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City Clinic gets a refresh
Disco Coalition set to start
ARTS
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'Today It Rains'
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Husbands who cook
The
www.ebar.com
Serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities since 1971
Vol. 49 • No. 12 • March 21-27, 2019
Trans, youth issues focus of California LGBT bill package by Matthew S. Bajko
Rick Gerharter
Project Inform’s last known address was in a WeWork building at 25 Taylor Street.
Project Inform has closed, sources say by Liz Highleyman
P
roject Inform, one of the nation’s longest-running HIV education and advocacy organizations, has terminated its staff and dissolved, according to former staff members and others. Last Friday, the Bay Area Reporter reported online that the agency was likely to cease operations, as former staff members issued a statement saying Project Inform could not “successfully navigate the current funding environment.” This week, the paper learned from sources close to the organization, who asked to remain anonymous due to ongoing legal issues, that the See page 8 >>
T
he dozen LGBT rights bills that Equality California is co-sponsoring with state lawmakers this year focuses largely on the rights of transgender people and LGBTQ youth. One of the more controversial is Senate Bill 201, the Intersex Bodily Autonomy bill authored by gay state Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco). It would ban medically unnecessary surgeries performed on intersex infants, but as the Bay Area Reporter reported online Monday, the powerful California Medical Association is officially opposed to it. Another bill being watched closely is SB 159 co-authored by Wiener and gay Assemblyman Todd Gloria (D-San Diego). It would authorize pharmacists to furnish PrEP, or pre-exposure prophylaxis, and PEP, or post-exposure prophylaxis, to patients without a physician prescription. Just as people do not need a prescription to obtain birth control pills from a pharmacist, neither should they need one to obtain the HIV prevention medications, contend the lawmakers, who are chair and vice chair, respectively, this year of the Legislative LGBT Caucus. Wiener is also the author of a third bill attracting intense opposition from conservative groups. SB 145 would prevent gay male adolescents from
Tia Gemmell
Legislative LGBT Caucus members state Senator Scott Wiener, left, Assemblyman Evan Low, Assemblywoman Susan Talamantes Eggman, Assemblyman Todd Gloria, and Assemblywoman Sabrina Cervantes spoke on a panel at the March 15 statewide summit for LGBT elected officials.
having to be listed on the state’s sex offender registry for sleeping with a boyfriend under the age of 18. The bill aims to include a “Romeo/Juliet” clause for gay and lesbian teenagers so they are treated similarly to their heterosexual counterparts.
It would apply to teens aged 15 or older who engage in consensual sex with a partner within 10 years of age. While an 18-year-old boy or girl who has sex with a 17-year-old partner could still be prosecuted for statutory rape, they would not See page 14 >>
BALIF board members quit
PRC to open new space in SOMA
by Alex Madison
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B
ay Area Lawyers for Individual Freedom has lost at least three members, including one co-chair, from its board of directors, the Bay Area Reporter has learned. Courtesy BALIF Though no official announcement BALIF board has been made, the Co-Chair Annick B.A.R. has obtained Persinger resignation emails sent to the board from recently resigned co-chair Sarah Davis and gala co-chairs Tyler Alexander and Austin Phillips, each one detailing internal strife at the nation’s oldest LGBT bar association. BALIF’s latest newsletter no longer lists Davis, Alexander, or Phillips on its roster. BALIF’s website still lists all three people as being board members on the contact page of its website, though they have been removed from the page listing board members. “The board of directors cannot comment about the resignations,” Annick Persinger, a BALIF board co-chair, told the B.A.R. Monday. “BALIF is fully operational, per our bylaws. The BALIF board of directors will be meeting to elect new officers.” See page 15 >>
by Alex Madison RC will open the doors of its new integrated service center in San Francisco’s South of Market neighborhood April 1. The nonprofit will move into the 25,500 square foot building at 170 Ninth Street from its current location, 785 Market Street. The new space will allow PRC – and Baker Places and the AIDS Emergency Fund, which PRC took over in 2016 – to operate under one roof. “This is the vision of PRC,” CEO Brett Andrews said during a tour of the building with the Bay Area Reporter Monday, March 18. “We wanted this space to be comfortable, inviting, and welcoming for our clients and employees.” The nonprofit serves 5,000 people annually who are affected by HIV/AIDS, substance abuse, or mental health issues. Services include employment assistance and legal representation, and it has multiple locations throughout the city that offer residential treatment programs, rehabilitation, and supportive housing. Three current administrative PRC locations in the city and one Baker Places location will be moved into the new Ninth Street location. It’s been described as a one-stop shop by PRC staff. Andrews said that nearly 30 percent of PRC’s clients use services from at least two of the three merged organizations. “We went for an under one roof theme,” Andrews said, pointing out an interior design feature
Rick Gerharter
Brett Andrews, CEO of PRC, holds a rendering of the finished plan of the employee lounge in front of the space, which is now filled with furniture waiting to be unpacked.
found throughout the building of exposed wood beams that create the illusion of a roof. The three-story building has an open floor plan, lots of windows, 40 client counseling and meeting rooms, a 34-person boardroom, and community spaces. The interior and exterior of the space is accented with the colors of the PRC logo, teal, dark gray, and orange. The exterior of
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the building will be dark gray with orange accents and lighting to enhance safety at night. A large reception area will welcome clients entering the building with staff members ready to direct them to the right person. A 24-terminal computer lab will also be available to clients for job skills work. The space will be dedicated to four main areas: employment services, benefits counSee page 14 >>
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