SGN June 23, 2017 - Pride - Section 1

Page 1

2017 PRIDE events calendar

Celebrating 43 Years! Issue 25 Volume 45

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Seattle Gay News

SGN exclusive interview: Mayoral candidate Jenny Durkan by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer Mayoral candidate Jenny Durkan is running for office for the first time, but she’s no stranger to politics. A lawyer, former US attorney, family friend of the Gregoires, member of two police review boards, Mike Lowry staffer, and daughter of an 18-year veteran of the Washington state legislature, Durkan knows her way around the corridors of power. She announced her candidacy for mayor only three days after incumbent Ed Murray dropped out of the race in the wake of a sex abuse scandal. According to two recent polls, Durkan is likely to be one of the two candidates who will make it to the general election in November. Nevertheless, she has struggled to distinguish herself from her competition. “We are all varying shades of blue,” she told the SGN. Asked explicitly what makes her different from the five or six other candidates who have a chance to make it through to November, Durkan points to her background. “I bring decades of proven results on progressive issues,” she says, “and I’m one of only two candidates with executive experience,” the other one being former mayor Mike McGinn. “I can bring people togeth-

Jenny Durkan mayoral announcement – Photo by Nate Gowdy

er, and bring results.” Competitor Bob Hasegawa was a union leader before serving in the state legislature; Nikkita Oliver is an attorney, artist, and activist; Jessyn Farrell was chair of the Transportation Choices coalition; and Mike McGinn was chair of the Sierra Club, a neighborhood activist, and as mayor, a foe of downtown business interests. In contrast, Durkan has been endorsed

Members of Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/ AIDS quit Trump “does not care,” they charge

Photo by Evan Vucci, Associated Press

by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer Six of the 18 members of the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA) resigned June 13, saying that Donald Trump “simply does not care” about fighting the disease. In a June 16 op-ed in Newsweek maga-

zine, Scott Schoettes, Counsel and HIV Project Director at Lambda Legal, explained why he and his colleagues quit PACHA. “As advocates for people living with HIV, we have dedicated our lives to combating this disease and no longer feel we

see HIV/AIDS page 11

by the Seattle Hotel Association and the Chamber of Commerce. Asked how these business endorsements will win her the votes of regular working people, Durkan looks back at her life experiences. “I’d ask people to look at what I’ve done over 30 years,” she replies. “I was raised in and around union issues. My dad was a leader in the Democratic Party. At my house, the idea was if you can walk, you

can doorbell. “As a lawyer I represented injured workers and unions – workers with mesothelioma, workers injured in explosions. “As US attorney, I formed a civil rights unit in my office. Civil rights laws are there to protect individuals, and they’re as important as any other aspect of a US attorney’s job.” As US attorney, Durkan also played a role in the US Department of Justice investigation that found Seattle police guilty of a “pattern and practice” of excessive force and racial discrimination. The finding eventually led to a federal consent decree requiring the police to clean up their act. “Police reform not a destination,” Durkan says. “As the city grows, we have to remain conscious of the question: is the training sufficient? There always has to be an ethos of improvement. “Police services also can’t be viewed in isolation – every day the police encounter people with mental health problems, addiction, health care issues. “Police and firefighters are our first-line social workers. They don’t resent that – when I meet with them, they don’t tell me that – but we have to reconfigure their role. We have to look at the problems holistically.”

see DURKAN page 5

Pride isn’t cheap:

Capitol Hill Chamber responds to question about lack of Pride banners on Capitol Hill by MK Scott SGN A&E Writer During all this Capitol Hill Pride chaos, has anyone one wondered where the traditional Pride banners are that used to line Broadway? The tradition was started in the mid1980’s by Bill Swigart and was taken over by the Capitol Hill Chamber of Commerce. I went directly to Executive Director, Sierra Hansen for a response. Hansen explained that the company that used to put up the banners had retired. The city also requires a permit to turn off the Metro Trolley lines (which costs about a $1,000) in order to put up the 26 banners, and another $1,000 permit to take the banners down. In addition it costs $6,000 to print the banners raising the price tag to $8,000. When I asked Hansen if there were any steps to reach out to notify the community of the extra cost, she replied that they had conducted a survey in early 2017, and the banners were not a priority that the Chamber wanted to spend money on. Other steps to notify the community never happened. Hansen was enthusiastic about if anyone in the community wanted to take this project on to ensure this tradition continues.

Pride banner on Broadway, 2011 – Photo by Priscilla Long

Seattle Gay News publisher, George Bakan said he would get involved as a sponsor and would welcome the community to come together and support the project for next year.


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