July 21, 2022 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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South Bay monkeypox news

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Sanctuary City

ARTS

Out candidates get backing

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ARTS

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Jewish Film Festival

The

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

Vol. 52 • No. 29 • July 21-27, 2022

SF DA Jenkins hires out staff, tours Castro neighborhood

by Eric Burkett

Liz Highleyman

Laura Thomas from the San Francisco AIDS Foundation urged a quicker federal response to monkeypox at a July 18 rally outside the local offices of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Advocates rally to demand more monkeypox vaccines by Liz Highleyman

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GBTQ and HIV advocates rallied outside the local offices of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Monday, July 18, to demand speedier monkeypox testing and an increased supply of vaccines. More than 50 activists and elected officials joined the protest, organized by the Alice B. Toklas and Harvey Milk LGBTQ Democratic clubs. “This is really about the community coming together and demanding that our government do better,” said gay state Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco). “What’s most frustrating about this whole situation is that it was completely and utterly avoidable, and it’s impacting the queer community in a very significant way. I’m old enough to remember HIV in the 1980s, when the federal government was completely ignoring our community and allowing a mass die-off of gay men. We can never, ever let anything like that happen again.” On July 15, the San Francisco Department of Public Health updated its monkeypox tally to 86 confirmed and probable cases, and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention raised the national count to 1,972. While anyone can get monkeypox through close physical contact, the vast majority of cases in the current outbreak have been among gay, bisexual, and trans men, as well as other men who have sex with men. According to Wiener, almost 90% of the monkeypox cases in the Bay Area and half of those in California are in San Francisco. When the state Legislature goes back in session on August 1, one of his highest priorities will be to obtain funding for local communities to expand testing and treatment. “We need to make sure that our state health authorities are prioritizing this community, which is being so deeply impacted by this virus,” he said. See page 10 >>

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an Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins announced two new LGBTQ appointees to her growing management team and conducted a get-acquainted walking tour of Castro businesses with gay District 8 Supervisor Rafael Mandelman Tuesday. Jenkins was appointed to the office July 8 by Mayor London Breed after the recall of former DA Chesa Boudin. She has named Susan Belinda Christian, a lesbian, as managing attorney of collaborative courts, and Julius DeGuia, a gay man, as chief of criminal division vertical courts. Both bring extensive experience in the district attorney’s office to Jenkins’ administration, having initially been hired by former DA Kamala Harris, now vice president of the United States. The moves come five days after Jenkins fired about 15 people, including bi former prosecutor Arcelia Hurtado, as the Bay Area Reporter first reported online. Christian, a former co-chair of the Alice B. Toklas LGBTQ Democratic Club, also served under Boudin, as co-chair of his Community Health Advisory Committee. Her work has long centered on behavioral health and its intersection with the law.

Rick Gerharter

San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins, center, chats with Joseph Estrada, left, of the Castro Village Wine Co. during her tour of the Castro district, which was led by District 8 Supervisor Rafael Mandelman, right.

From 2012 to 2019 she worked in the Behavioral Health Court, a “multidisciplinary court providing treatment and rehabilitation for people who criminal justice involvement is tied to behavioral health disorders,” according to her biography on SFgov.org, and has also served on the city’s Human Rights Commission, serving four terms

as commission chair. Christian helped create and implement a pilot program for implicit bias training for city employees in cooperation with the late Mayor Ed Lee’s office, and was appointed to the San Francisco Health Commission in 2020 by Breed. See page 2 >>

LGBTQ parks officials hail Presidio Tunnel Tops opening by Matthew S. Bajko

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fter eight years of overseeing the design and construction phases of the Presidio Tunnel Tops, Michael Boland took in the transformative new parkland on the northern edge of San Francisco and admired the various amenities throughout its 14 acres. Several grass meadows serve as picnic spots with breathtaking views of the bay and the Golden Gate Bridge. A campfire circle provides a space for nature talks by national parks rangers. Trails meander through the sloped site, wending a path to an extensive new play area for children called the Outpost adjacent to a revamped center for educational youth programs. “The whole purpose of this place, in particular, is to provide a gateway to the national parks for everyone,” said Boland, a Bay Area native and gay man who, since 2001, has been the chief of park development and visitor engagement for the Presidio Trust. “This is a gateway for communities that don’t feel welcome in the national parks. Queer people, people of color still don’t feel comfortable in national parks.” He spoke to the Bay Area Reporter during the new park site’s ribbon-cutting ceremony Saturday, July 16, held a day prior to it officially opening to the public. “It was thrilling,” Boland said of seeing the fencing around the Tunnel Tops site come down, “because people immediately were

Rick Gerharter

Members of Fogo na Roupa lead a procession along the Cliff Walk as part of opening ceremonies of the Presidio Tunnel Tops July 16.

using the park. And it was exciting to see so many diverse people coming and using it. We wanted to create a space where people would feel welcome and fall in love with the national parks and want to visit parks farther away like Point Reyes and Yosemite.” Boland had first spoken to the B.A.R. about the project and his decades-long career with the National Park Service in 2019 when he received the prestigious designation of

Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects. At the time seated at one of the outdoor tables of the Presidio Transit Center, now connected to the new park site and whose eateries are set to reopen later this year, Boland had noted that the Tunnel Tops was “the same size” as Mission Dolores Park, the city park on Liberty Hill he once lived near.

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See page 10 >>


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