Delay on theater vote
13
ARTS
San Diego, Sacto queer history
13
ARTS
09
02
"Fortune Feimster
'Make Me Famous'
The
www.ebar.com
Serving the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer communities since 1971
Vol. 53 • No. 42 • October 19-25, 2023
Newsom signs set of trans bills by Matthew S. Bajko
SF sees September mpox spike by John Ferrannini
S
an Francisco saw an uptick in mpox cases last month, according to the city’s Department of Public Health. As the Bay Area Reporter previously reported, DPH had warned August 30 that there’d been seven cases in the prior five weeks. Through June the city had been averaging one case per month since January, health officials noted at that time. On October 13, DPH reported that there were 19 cases in September. According to the health department’s tracker, most of those occurred before the Folsom Street Fair September 24. Health officials had an mpox vaccination booth at the leather and kink festival in the city’s South of Market neighborhood. There has been one case reported so far in October, according to the case count tracker. “While mpox cases remain low compared to 2022, this is an increase from an average of one case per month from January to June 2023,” DPH noted in its San Francisco Monthly STI Report released October 13. Dr. Stephanie Cohen, a straight ally who is the section director for HIV/STI prevention with the health department, told the Bay Area Reporter that it is unclear why the increase in cases is coming now. “We know mpox is circulating in sexual networks and its primarily spread during intimate contact during oral and anal sex. That’s how cases are spread,” she said. “While we don’t know exactly why cases are increasing now, it’s important to point out our cases are much lower than in 2022 because of the robust vaccine rollout that occurred during the 2022 outbreak and the fantastic work of community members, organizations, and health systems providing vaccine to our communities.” Cohen also said that 40% of those who received the first dose of mpox vaccine didn’t return for a second. “It’s never too late,” she added. See page 11 >>
T
he last two remaining LGBTQ-related bills adopted this year by California lawmakers have been signed into law by Governor Gavin Newsom. Both concern the needs of gendernonconforming individuals. Under Assembly Bill 1163 by Assemblymember Luz Rivas (D-Arleta) various state agencies and departments have until July 1, 2026, to revise their public-use forms so they are more inclusive of individuals who identify as transgender, gendernonconforming, or intersex. The agencies also now need to collect data pertaining to the specific needs of such individuals, such as their medical care and mental health disparities, as well as the population size of the various communities. It is the latest effort by Golden State lawmakers to improve the collection of sexual orientation and gender identity data by state agencies. But as the Bay Area Reporter has previously reported, the gathering of SOGI information has run into myriad problems at the local, state, and federal levels. The state’s auditor earlier this year called out the California Department of Public Health for its failures in collecting LGBTQ health data. The agency has been working to address the issues cited in the auditor’s report, as it recently noted in a response to the audit findings.
Courtesy Governor’s Office
Governor Gavin Newsom
AB 1487 by Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) establishes the Transgender, Gender Variant, and Intersex Wellness Reentry Fund in order to provide grants for reentry programming “specifically to support transgender, gender variant, and intersex people who have experienced carceral systems.” Although Newsom signed the bill creating it, there is no funding for it. It will be up to the governor and state lawmakers to allocate funds toward it in future state budgets.
See page 10 >>
Group advocates for SF, Oakland bar patios to be smokefree
by Matthew S. Bajko
S
ince 2012, San Jose has required the outdoor patios of all bars in the city to be smokefree. Daly City and Fremont have adopted similar bans. More than four-dozen Bay Area cities have enacted laws for 100% smokefree outdoor dining and bar patios, according to a list compiled by the American Nonsmokers’ Rights Foundation. The counties of Contra Costa, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, and Sonoma also have imposed such a restriction, noted the advocacy organization. An effort is underway to see San Francisco and Oakland follow suit. The group LGBTQ Minus Tobacco has been meeting with leaders in both cities to discuss the adoption of a smokefree bar patio policy. (https://www.lgbtqminustobacco.org/smoke-free-bar-patios) Next Thursday, October 26, it is hosting a community meeting in Oakland to raise awareness about the issue. “The Oakland meeting is sort of a kick start to our work in Oakland a little bit,” said Brian Davis, the project director for LGBTQ Minus Tobacco. It has been surveying attendees at Pride events in both cities about the policy. It also has had booths at street festivals in San Francisco,
Rick Gerharter
Brian Davis, left, T.J. Lee, and Amaya Wooding staffed the LGBTQ Minus Tobacco booth at the October 1 Castro Street Fair.
such as at this month’s Castro Street Fair and the Bearrison Street Fair. “We have now asked 245 people who named specific bars with patios in SF that they go to whether they would go more often, about the
SP EC IA
L IS SU E
- C A LI FO
RN IA PR
same, less often, or not at all if a law passed in SF requiring all bar patios to be smokefree. Forty-four percent would go more often, 48% would go about the same, and 8% would go less often,” Davis told the Bay Area Reporter. See page 11 >>
ID E!
05 11 Assemb
ly race hits
Castro
Senior hou
The
sing upd
ate
ARTS
Rick Gerharter
San Francisco Department of Public Health staff had an mpox vaccination booth at the Folsom Street Fair September 24.
The bill’s backers have said they would like to secure at least $5 million for the reentry fund. It mirrors the state fund created in 2020 by the passage of a bill Santiago authored that pays for trans health care services across the Golden State. Newsom appropriated $13 million for it in 2022, while the Office of Health Equity within the state’s health department is responsible for administering the fund and awarding the fiscal grants to organizations providing trans-inclusive health care. Newsom’s office announced Friday night that he had signed the two bills into law. Earlier on October 13, the state health department announced it had awarded $2.4 million from the Transgender Wellness and Equity Fund to five agencies providing gender-affirming care services. Among them was one Northern California agency, the San Francisco-based Lyon-Martin Community Health Services. The other four provide services in Southern California, such as The TransPower Project, formerly known as Queer Works, and Desert AIDS Project in Palm Springs. The others are Alianza Translatinx based in Santa Ana, the TransLatin@ Coalition and Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, and the St. John’s Community Health and Transgender Health and Wellness Center in Los Angeles.
15
Lena Hal
l
2021 • May 27, No. 673 agazine.com outwordm
Since 1971 www.eba r.com
Chick lA opens -fi n r SF city liea ne
by Matthew
L
Hall: Todrick to Oz in g Returnina County Sonom
REACH CALIFORNIA’S LARGEST LGBTQ AUDIENCE. ns on Expressio tice Social Jus page 2
LA Pride s Announce nts Eve In-Person 4 page
& Pronouns “PRIDE, gress” Pro page 15
page 34
Serving
S. Bajko
the lesbian,
gay, bise xual, tran
Tenan Ellis Actst fight ‘devastati evictions ng’ sgender,
and queer
commun
ities sinc
e 1971
ong revile d by bers, chick LGBTQ community en sandwich memfil-A is purveyor Chicktion mere opening its newest Bay minu city line. Perch tes away from San Area locaCity, the chain ed above Interstate Francisco’s 280 ’s distin ctive red signa in Daly to miss by drivers head ge is hard ternationa l Airport, ed to San Francisco Silicon Valle InMateo coast y, or the San . The Chick doors Nove -fil-A Serramonte Cent mber 18 at er opens its Callan Boul 6 evard outsi Serramonte Center on It is across de of the shop the Macy’s and parking lot from the ping mall. brings the entrance to locations num ber Larry Kues of in ter, left, the company,the Bay Area to 21, Chick-fil-A Mooney, Lynn Niels according all to opens Thur as another East Bay supporter residents at 3661 en, and Paul sday. location also s 19th Stre Susanna Choe 15 protest outside their hom et, talk to e during about their with her husb , the mother of a November pending three child Ellis Act ren of the new and, Philip, is the evictions. local opera Peninsula tor drive outsi location a by John Ferr de of San two-minute Franc statem ann isco. ini ent to the e Pride Bay Area Repo In an emailed Celebrat tflix rter, she invite aul Mooney, building on d With Ne LGBTQ aparta resident of a majo was served November 16 when ritywith he ment 25 See e page build Mission pag “A process an eviction notice. himself ing next 12 >> to community Dolores Park, was tenants and server came to the rallying the against a rally to catch serve them plan to evict Bay Area ,” Mooney, his entire Reporter 51, told the the follow anoth for er tenant sic was also serve ing day, saying Queer Mu d at that de time. Pri
er TransgendDoubleary Courtesy the The Bay publications Documentader Area and the Wash Reporter, Tagg He page 35
No. 46 • Nov
ember 18-2
4, 2021
CALL 415-829-8937 P
page 26
Vol. 51 •
magazin e, the six LGB ington Blade are new colla TQ publications three of involved borative in a funded by Google.
B.A.R.
“I’ve lost so much sleep ter thinking wher worr ying abou leave. I love e I might go. I don’t t it and this want to Yet Mooney city.” might have to leave if the efforts See page 12 >>
Report fl ags housi Castro, nei n ghboring g issues in commun ities
Rick Gerhar