Time for a winter getaway Buenos Aires offers value, late night fun for gay travelers. page 10
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3 for 1 Chats with RuPaul, Melissa Etheridge & Chaka Khan. see Arts section
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BAYAREAREPORTER
Vol. 38
. No. 1 . 3 January 2008
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Serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities since 1971
Suspect charged in hit and run death
2008 ushers in new laws by Heather Cassell
Ringing in 2008! Entertainer Sandra Bernhard, right, took to the stage at the Castro Theatre on New Year’s Eve for a one-night only performance. Elsewhere in the gay neighborhood, bars were packed with revelers anxious to ring in the new year.
Gays campaign for Clinton band, former President Bill Clinton. “She’s not a first timer.” Luis Vizcaino, 38, is ay and lesbian supthe openly gay California porters of Hillary communications director Clinton’s presidenfor the Clinton campaign. tial bid are working overHe told the B.A.R. that he time in Iowa, where cauleft his job at the Human cusgoers will meet tonight Rights Campaign because (Thursday, January 3). And he so believes in her canlocally, those campaigning didacy. for the New York senator’s “I was working for the bid for the Democratic largest LGBT group in the nomination insist that she country,” he said. “I wantis the one candidate who ed to work for a candidate can win back the White who would sign legislaHouse. tion.” On the campaign trail, He said that Clinton Clinton, a former first lady Hillary Clinton at an appearance supports an Employment and current senator from in San Francisco last month. Non-Discrimination Act New York, talks about her that includes protections experience in an effort to differentiate herself from Barack Obama, for gender identity; a version of the law that who is running second to Clinton in most covers only sexual orientation passed out of national polls, though the numbers don’t the House of Representatives last fall. Clinton is also on record supporting hate crimes mean a lot at this point in the campaign. “I really believe she is the one who knows legislation and ending the military’s anti-gay how to get things done,” out lesbian Cather- “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy that prevents ine Dodd told the Bay Area Reporter in a De- gays and lesbians from serving openly in the military. cember 30 telephone interview. “On our issues, she’s great,” Dodd said, A registered nurse and member of the San Francisco Health Commission, Dodd, who noting that Clinton supports equal benefits used to serve as district director for House for federal employees as a co-sponsor of the Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), put Domestic Partnership Benefits and Obligahealth care at the top of her list of issues, tion Act, which would grant the same benefits, including health insurance, to domestic “next to ending the war.” Dodd, 51, noted that San Francisco partners of federal employees that are curspends $1.3 billion on health care services in rently offered to employees’ legal spouses. Vizcaino said that there are more than 100 state, federal, and local funds. “We have to LGBT community leaders who support Clinhave a system,” she said. “Hillary Clinton has walked through that ton, including state Senator Sheila Kuehl (Dlandmine once,” Dodd said, referring to Clin- Santa Monica). “This is a very important election,” Vizton’s failed health care proposal during the early years of the administration of her huspage 15 씰
by Cynthia Laird
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woman suspected in the hit and run death of a gay San Francisco man has turned herself in to authorities and faces felony charges in the December 23 incident, officials said. Samantha Osborne, 23, of Novato, pleaded not guilty to charges of vehicular manslaughter and leaving the scene of a crime at her arraignment in Superior Court Wednesday, January 2, said Connie Chan, Gregory Anstett spokeswoman for the district attorney’s office. San Francisco Police Department spokesman Sergeant Neville Gittens said that Gregory Anstett, 51, died at 12:10 a.m. December 23 after a 1994 Jeep Cherokee struck him on Van Ness Avenue at Post Street. The vehicle’s license plate was left at the scene, Gittens said. Osborne turned herself in at the police station at 850 Bryant Street on December 26 at 9:30 a.m., Ron Giddings, deputy clerk of the San Francisco Sheriff ’s Department, said Monday, December 31. Osborne posted $15,000 surety bail, said Giddings, and was released at 1:22 p.m. the same day. SFPD Inspector Dean Taylor said that Anstett was “on the hood of the car for about 50 feet. We don’t suspect the car was traveling that fast.” Osborne was stopped 20 minutes after the accident on Geary Boulevard and 8th Avenue. There were an unknown number of passengers in the vehicle at the time police stopped her, Gittens said. He said that she was alone at the time of the incident. Osborne wasn’t suspected to be intoxicated at the time she was stopped, according to Gittens, and was released “pending further investigation.” No witnesses to the accident have contacted San Francisco police, Taylor said, though two witnesses after the accident have come forward. Anstett’s tight group of friends was shocked by the news of his death. Anstett, an optician at Kaiser Permanente, was a San Francisco resident for more than 20 years, according to friends grappling with the news. Anstett, who was single, was originally from Chicago, where his family still lives, friends said. A memorial service was held December 30 at Driscoll’s Valencia Street Serra Mortuary. His friends are filled with grief and questions about his death. They have also banded together to ensure an older gay man, whom Anstett looked after, finds a new caretaker. “It’s been a big shock,” said George Arvanites, who knew Anstett for 27 years, in a December 31 phone interview from Chicago. page 3 씰
Thomas MacEntee
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Jane Philomen Cleland
Rick Gerharter
by Heather Cassell Steven Underhill
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here must have been a lot of rainbow confetti on New Year’s Eve as the LGBT community celebrated another record setting year of legal protections that went into effect January 1. While Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger followed through on his promise to veto Assemblyman Mark Leno’s (D-San Francisco) marriage equality bill for the second time, he also set another record by signing 11 gay bills into law in 2007. In 2006, Schwarzenegger signed eight bills into law. The new laws that went into effect Tuesday cover a variety of issues from domestic partnerships to helping HIVpositive individuals to protecting youths in and out of Sen. Sheila Kuehl schools to the strongest anti-discrimination laws in the United States to protect all Californians. Equality California sponsored nine out of 10 pieces of legislation that passed, including the Student Civil Rights Act (SB777), authored by Senator Sheila Kuehl (D-Santa Monica). SB777 updates the state’s education code to reflect current legally recognized protected classes, including sexual orientation and gender identity, in the Student Safety and Violence Prevention Act of 2000 (AB537). Kuehl and advocates for SB777 told the Bay Area Reporter that the law was scheduled to go into effect January 1, unless the anti-gay Capital Resource Family Impact is successful gathering the 433,971 qualified signatures for a referendum by January 10. The anti-gay group filed a referendum against SB777 with the attorney general’s office as soon as Schwarzenegger’s signature dried on the bill. If Capital Resource Family Impact submits the qualifying amount of signatures to the secretary of state’s office in time, SB777 will be held until June when Californians vote. The referendum won’t affect AB537, which has been protecting students for eight years. In a December 21 e-mail urging constituents to turn in signed petitions, Capital Resource Family Impact claimed to have gathered more than 161,000 signatures. page 4 씰