November 2, 2023 edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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Update on Lt. gov's trans council

New Oakland port commissioner

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Sundance Stompede

ARTS

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ARTS

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Show and 'Tell'

The

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

Vol. 53 • No. 44 • November 2-8, 2023

After long legal fight, KQED begins to mine Prop 8 tapes by Matthew S. Bajko

Courtesy CDPH

California public health director Dr. Tomás J. Aragón is urging people to get vaccinated against the mpox virus.

State health officials sound alarm as mpox returns by John Ferrannini

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ith mpox cases continuing to rise in the Bay Area and statewide, the California Department of Public Health is encouraging all people – but gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men in particular – to get the full vaccination series for the disease if they have not already. The increase in recent weeks has been precipitous. The Bay Area Reporter last reported October 13 that there’d been only one case reported in San Francisco that month. As of October 31, there’ve been 20 reported cases – the most of any month this year. “We are beginning to see an uptick in mpox cases across the state. With this, we are reminding and encouraging all Californians to be aware of the signs and symptoms of mpox and to take preventive measures, including vaccination, to protect against severe illness,” stated Dr. Tomás J. Aragón, the state’s public health director. “Mpox began circulating in California in the spring of 2022, and while cases have been low since its initial emergence thanks to education and community vaccination efforts, mpox can seriously impact individuals who test positive,” added Aragón, who used to be the health officer for San Francisco before joining the state health department. Statewide, reported cases had averaged less than seven per week in July and August, in spite of fears of a summer resurgence. Cases have now increased to “nearly 17 per week,” according to a California DPH news release, which stated that a health advisory was sent to providers October 30. San Diego County recently saw a spike in mpox cases, with 11 new cases reported in October, according to a county newsletter. Two doses of the Jynneos vaccine given about a month apart provides the best protection against the disease, health officials said. According to the San Francisco Department of Public Health in a statement See page 4 >>

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eated next to his husband, Paul Katami, in one of KQED’s San Francisco studios, Jeff Zarrillo is seen watching for the first time video footage of his testimony as one of the plaintiffs in the 2010 federal lawsuit Hollingsworth v. Perry. Seeing the moment where he is asked by one of his attorneys to talk about meeting the man he would one day marry due to winning the case, Zarillo’s eyes well up. “I was just incredibly anxious, incredibly nervous, and wanted to make sure I articulated my story and our story. We had prepared for days for that moment,” recalls Zarrillo, moments later adding, “I just always knew we were on the right side of the law.” Katami adds that the Los Angeles couple hadn’t expected they would serve as witnesses when they agreed to be part of the lawsuit that won the right for same-sex couples to wed in California in June of 2013. “Never did we, one at the start of this, did we think we would take the stand and have to testify,” he says.

Kori Suzuki/KQED

Paul Katami, center left, a plaintiff in the landmark 2010 lawsuit that overturned California’s ban on same-sex marriage, greets fellow plaintiffs Kris Perry, center right, Sandy Stier, right, and KQED politics editor Scott Shafer, left, ahead of an interview at the KQED offices in San Francisco on March 3, 2023. Katami, Perry, and Stier came to the studio to watch clips of their testimony in federal court, which KQED had fought to get unsealed, for the first time.

The men’s comments are part of a 14-minute video the Bay Area public broadcaster is releasing online Thursday, November 2. A

second 10-minute video it is posting that day features interviews with the other plaintiff See page 2 >>

SFPD LGBTQ forum talks safe havens and hate crimes at meeting

by John Ferrannini

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n LGBTQ group that advises the San Francisco Police Department is seeking new members. That was one of the messages delivered at the department’s LGBTQ+ Advisory Forum meeting October 25 that the Bay Area Reporter was invited to attend. The forum is made up of civilians and department personnel. It is looking for a more diverse array of participants as it works on updated posters to let victims of crime know where they can go for safe haven in the event they are victims of a crime, officials said. The group is also planning a community symposium on hate crimes. “The purpose of this forum is not to represent the Castro,” Greg Carey, a gay man who is the chair of Castro Community on Patrol and community co-chairperson of the forum, said during the group’s meeting, held at the UCSF Mission Bay campus. “It’s to represent all of San Francisco, all genders and ethnicities. ... There are other places in the city that have populations of queer people who also should have a voice in the conversation.” The forum was established in 2010 by thenSan Francisco Police Chief George Gascón as a way for the LGBTQ community to address concerns directly to SFPD command staff. Gascón

John Ferrannini

San Francisco Police Department Officer Jose Canchola, left, and Captain Christopher Del Gandio listen to a presentation by Graham Hinchcliffe, M.S., right, on Pride flag pins he introduced at UCSF during the SFPD’s LGBTQ+ Advisory Forum meeting at the UCSF Mission Bay campus October 25.

went on to become the city’s district attorney before relocating to Los Angeles, where he was elected that county’s DA in November 2020. (He is running for reelection next year.) Christopher Del Gandio, the first out gay SFPD captain and the department’s co-chairperson of the forum, said that there are eight similar advisory bodies for other groups and communities throughout the city, such as for Asian American Pacific Islanders and small business owners.

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The LGBTQ+ forum, which currently has 20 members, was recently renamed from the San Francisco Police Department Chief ’s LGBTQ+ Forum because the forums are being restructured, Del Gandio explained. The proliferation of chief ’s forums has made it hard for Chief William Scott to attend all of them, and so one representative selected by Scott from each forum will comprise a new chief ’s forum, and the existing forums will become department-focused forums. See page 12 >>


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