October 11, 2012 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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Danny Lyon

Halloween party in Oakland

The

www.ebar.com

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

Vol. 42 • No. 41 • October 11-17, 2012

Family images an issue in campaigns by Matthew S. Bajko

Jane Philomen Cleland

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edding images depicting a happy heterosexual couple on their special day don’t normally come to mind as being problematic photos. But when they are deployed as part of a political campaign, they can become suspect in the eyes of LGBT voters. Some may question if the photo is meant to signal a hidden message, particularly if the candidate’s opponent is LGBT. At the very least it can be read as insensitive considering the ongoing struggle to win marriage rights for same-sex couples. On the other hand, depicting one’s family, whether a spouse or children, is a time-tested way for candidates to introduce themselves to voters. It is an easy way to signal one’s ties to the community. LGBT candidates can face their own doubled-edged sword regarding how to showcase See page 10 >>

Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi, with his wife Eliana Lopez and their son Theo.

Jane Philomen Cleland

Shirtless at the fair W

arm, sunny weather made going shirtless at the Castro Street fair a no-brainer, as Roberto Martinez, left, and Matt Smith demonstrated while wading through the crowd. This year’s

fair, held Sunday, October 7, also had people in the buff, as the Castro debates the appropriateness of public nudity, as well as plenty of dancing and entertainment.

Sheriff wins job back by Seth Hemmelgarn

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mbattled San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi won his job back after the Board of Supervisors voted 7-4 Tuesday night, October 9 to reinstate him. See page 13 >>

BAY AREA REPORTER Candidates discuss election endorsements fixes for City College by Seth Hemmelgarn 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 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

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

State Senate (East Bay) Dist. 9: Loni Hancock

California Propositions Vote YES on 30, 34, 36, 37, 40 Vote NO on 31, 32, 33, 35, 38, 39

State Assembly (Regional) Dist. 15: Nancy Skinner Dist. 18: Abel Guillen Dist. 24: Rich Gordon

Remember to vote on November 6! Check back next week for Oakland City Council endorsements.

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andidates running for the City College of San Francisco board agree on the school’s value to the community, but they have varying ideas on how to fix the community college’s problems as it faces the possibility of closing. “City College is critical to the educational and career dreams of our students,” said candidate Rodrigo Santos. In August, Mayor Ed Lee appointed Santos to the board to serve out the remaining few months of Trustee Milton Marks III’s term, after Marks died due to a brain tumor. “Today, due to fiscal irresponsibility and lack of real planning, City College is fighting for its life,” Santos, 54, said in response to a Bay Area Reporter questionnaire. “It is clear that City College needs leadership change across the board and, as trustee, I will create a new, more prosperous future for CCSF.” The community college, which has nine campuses and 86,000 students, may lose its accreditation due to problems that were addressed in a critical report issued in June by the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges. The commission outlined a series of shortcomings, including an inadequate funding base, lack of a planning process, a failure to react to ongoing reduced funding, and inad-

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Rick Gerharter

City College candidate Rafael Mandelman

equate administrative leadership. Don Griffin, the college’s last chancellor, stepped down due to health issues; interim Chancellor Pamila Fisher, who was hired in May, is See page 12 >>


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