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July 27, 2023 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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Lucinda Williams

ARTS

Rev. Steve Pieters dies

Funds for HIV services

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Drag King Contest

The

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

Vol. 53 • No. 30 • July 27-August 2, 2023

San Francisco’s budget adds $5.4M for LGBTQ needs by Matthew S. Bajko

T Courtesy CCB

The rainbow banner in front of the Congregational Church of Belmont was vandalized sometime overnight July 18.

Police probe Pride banner vandalism at Belmont church by Cynthia Laird

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elmont police have launched a hate crime investigation after a rainbow banner at a local church was vandalized earlier this week. According to the Reverend Jim Mitulski, the Pride banner at Congregational Church of Belmont, where he is senior pastor, was discovered vandalized Tuesday, July 18. “A rainbow banner celebrating the Congregational Church of Belmont’s commitment to LGBTQ rights – and its extravagant welcome to members of that community – was slashed in two on the porch of the church overnight Tuesday, July 18,” Mitulski stated in a news release. The church’s office administrator discovered the vandalism when she arrived at work on Wednesday morning, July 19, the release stated. The Belmont Police Department responded to a call from the church that day. Belmont police Lieutenant Pete Lotti confirmed to the Bay Area Reporter that police did respond to the church and took a report. “We are investigating it as a hate crime,” Lotti said. “We shot the report straight up to the investigative unit.” Lotti said that police have not found any surveillance cameras in the area of the church, which is located at 751 Alameda de las Pulgas in the San Mateo County city south of San Francisco. The church is a member of the United Church of Christ denomination. It isn’t the first time in recent months that a church in the area has been targeted due to displaying a Pride flag, In May, Palo Alto police opened a hate crime investigation into the vandalism of the LGBTQ symbol flown by the city’s First Lutheran Church. A church employee had found it ripped down and reported the incident to police on May 16, as the Mercury News reported. See page 10 >>

Age with Pride Seqiouas-072723-STRIP.indd 1

he two-year budget San Francisco leaders have crafted includes funding for various LGBTQ needs, from beefing up security at nonprofits to assisting the local transgender community through an array of programs. Mayor London Breed signed the balanced budget July 26. The $14.6 billion budgets adopted 10-1 by the Board of Supervisors at its July 18 meeting cover fiscal years 2023-2024 and 2024-2025 and addressed a nearly $800 million deficit over that time frame. According to the office of gay District 8 Supervisor Rafael Mandelman, a member of the board’s budget committee this year, there is roughly $5.4 million in special allocations for LGBTQ programs. “My colleagues generally recognized the need for these services. A lot of cuts included in the mayor’s budget had needed to get back filled,” said Mandelman, who noted that numerous programs “that had been going, some for a number of years, have always been funded by add backs, and we were able to find add backs to keep them going.” Mandelman’s office included in its LGBTQ funding total several budget asks made by HIV

Cynthia Laird

Supervisor Rafael Mandelman was able to secure funds in the city budget for LGBTQ programs in the Castro and other parts of the city.

service providers, who had rallied in the spring at City Hall to press their case. However, not all of the $7 million in funding they had requested was appropriated. (See story, page 2.) “These are tough budget times; a lot of things

are on the chopping block,” noted gay District 4 Supervisor Joel Engardio, who was elected to his first term last year. “Every group or organization that was in jeopardy had a very compelling case to not lose funding.” See page 10 >>

SF leather district board member resigns over tweets by Cynthia Laird

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member of the San Francisco Leather & LGBTQ Cultural District board resigned July 20, a couple of weeks after he posted tweets that some viewed as racist and anti-trans. It comes as the city’s fetish and leather communities ready for the annual Up Your Alley street fair being held on July 30. JConr B. Ortega, the organization’s diversity and membership committee chair, posted a statement on Twitter July 20, stating that he has left the cultural district’s board. (Twitter rebranded to X on July 24.) “It was brought to my attention that political activist(s) in our community have taken issue with my personal stance on various political issues and instead of conducting civil discourse in an entirely separate forum, they, in turn, have pressured members of our leadership to remove a democratically elected board member of a cultural district nonprofit board,” Ortega wrote. “As a board member of the Leather & LGBTQ Cultural District, I am resigning my position immediately.” Ortega also wrote that had he not resigned, it was likely the district’s board would have “forced me out by a politically motivated vote to appease the activist(s).” He stated that he did not violate the bylaws of the leather district. Ortega was likely referring, in part, to retweets of his July 3 post by Lito Sandoval, a former president of the San Francisco Latino Democrats and former

From Ortega’s Twitter feed

JConr B. Ortega stands by San Francisco Mayor London Breed’s Pride float June 25.

board chair of the GLBT Historical Society. In one of those, Sandoval retweeted Ortega’s tweet in which Ortega wrote. “Wrong lane. This is the Pride lane – trans lane over to the right.” “Uhhh, So this dood is on the board of @SFleatherDist and @sfyd? With his anti-affirmative action stance and LGB not T attitude? Que lastima! [what a pity]” Sandoval tweeted, referring to the leather district and the San Francisco Young Democrats. Regarding affirmative action, Ortega had written July 2, “Call me an old fashioned Democrat, I do not support the idea of race being a factor in an admis-

sion to a school. I reject the premise that one’s acceptance should be based on the color of their skin and not the contents of their character, as Dr. King would say.” He was referring to the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the late civil rights leader. The tweet was an apparent reference to the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision last month that struck down affirmative action in college admissions. In a direct message to the Bay Area Reporter July 20, Ortega blamed a Twitter troll but did not specifically name anyone. See page 10 >>

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