September 15, 2011 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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6

The Triple R rises again

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Dolores Park's personality

17

''Mary Lou' plays the Castro

The

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

Pride ED departure uncertain

Vol. 41 • No. 37 • September 15-21, 2011

A somber remembrance

by Seth Hemmelgarn

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by Matthew S. Bajko

he head of the San Francisco LGBT Pride Celebration Committee told the Bay Area Reporter last weekend that his future with the organization isn’t settled. He previously told the paper that there were no plans for him to stay with the nonprofit after his contract ends in December. In August, Pride’s interim Executive Director Brendan Behan said, “No. Right now, the plan is no,” when asked whether he would stay past December. Behan has helped stabilize the organization, which has endured months of financial and leadership turmoil, and his departure could cause more hardship. But at Pride’s annual general meeting Saturday, September 10, Behan said, “Nothing is definite at this point” in regards to his future with Pride. He still wouldn’t say directly whether he wants to stay, though. “I want to talk to the board about what

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See page 6 >>

Gay pioneer Arthur Evans dies by Cynthia Laird

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ay pioneer, writer, and neighborhood activist Arthur Evans, who lived at the corner of Haight and Ashbury streets in San Francisco since 1974, died Sunday, September 11 at his home. He was 68. Naphtali Offen, a close friend of Mr. Evans and the executor of his estate, said that he suffered a heart attack around Rick Gerharter 4:30 a.m. Mr. Evans Arthur Evans See page 11 >>

Herrera criticized in housing fight

Steven Underhill

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an Francisco Mayor Ed Lee spoke at a memorial marking the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks Sunday, September 11 at Harvey Milk Plaza. The memorial, organized by freelance photographer Bill

Wilson, paid tribute to several LGBT victims of the attacks, including San Francisco Fog rugby player and public relations executive Mark Bingham and New York City Fire Department Chaplain Mychal Judge.

in 2010

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he dispute over a controversial housing project for at-risk youth in the city’s Marina District has ensnared City Attorney Dennis Herrera, whose office has come under attack for allowing an appeal of the project to move forward. Sponsors of the housing development, which is expected to benefit LGBT homeless youth and those aging Ashley Thompson out of the foster care system, sent out an City Attorney email Monday morning Dennis Herrera claiming Marina residents and Herrera “torpedo project.” Their ire was due to five Marina and Cow Hollow neighborhood groups contesting the Planning Commission’s vote in July that the project did not require greater scrutiny under the California Environmental Quality Act. The Cow Hollow Association, acting on behalf of the quintet, requested a CEQA appeal Thursday, September 8, the night before a planned meeting with the project sponsors aimed at addressing lingering concerns about the development. Despite claims from Community Housing Partnership and Larkin Street Youth Services, the two groups behind what is known as the Edward II project, that the CEQA appeal was three weeks late, on Friday Herrera’s office issued a memorandum stating that the neighborhood groups’ filing was “timely.” Because the project was still under review by city leaders, Deputy City Attorney Marlena G. Byrne wrote in the September 9 memo that “the appeal is ripe for review.” The decision meant that the Board of Supervisors, which was set to hear an appeal of the Planning Commission’s approval of a special use district for the housing project at its meeting Tuesday, could no longer take up the matter. The board’s land use committee did vote Monday to send the matter to the full board without making a recommendation on the issue. The supervisors are now expected to hear both appeals in early October. The delay prompted consternation from leaders at the nonprofits, who criticized the neighbors for “an extremely bad faith move, behind our backs and with no advance notice” in the email. They also stated that they were “extremely disappointed” with Herrera. “While the actions of a handful of neighbors and the city attorney are beyond disappointing, See page 13 >>


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