New Bay Times Columnist Rafael Mandelman Page 14
Gay Giants Fans Page 12
Bay Times’ Paul Pratt Talks with Melissa Etheridge Page 17
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October 4-17, 2012 | www.sfbaytimes.com
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Baseball Mojo
SF Giants Are Pro LGBT Editor’s Note: Special thanks to Staci and the Giants for their help in compiling this piece during an incredibly busy time for the team. That speaks volumes itself about their ongoing support of our community. By Staci Slaughter
f irst-of-its kind partnership in the HIV/AIDS world was precedent setting, bringing together a professional sports team and the AIDS advocacy group to address an issue, which at the time was of epidemic proportions in the San Francisco Bay Area.
We are proud that the Giants have a longstanding history of supporting the LGBT community. In 1994, for example, the Giants became the firstever professional sports team to host an HIV/AIDS awareness game. As a result, the 2012 Giants season marked our 19th Until There’s A Cure game presented by Gilead Sciences and the Giants Community Fund. This
While great strides in HIV/AIDS treatment and research have been made, especially in the San Francisco community, we’re still not there yet. This means that the Giants will continue to devote a game each season to keep this issue in the forefront of our community until a cure is ultimately found. Plans for our 20th anniversary game with The Until
There’s A Cure Foundation are underway. The Giants, the Giants Community Fund, and many of our corporate sponsors throughout the years have additionally raised more than $2 million for numerous local community organizations that provide services and treatments to those living with HIV and AIDS. In addition to our signature Until There’s A Cure Day, the Giants have also lent our support to LGBT issues and awareness through our LGBT special events at AT&T Park and our team’s participation in the It Gets Better Campaign. The Giants were the first professional sports team to
join the campaign. It gained the support of Giants players and coaches, including Matt Cain, Barry Zito, Sergio Romo and Hensley Meulens. They took a stand against LGBT harassment and other forms of bullying. 2012 marked the 10th annual LGBT Night with the Giants, featuring an average attendance of 1,500 attendees. It’s enjoyed a sellout capacity for the past three years. Each LGBT event includes a social gathering within AT&T Park, music, beverages, contests and local celebrity attendance, all exclusive to the LGBT Night special event guests. Long time community partners participating in
the Giants LGBT Nights include the Gay Softball Leagues, Lesbian/Gay Chorus of SF, Betty’s List, Bay Area Reporter and AT&T. A portion of the ticket sales to this special event have benefited many groups including the SF Gay Games, Gay Olympics in Cologne Germany, Team SF, SF LGBT Community Center and Cheer SF. Staci Slaughter, Senior Vice President of Communications for the San Francisco Giants, became the first female vice president in the history of the organization in 1999. She also currently serves on the board of trustees of the Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy, the San Francisco Friends School and the Friends of the San Francisco Public Library.
Jehovah’s Witnesses Helped to Kill Prop 8 By Joel P. Engardio Will anyone thank Jehovah’s Witnesses for helping gay and lesbian couples win the right to marry? Everyone knows Mormons took a lot of abuse for helping pass Proposition 8, the amendment that banned samesex marriage in California. But few realize how Jehovah’s Witnesses, that other door-knocking and gay-is-sin
religion, played a key role in getting Prop 8 declared unconstitutional.
have to wait until next June for a walk down the aisle.
to happen in America, land of the free.
By the time you read this in print, or soon after, we’ll know whether gays can start getting married again in California. If the U.S. Supreme Court refuses to hear the Prop 8 case ruled by a lower federal court, then we’ll be hearing wedding bells in a matter of days. But if the high court wants to decide the issue itself, we’ll
Either way, Prop 8 looks headed for history book shame. How then, did the most unlikely of groups -- Jehovah’s Witnesses -- help kill it?
Vaughn R. Walker, the federal judge who first struck down Prop 8 in 2010, boldly said it “was premised on the belief that same-sex couples simply are not as good as opposite-sex couples.” He also minced no words with the electorate: “That the majority of California voters supported Proposition 8 is irrelevant.” (continued on page 3)
One of the biggest outcries over Prop 8 was that the fundamental rights of a minority group could be taken away by popular vote, which isn’t supposed
Supervisor Wiener Introduces Legislation Restricting Public Nudity Supervisor Scott Wiener this week introduced legislation restricting public nudity in some public spaces while allowing it in other appropriate spaces. Specifically, the legislation would prohibit display of genitals and buttocks in city plazas, parklets, sidewalks, streets, and public transit. The legislation contains a blanket exemption for street fairs, festivals,
and parades. Thus, nudity will still be permitted, for example, at Folsom Street Fair, Dore Alley Fair, the Pride parade, and Bay to Breakers. The legislation has no impact on nudity at beaches or on private property. California state law does not outlaw public nudity and only bans “lewd” behavior, which the courts have in-
terpreted to exclude the simple fact of being naked. Berkeley and San Jose have enacted local prohibitions on public nudity. San Francisco currently bans nudity only in parks, port property, and restaurants but nowhere else. The proposed ordinance resulted from a sharp increase in public nudity
in the Castro, including an almostdaily ad hoc nudist colony at Jane Warner Plaza at Castro and Market and frequent nudity on the streets of the neighborhood. Over the past year, a growing number of gay and straight residents, small business owners, and others have called for restrictions on public nudity in light of this extreme situation.
According to Supervisor Wiener: “While most people in San Francisco, myself included, have no problem with occasional public nudity, we’ve seen a shift in public attitude because of the over-the-top situation at Jane Warner Plaza and elsewhere in the Castro. Until recently, public nudity in our city was mostly limited to vari(continued on page 2)