Anna Eshoo Dist. 19: Zoe Lofgren

Dist. 11: Scott Wiener

State Assembly Dist. 17: David Chiu Dist. 19: Phil Ting

Judges SF Superior Court Seat 7: Paul Henderson

SF DEMOCRATIC COUNTY CENTRAL COMMITTEE Dist. 17: Joshua Arce, Bevan Dufty, Zoe Dunning, Michael Grafton, Pratima Gupta, Shaun Haines, Frances Hsieh, Rafael Mandelman, Gary McCoy, Leah Pimentel, Rebecca Prozan, Alix Rosenthal, Francis Tsang, Scott Wiener Dist. 19: Kat Anderson, Keith Baraka, Joel Engardio, Mark Farrell, Sandra Lee Fewer, Tom Hsieh, Mary Jung, Rachel Norton, Marjan Philhour

CALIFORNIA PRIMARY President: Hillary Clinton Kelly Sullivan

Homeless Youth Alliance Executive Director Mary Howe, left, speaks with an open house attendee May 18.

Mary Howe, HYA’s executive director, said in an interview that she started doing outreach about the space in January, and she’s been “really clear about it being for office use only.” There’s “an unfair perception that the young people we work with will automatically come here,” she said, adding, “I understand those are fears neighbors have, and I encourage dialogue around that.”

U.S. Senate: Kamala Harris

State Assembly (Bay Area) Dist. 15: Tony Thurmond Dist. 18: Rob Bonta Dist. 28: Evan Low

State Senate (Bay Area) Dist. 9: Nancy Skinner

CALIFORNIA PROPS Yes on 50

DISTRICT PROPS Yes on Measure AA

SAN FRANCISCO PROPS Yes on Props A, B, C, D, E

Remember to vote June 7!

{ FIRST OF THREE SECTIONS }


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