2
8
Vandal hits Castro
17
Honduran candidate in SF
Hula Show
The
www.ebar.com
Serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities since 1971
SF supe contests wide open
SFAF, therapists spar over space by Heather Cassell
T
he San Francisco AIDS Foundation has found itself in a disagreement with a for-profit therapy collective as it prepares to take over the space in the Castro to house three of its programs. Courtesy SF Therapy Collective The SF Therapy Nancy Heilner Collective, currently located at 474 Castro Street, is losing its lease next spring and SFAF will move in. The collective also has a nonprofit arm, Queer LifeSpace, which is housed in the same building. SFAF officials said last week that they were unaware that the therapists were in the building until October 19, when they held a meeting with representatives from the group, who asked SFAF to provide $100,000 in relocation costs. See page 13 >>
Vol. 42 • No. 44 • November 1-7, 2012
by Matthew S. Bajko
T Jane Philomen Cleland
World Series champs! S
an Francisco Giants outfielder Angel Pagan greets excited fans along the parade route Wednesday, October 31 as the city celebrated the team’s four-game sweep of the Detroit Tigers in the World Series. Pagan, who made some great defensive plays during the
series, thanked fans from the stage during speeches at Civic Center Plaza after the parade. Mayor Ed Lee presented the team with the key to the city and a golden broom, which team CEO Larry Baer said would be kept at AT&T Park.
hree hotly contested campaigns for San Francisco supervisor seats remain horse races ahead of Election Day. Two out candidates seeking board seats have received jolts of momentum in recent Rick Gerharter weeks, though, increas- District 7 candiing their chances of be- date Joel Engardio ing victorious. Gay journalist Joel Engardio, running for the open District 7 seat west of Twin Peaks, received a surprise endorsement from the San Francisco Chronicle in his race. He is touting the paper’s backing on door hangers at every house in the district. See page 13 >>
BAY AREA REPORTER Attacks lobbed in
election endorsements CA legislative races GENERAL ELECTION LOCAL RACES
San Francisco Supervisors Dist. 1: Eric Mar Dist. 3: David Chiu Dist. 5: Christina Olague, first choice London Breed, second choice Dist. 7: Francis “FX” Crowley, first choice Norman Yee, second choice Joel Engardio, third choice Dist. 9: David Campos Dist. 11: John Avalos San Francisco Board of Education Matt Haney, Sandra Fewer, Rachel Norton, Jill Wynns San Francisco Community College Board Rafael Mandelman, Amy Bacharach, Rodrigo Santos BART Board, Dist. 7 Lynette Sweet
BART Board, Dist. 9 Tom Radulovich Oakland City Council Dist. 3: Sean Sullivan At-large: Rebecca Kaplan Berkeley City Council Dist. 2: Darryl Moore NATIONAL RACES President Barack Obama/Joe Biden STATE RACES U.S. Senate Dianne Feinstein State Senate (San Francisco) Dist. 11: Mark Leno State Assembly (San Francisco) Dist. 17: Tom Ammiano Dist. 19: Phil Ting State Senate (East Bay) Dist. 9: Loni Hancock
State Assembly (Regional) Dist. 15: Nancy Skinner Dist. 18: Abel Guillen Dist. 24: Rich Gordon Congress (Bay Area) Dist. 2: Jared Huffman Dist. 3: John Garamendi Dist. 5: Mike Thompson Dist. 11: George Miller Dist. 12: Nancy Pelosi Dist. 13: Barbara Lee Dist. 14: Jackie Speier Dist. 17: Mike Honda Dist. 18: Anna Eshoo Dist. 19: Zoe Lofgren
BALLOT MEASURES San Francisco Propositions Vote YES on A, B, C, D, E, G Vote NO on F California Propositions Vote YES on 30, 34, 36, 37, 40 Vote NO on 31, 32, 33, 35, 38, 39
with out candidates by Matthew S. Bajko
T
hree races for California legislative seats with out candidates have turned nasty as the 2012 campaign season comes to a close. And in a noteworthy twist, the negative attacks have had nothing to do with the trio’s sexual orientation. In Oakland, Assembly candidate Abel Guillen, who identifies as two spirit and dates both men and women, has had to defend himself against attacks that he has done nothing “to protect those least able to protect themselves.” Out in the Central Valley, lesbian Assemblywoman Cathleen Galgiani (D-Stockton) is in a heated battle for a state Senate seat. She has faced questions due to an Associated Press article detailing a little known rule that allows state lawmakers to change their voting records. And Galgiani has called out as “appalling” an ad about her record on taxes and vehicle perks. The Sacramento Bee deemed it to be misleading and factually “untrue or exaggerated.” The most heated contest appears to be down in Los Angeles, where gay Latino activist Luis Lopez and nurses’ lobbyist Jimmy Gomez have been at-
{ FIRST OF TWO SECTIONS }
Jane Philomen Cleland
Assembly candidate Abel Guillen
tacking each other for weeks as they fight for an Assembly seat. One claim lobbed against Gomez is that he hates, of all things, polar bears. Domestic violence advocates have also criticized Gomez for See page 12 >>