Watermark Issue 27.09: Essential Heroes

Page 1

Your LGBTQ Life.

April 30 - May 13, 2020 • Issue 27.09

Essential

Heroes

St Pete Pride postpones celebration Pulse Remembrance to be virtual

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April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com


departments 7 // Bureau Chief’s Desk

page

12

8 // Central Florida News 10// Tampa Bay News

The designation of all gender restrooms will result in less hassle for people who don’t fit neatly into some people’s expectations of what it looks like to be male or female. –PALM BEACH CO. HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL BOARD MEMBER RHONDA WILLIAMS

12// State, Nation & World News 13// Talking Points 15// COVID-19 & Community 25// Tampa Bay Inside + Out 29// Central Fl Inside + Out 23// Tampa Bay Marketplace 26// Central Fl Marketplace On the cover

page From the Frontlines:

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page ESSENTIAL

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HEROES: Frontline LGBTQ workers reflect on COVID-19.

Photo illustration by Dylan Todd.

scan qr code for

WatermarkOnline.com

Central Florida and Tampa Bay essential heroes discuss COVID-19.

Watermark Issue 27.09 // April 30 - May 13, 2020

Virtual Rememberance Fall Forward

Neutral Ground

Community Response

page onePULSE Foundation postpones Rainbow Run.

page

page

Read It Online! In addition to a Web site with daily LGBTQ updates, a digital version of each issue of the publication is made available on WatermarkOnline.com

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page St Pete Pride 2020 reschedules to the fall.

10

12

Boynton Beach City restrooms go gender neutral.

15

State Rep. Jennifer Webb discusses COVID-19 and Florida unemployment.

Follow us on Twitter and Instagram at @WatermarkOnline and Like us on Facebook. watermark Your LGBTQ life.

April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com

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watermark Your LGBTQ life.

April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com


central florida

bureau chief’s

Jeremy Williams cfl bureau chief

Jeremy@WatermarkOnline.com

I

Desk

’ve always been an anxious

person. Maybe it is the copious amounts of caffeine I have been ingesting every day for decades or maybe it is the crippling fear of death I have had ever since I was a kid, but for whatever reason I have always been easy to breaking into sweats and shaking like a Chihuahua in a light breeze. Even when I seem calm on the outside, my insides are being inappropriately shaken around like a starlet in a 1940s, black and white talkie.

About eight years ago, that anxiety manifested itself into my first full-on panic attack, and I thought the anxiety was bad. The anxiety was that annoying kid at school who constantly picks at you, but the panic attack was his big brother who likes to beat the shit out of you. After many panic attacks, and just as many visits to the E.R. thinking I was having a heart attack, I started to see someone who helped me work through the

panic and anxiety and get to a much better place. The panic and anxiety, which still comes and goes, became manageable. Then the Stay-At-Home order happened. At first it was fine. They said it was only going to last 14 days and if we all would social distance and self isolate and stay home we could flatten the curve. After a week the anxiety started back up and then as the cases of COVID-19 and the deaths increased and the unemployment numbers and the

uncertainty went up, I started to feel the panic sliding back. I became obsessed with watching the news and reading up on how you get COVID, what the symptoms are, how your body reacts and what dying from a virus like this would be like. It all can, and did, become overwhelming. As I was slowly regressing back into the anxiety-filled madness of my former self, I reached out to some of those old lifelines I had back when the panic was getting to be too much, and I thought I’d share a few of the suggestions I received in case you too were feeling overwhelmed. The first and most important thing I was told to do is unplug. In times like these it is important to be informed with the facts, but you don’t need the facts on repeat and you certainly don’t need them accompanied by other’s opinions on those facts. Pick a reputable news source, get the information for a limited amount of time and then occasionally check in for updates. Also, take the weekends to unplug completely from news and social media. One of my favorite techniques when the anxiety was creeping up, which was given to me by a therapist, is called grounding in the present, and it is something easy anyone can do at anytime. First you place your feet flat on the ground and take slow, long breaths. Then stand up and do the following five steps, using each of your senses to countdown. -Look around the room you are in and count off five things you see. It can be objects on the table, something on the wall, anything that you can focus your sight on. -Feel around where you are and find four things you can touch. Again, it can be something in front of you on a table or something on your body — your shirt, your hair, etc. -Listen for three distinct sounds. What do you hear around you? The

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The anxiety was that annoying kid at school who constantly picks at you, but the panic attack was his big brother who likes to beat the shit out of you.

sanitized hands and a glass — or four — of a nice Merlot. The biggest tip I have gotten, though, is reach out and talk to someone. Find a person you can dump all of your anxiety, fear and irritation on. Someone who will listen without judgment and know that it is not directed at them, it’s just you venting. And when you are in a better place, offer to be that person for them. Sometimes you just need to unload all the shit in your head and the best thing we can do for each other right now is listen without consequences. In this issue, we look at some essential heroes on the frontlines who are helping our communities to run in these scary times. Be safe and let’s make sure we are all taking care of each other.

Orlando Office Sales Director: Danny Garcia • Ext. 108 Danny@WatermarkOnline.com Senior Orlando Account Manager: Sam Callahan • Ext. 103 Sam@WatermarkOnline.com

watermark Your LGBTQ life.

contributors Rep. Jennifer Webb

is a microentrepreneur who specializes in business strategy and development. She is the first openly LGBTQ woman elected to higher office in the state of Florida. She and her spouse, Cynthia, live with their puppy, Ringo, and bird, Bandit, in Gulfport. She is a Freshman Democrat up for re-election in November. Page 15

Sabrina Ambra, Nathan Bruemmer, Scottie Campbell, Miguel Fuller, Divine Grace, Holly Kapherr Alejos, Jason Leclerc, Melody Maia Monet, Jerick Mediavilla, Greg Stemm, Dr. Steve yacovelli, Michael wanzie

photography Brian Becnel, Nick Cardello, Bruce Hardin, Jamarqus Mosley, Chris Stephenson, Lee Vandergrift

distribution LVNLIF2 Distributing, Ken Carraway, Vanessa Maresca-Cruz

CONTENTS of WATERMARK are protected by federal copyright law and may not be reproduced in whole or part without the permission of the publisher. Unsolicited article submissions will not be returned unless accompanied by a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Although WATERMARK is supported by many fine advertisers, we cannot accept responsibility for claims made by advertisers. Publication of the name or photograph of any person or organization in articles, advertising, or listing in WATERMARK is not to be construed as any indication of the sexual orientation of such persons or members of such organizations. WATERMARK is published every second Thursday. Subscription rate is $55

watermark staff CFL Bureau Chief: Jeremy Williams • Ext. 106 Jeremy@WatermarkOnline.com

hum of a ceiling fan or the traffic outside the window or even the breath as you exhale works. -Find two smells around you. A scented candle or an old book, maybe the smell of the gallons of hand sanitizer you have been using for weeks on end. -Finally, find one thing you can taste. A piece of candy, a sip of coffee, better yet a nice glass of wine. By the time you reach one, hopefully the edge has been taken off. If not, at least you have

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April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com

(1st class) and $26 (standard mail). The official views of WATERMARK are expressed only in editorials. Opinions offered in signed columns, letters and articles are those of the writers and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the newspaper’s owner or management. We reserve the right to edit or reject any material submitted for publication. WATERMARK is not responsible for damages due to typographical errors, except for the cost of replacing ads created by WATERMARK that have such errors.

Watermark Publishing Group Inc.

7



tampa bay

bureau chief’s

Ryan Williams-Jent TB bureau chief Ryan@WatermarkOnline.com

W

Desk

hile as a journalist I hope

it’s clear that I have a particular affinity for them, I also hope we can all agree that words matter.

Choosing them carefully and deliberately can change the world, for better or for worse. It can do so one person at a time or in staggering numbers, and neither is without merit. Your influence just depends on the size of your platform, which thanks to modern technology is larger than ever for almost all of us. It’s a part of what can make social media so maddening. It’s amplified each of our voices and brought society closer together than ever, particularly as we socially distance from one another, all while simultaneously managing to push many of us further apart. I believe that’s because while we’re just fingertips and a few keystrokes away from vast wells of knowledge, too many of us

choose not to drink. In other words, Aunt Karen just needs to Google it. Unfounded opinions cloaked as facts aren’t limited to the internet, however, and can come from much larger, much more public stages. Like the podium in front of the president of the United States, who liked or loathed is as closely scrutinized by the world at large as he is on its great wide web. The same is true for most heads of state. Referring to COVID-19, which at the time was known to have killed more than 51,000 Americans, Donald Trump suggested that sources of light or disinfectants could treat the respiratory illness. “I see the disinfectant that knocks it out in a minute, one

minute,” he shared April 23, “and is there a way we can do something like that by injection inside or almost a cleaning? As you see, it gets in the lungs, it does a tremendous number on the lungs, so it would be interesting to check that.” After medical experts and even the makers of disinfectant brands like Lysol publicly denounced the president’s words, the White House utilized the opportunity to attack journalists for reporting them. Trump subsequently claimed he was being sarcastic. Former vice president Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president who will likely challenge Trump in November, chose his own words carefully in a response. “I can’t believe I have to say this,” he shared, “but please don’t drink bleach.” The differences between the two men couldn’t be starker, especially concerning LGBTQ Americans. As transgender soldiers fight for a country that negates their rights to do so and as this administration argues that our community should be able to be fired simply for who we are, we must remember that. Words matter, and when this country holds its 2021 inauguration and this year’s victor recites their presidential oath, it’s imperative that he believes that. We need a president who will preserve, protect and defend the U.S. Constitution not just for the few, but for the many. Biden will, because he has. “I am absolutely comfortable with the fact that men marrying men, women marrying women and heterosexual men and women marrying, are entitled to the same exact rights, all the civil rights, all the civil liberties,” he said as vice president in 2012, three days before President Barack Obama publicly supported

Owner & Publisher: Rick Claggett • Ext. 110 Rick@WatermarkOnline.com Business Manager: Kathleen Sadler • Ext. 101 Kathleen@WatermarkOnline.com

Tampa Bay Bureau Chief: Ryan Williams-Jent • Ext. 302 Ryan@WatermarkOnline.com Creative/Photographer: Dylan Todd • Ext. 102 Dylan@WatermarkOnline.com

In other words, Aunt Karen just needs to Google it.

and entertainer share their stories from the front lines of this pandemic. We examine its effects in other ways in Tampa Bay and Central Florida news, as area leaders make difficult decisions about this year’s LGBTQ celebrations and ceremonies. St Pete Pride, the state’s largest outing, announces it will be held in the fall. Tampa Pride, which was previously rescheduled to May, postpones until 2021 – and in Central Florida, the Pulse Remembrance Ceremony goes virtual. We also hear directly from State Rep. Jennifer Webb about what resources are available to help our struggling communities. Watermark strives to bring you a variety of stories, your stories. I hope you avoid digesting bleach, check your voter registration status and enjoy this latest issue.

Rep. Jennifer Webb

is a microentrepreneur who specializes in business strategy and development. She is the first openly LGBTQ woman elected to higher office in the state of Florida. She and her spouse, Cynthia, live with their puppy, Ringo, and bird, Bandit, in Gulfport. She is a Freshman Democrat up for re-election in November. Page 15

Sabrina Ambra, Nathan Bruemmer, Scottie Campbell, Miguel Fuller, Divine Grace, Holly Kapherr Alejos, Jason Leclerc, Melody Maia Monet, Jerick Mediavilla, Greg Stemm, Dr. Steve yacovelli, Michael wanzie

photography Brian Becnel, Nick Cardello, Bruce Hardin, Jamarqus Mosley, Chris Stephenson, Lee Vandergrift

distribution LVNLIF2 Distributing, Ken Carraway, Vanessa Maresca-Cruz

CONTENTS of WATERMARK are protected by federal copyright law and may not be reproduced in whole or part without the permission of the publisher. Unsolicited article submissions will not be returned unless accompanied by a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Although WATERMARK is supported by many fine advertisers, we cannot accept responsibility for claims made by advertisers. Publication of the name or photograph of any person or organization in articles, advertising, or listing in WATERMARK is not to be construed as any indication of the sexual orientation of such persons or members of such organizations. WATERMARK is published every second

Orlando Office Sales Director: Danny Garcia • Ext. 108 Danny@WatermarkOnline.com Senior Orlando Account Manager: Sam Callahan • Ext. 103 Sam@WatermarkOnline.com

watermark Your LGBTQ life.

contributors

Thursday. Subscription rate is $55

watermark staff CFL Bureau Chief: Jeremy Williams • Ext. 106 Jeremy@WatermarkOnline.com

marriage equality. “And, quite frankly, I don’t see much of a distinction beyond that.” Three years later, the tides turned and the Supreme Court made marriage equality the law of the land. As the LGBTQ community faces its next uphill battle before that same body, albeit with two Trump appointees, having a president on our side can make all the difference. Just as important as words are actions. That’s why in this issue we introduce you to four essential heroes who are making a difference in Tampa Bay and Central Florida. As we collectively grapple with COVID-19, a nurse, server, delivery driver

Senior Tampa Bay Account Manager: Russ Martin • Ext. 303 Russ@WatermarkOnline.com Founder and Guiding Light: Tom Dyer Tom@WatermarkOnline.com National Ad Representative: Rivendell Media Inc. • 212-242-6863

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April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com

(1st class) and $26 (standard mail). The official views of WATERMARK are expressed only in editorials. Opinions offered in signed columns, letters and articles are those of the writers and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the newspaper’s owner or management. We reserve the right to edit or reject any material submitted for publication. WATERMARK is not responsible for damages due to typographical errors, except for the cost of replacing ads created by WATERMARK that have such errors.

Watermark Publishing Group Inc.

7


central florida news

Suspect in Parliament House shooting arrested Jeremy Williams

O

RLANDO | Orlando Police arrested Courtney Lamar Williams, 28, on April 15 for the murder of Ricardo Montez Filmore. Flimore, 38, was found shot to death at the Parliament House Resort in Orlando April 2. According to the police report, Williams was seen fleeing the Parliament House after two security guards and a front desk clerk heard multiple loud bangs coming from the direction of Filmore’s room. One of the security guards identified Williams in the report as “Ricky’s boyfriend.” Parliament House owner Don Granatstein said in an April 2 interview with Watermark that Filmore was a part-time employee and that he and his partner had been staying at the hotel. “[A domestic dispute] escalated and his partner shot him and ran,” Granatstein said. According to police, the occupant of the room below Filmore reported hearing a loud argument coming from the room above him. He then heard a “body slam” followed by loud bangs. Police discovered Filmore’s body lying on the ground inside his hotel room. Filmore had been shot five times and was pronounced dead on the scene. Williams was charged with second degree murder with a firearm on April 16 and is currently being held at the Orange County Jail. An in jail arraignment is scheduled for April 30.

3 local activists named LGBTQ Latinx role models Jeremy Williams

O

RLANDO | Honor 41 selected three Central Florida LGBTQ activists — Jose Luis Dieppa, Ashley Figueroa and Ricardo J. Negron-Almodovar — as a part of “The 41 List,” an list now in its fifth edition celebrating 41 LGBTQ Latinx individuals around the world who are seen as role models in their communities. Honor 41’s previous lists of honorees were release from 2013-2016. The 41 List 2019/20 honorees represent 10 different countries and consist of professors, journalists, community leaders, actors, elected officials, activists, nonprofit leaders, artists, students, entrepreneurs and more. Dieppa, Figueroa and Negron-Almodovar are active in Central Florida’s LGBTQ and Latinx communities, working with a variety of organizations including Come Out With Pride, The Contigo Fund, Bliss Cares and more. Honor 41 is a national Latinx LGBTQ nonprofit organization that celebrates community and creates awareness about issues that impact both the LGBTQ and Latinx communities.

For more information on the organization, visit Honor41.org.

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Rainbow Runners:

Participants approach the Pulse memorial during the CommUNITY Rainbow Run in 2019. Photo by

Jeremy Williams

Mourning from a Distance Pulse Rainbow Run postponed, Remembrance Ceremony to be virtual Jeremy Williams

O

RLANDO | The onePULSE Foundation announced in a press release April 16 that the 4th annual CommUNITY Rainbow Run, originally scheduled for June 6, will be rescheduled to Sept. 12 and that the annual Pulse Remembrance Ceremony will be a virtual event. “Please know we do not make these decisions lightly — we will always prioritize the health and safety of the public, the Pulse community and our employees,” said Barbara Poma, CEO of onePULSE Foundation, in the press release. “We are exploring different ways to honor and remember the 49 Angels, survivors, first responders and all those affected by the Pulse tragedy.” The 4.9K run/walk, which honors all those affected by the Pulse nightclub tragedy and is presented by Orlando Health in partnership with the UCF DeVos Sport Business Management Program, will still

watermark Your LGBTQ life.

begin and end at Wadeview Park in downtown Orlando on the rescheduled date. The path of the run in part travels down what is known as Survivor’s Walk and passes in front of the Pulse memorial. In addition to the Rainbow Run in downtown Orlando, the event will also include a 1K Old Town Kissimmee Kids Fun Run and an option for runners outside of Central Florida to join the event by participating in a PNC Bank 4.9K Virtual Run, which can be run at any location and at the runner’s pace. Individuals who have already registered for the event will have their spot automatically transferred to the new date. The press release goes on the state that “as per the refund policy signed at the time of registration, runners’ entry fees and donations are non-refundable.” The Remembrance Ceremony, originally scheduled to be held at the site of the Pulse Interim Memorial, will be done as a virtual event starting at 7 p.m. on June 12. More

April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com

details on the virtual ceremony will be released as plans are developed. Information will first be shared with family members, survivors and first responders then released through onePULSE’s social media channels and local media. Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and Orange County Mayor Jerry L. Demings both released statements in support of onePULSE’s decision to hold a virtual ceremony during the COVID-19 pandemic. “While we aren’t able to honor our Angels in the same manner on June 12, we appreciate onePULSE creating a way for our community to be able to come together in a different manner to heal and honor our 49 Angels,” Dyer said. “Even as we face this new challenge, we remain a community and a City that cares deeply for each other and we will continue to exhibit love and kindness in everything that we do to honor the 49 lives taken and to support those who have been impacted by the tragedy.” “The public health measures and continuity solutions adopted by onePULSE Foundation are examples of how local organizations are working together to break the backbone of this virus,” Demings said. “Working collaboratively, similar to the months after the Pulse tragedy, we can begin to heal as a community while honoring our 49 Angels.”

For more information visit onePULSEFoundation. porg and CommUNITYRainbowRun.com


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April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com

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tampa bay news

Tampa Pride postponed until 2021 Ryan Williams-Jent

T

AMPA | Tampa Pride has been postponed until March 27, 2021 in response to COVID-19. The sixth annual event was originally scheduled for March 28. In an effort to slow the spread of the coronavirus, organizers initially rescheduled the gathering to May 30. Tampa Pride President Carrie West cited COVID-19’s unpredictability for the 2020 cancellation, which was discussed with city leadership. “We want everyone to be safe and healthy,” he shared. “In our meeting with officials, spring city events have been cancelled or rescheduled to fall.” The cancellation follows the postponement of neighboring celebrations St Pete Pride and Polk Pride. St Pete Pride announced April 20 they will hold their 2020 celebration in the fall, detailed to the right on this page, and Polk Pride will celebrate Sept. 26-Oct. 4. West cited those decisions and more in determining a new date for Tampa Pride. “With all the Pride organizations changing their dates, the Tampa Pride board said August is way too hot,” he shared. “September is hurricane time! October has other city Prides every weekend [and] November has us close to our 2021 Pride event.” It led organizers to postpone until the March 27, 2021 date. “It will be a big year of celebration,” West asserted, noting that Tampa Pride’s annual Pride-Zoo-La will return this year on Nov. 14. Tampa Pride also advised that all paid vendors, diversity parade entries and sponsors will be credited for the 2021 celebration. Vendors are able to upgrade to a sponsorship level if desired. West concluded by thanking Tampa Pride organizers and supporters for their hard work and dedication. “As you’ve seen the news by now, we are unable to hold our 2020 Tampa Pride Diversity Parade and Street Festival in person this year due to continuing restrictions and uncertainty with respect to public health,” Tampa Pride’s official social media channels subsequently shared. “But there will ALWAYS BE PRIDE!!!” Organizers teased virtual Tampa Pride events throughout the spring and summer, adding that a virtual global Pride will be held June 27. InterPride and the European Pride Organizers Association (EPOA) announced the celebration April 1. “The unprecedented challenges of COVID-19 mean that most Prides will not take place as planned in 2020, but we’re determined that this won’t stop us from coming together as a united, strong LGBTQIA+ community to celebrate who we are and what we stand for,” EPOA President Kristine Garina said. “Above all, we will show our resilience and determination that Pride will be back bigger and stronger than ever before.” Tampa Pride concluded by specifically thanking Tampa Mayor Jane Castor and city officials for their continued leadership as COVID-19 impacts Hillsborough County and beyond.

For more information about Tampa Pride, visit TampaPride.org.

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PROUDER DAYS: St Pete

Pride supporters on Bayshore Blvd. in 2019. PHOTO BY

NICK CARDELLO

Fall Forward St Pete Pride 2020 and official events rescheduled to the fall Ryan Williams-Jent

S

T. PETERSBURG | The 18th annual St Pete Pride, originally scheduled for June 26-28, has been postponed until the fall in response to COVID-19. Organizers originally intended to proceed with a June celebration, but opted to move the gathering as communities continue to deal with the coronavirus. St Pete Pride is actively working with city officials to secure new dates. “Due to social distancing measures imposed to slow the spread of COVID-19, St Pete Pride festivities scheduled for June have been postponed,” St Pete Pride shared April 20. Organizers added that they “will make additional changes to the schedule (as necessary) to move forward with the celebrations.” More than 265,000 people are estimated to have attended last year’s outing, creating an economic impact of $67.2 million on the city. St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Kriseman, one of Pride’s

watermark Your LGBTQ life.

earliest supporters, praised the postponement in a statement. “St Pete Pride recognizes that there is simply too much uncertainty right now to plan an event that draws such large numbers of people from near and far,” the mayor said. “I appreciate their thinking ahead, and their eagerness to look ahead to a future date that is in the best interest of public health. “Our annual parade and festival is one of the best and biggest in the nation and will certainly outlast any challenges that come its way,” Kriseman continued. “In the interim, we should continue to embrace and celebrate our LGBTQ residents and allies each and every day for their efforts in helping the sun to shine so brightly on us here in St. Pete.” The sentiments were echoed by St. Petersburg City Council. “While the postponement of our St Pete Pride celebration is disappointing, I fully support the decision to put health and safety first,” Vice Chair Gina Driscoll shared. “We can still stand together in other ways with our LGBTQ+

April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com

friends and family to recognize and honor the path that has led to our city’s beautiful diversity,” she continued. “We must remember that the spirit of Pride lives here in St. Petersburg every day – this is who we are.” “While we have seen progress towards ‘flattening the curve’ in St. Petersburg, the need to continue social distancing remains high and mass gatherings are not likely to resume any time soon,” District 8’s Amy Foster added. “I support the difficult decision to postpone this year’s St Pete Pride celebrations. I and many residents and businesses look forward to Pride and it saddens me to see such a unifying and uplifting event delayed.” “We recognize how meaningful our Pride celebration is to the LGBTQ community in Tampa Bay,” St Pete Pride President Chrys Bundy shared. “Although we may not be able to physically gather as we normally would this June, our postponement will in no way diminish what it means to be proud in St. Pete and Tampa Bay! We will still find ways to raise our flags of all colors, celebrate the beauty and vibrancy of our community, and spotlight the issues our movement still faces.” To read more about this year’s celebration, visit StPetePride.com. For the latest updates about COVID-19 and its impact on Tampa Bay’s LGBTQ community, visit WatermarkOnline.com.


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April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com

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state, nation+world news Third COVID-19 death linked to Miami gay festival Daniel Thomas Carr III, a South Florida real estate agent and member of the Pride Center’s Founders Circle, died from COVID-19 April 15. He was 67. Carr is the third COVID death linked to the Winter Party Festival in Miami Beach that took place March 4-10. To date, 38 Winter Party attendees have tested positive for COVID-19. Carr attended the festival with his husband J. Michael Heider, who he had been with for 35 years. Heider also tested positive for COVID-19, but has made a full recovery. Carr, who was also diabetic, was admitted to the hospital March 23. The Winter Party ended one day before the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic.

Iowa jail administrator on leave over biased remarks Dean Naylor, an administrator of Iowa’s Muscatine County jail, was placed on temporary leave April 23 pending an internal investigation after complaints about anti-Muslim and anti-gay remarks he made online. The Johnson County Board of Supervisors and other groups have called for Naylor’s removal. Naylor is accused of making comments in YouTube videos and an online statement that include calling Muslims “pawns to the devil” and describing “the gay lifestyle” as an abomination.

Judge tosses Smollett’s malicious prosecution lawsuit A federal judge dismissed actor Jussie Smollett’s malicious prosecution lawsuit against the city of Chicago and several police officers April 22. The former “Empire” actor sued in November in response to a lawsuit filed by the city in April 2019 seeking reimbursement of more than $130,000 paid in overtime to police who were involved in investigating the alleged false racist and homophobic attack on Smollett in January 2019. Smollett said the city couldn’t recover costs because it accepted $10,000 from Smollett “as payment in full in connection with the dismissal of the charges against him.” A judge ruled that Smollett can’t bring a malicious prosecution claim until all proceedings against him have ended.

Activists question Latin America gender-based COVID-19 measures Transgender activists in Latin America have expressed concern over rules that allow people to leave their homes during the coronavirus pandemic based on their gender. A “pico y género” rule has been issued in many Latin America countries, including Panamá, Peru and Colombia. A “pico y género” allows residence to leave their homes on designated days based on a person’s gender. A Peruvian LGBTQ advocacy group states that police and soldiers in several Peruvian cities harassed trans women who had left their homes to buy food and medicine on days when women were allowed to do so. Another group singles out Colombia, Peru, Panama, Honduras and Ecuador as countries with “an increase in institutional violence throughout the region” during the coronavirus pandemic.

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Boynton Beach makes restrooms gender neutral Jeremy Williams

T

he Boynton Beach City Commission voted unanimously April 21 to designate single-occupancy restrooms in all city-owned properties as “Gender Neutral” making it only the fourth Florida city to do so. “Boynton Beach will be the first municipality in Palm Beach County to have gender neutral restrooms in all municipal properties,” said Boynton Beach City Commissioner Ty Penserga. “Designating restrooms as all gender not only benefits people who do not identify as male or female, but also makes it easier

for parents and caregivers to assist their opposite sex children, family members, and patients.” Penserga raised the discussion with the city commission after a request from the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council (PBCHRC). The policy will also apply to the city’s Town Square Project, which is expected to open this summer. The 16-acre, $133 million redevelopment project will include the new city hall, library, police station, a fire station, a cultural center, amphitheater and hotel as well as thousands of square feet in retail space. “Boynton Beach fosters an environment that values diversity,” said PBCHRC Board Member Rhonda Williams. “The designation

of all gender restrooms will result in less hassle for people who don’t fit neatly into some people’s expectations of what it looks like to be male or female.” The PBCHRC has also sent a request for gender neutral, public restrooms to the Palm Beach County Commission. The request will be considered later this year. Boynton Beach joins Orlando, Gainesville and Miami Beach in the state and the cities of Austin, Chicago, Denver, Hoboken, New York City, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Santa Fe, Seattle and D.C. nationwide in enacting a gender neutral restroom policy. Vermont, New Mexico, Illinois and California have all enacted similar statewide policies.

“We urge the police to adequately, immediately and with sensitivity investigate these vile and atrocious murders of Serena Angelique Velázquez and Layla Pelaez,” said CABE spokesperson Ivana Fred. Velázquez and Pelaez are among the four trans people who have been murdered in Puerto Rico since the beginning of the year. Alexa, a trans woman who was homeless, was brutally murdered in the municipality of Toa Baja on Feb. 24 hours after police responded to a report that she was “peeping” on people in a fast food restaurant’s restroom. Yampi Méndez Arocho, a trans man, was killed in the municipality of Moca on March 5. Anti-LGBTQ violence is commonplace in Puerto Rico, even though the U.S. commonwealth’s hate crimes law includes gender identity and sexual orientation. CABE notes eight LGBTQ Puerto Ricans have been murdered over the last 15 months. Pedro Julio Serrano, founder of Puerto Rico Para Tod@s, another Puerto Rican advocacy group, and other activists say Hurricane Maria, which devastated the island in 2017, made LGBTQ Puerto Ricans even more vulnerable to violence and discrimination. These same activists also maintain the Puerto Rican authorities and the island’s government have not done enough to address anti-LGBTQ hate crimes. “Four members of the trans community have been murdered

in Puerto Rico within the past two months,” tweeted former New York City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, who was born in Puerto Rico. “The community demands that the police department seriously investigate these heinous murders.” Governor Wanda Vázquez in response to Alexa’s murder urged anyone with information to contact the Puerto Rico Police Department. Vázquez in a tweet also said authorities “will work with the diligence and sensitivity the case merits.” Vázquez last August succeeded then-Gov. Ricardo Rosselló after his resignation over a series of homophobic and misogynistic messages between him and members of his administration that became public. Vázquez, who was Puerto Rico’s justice secretary before she became governor, appeared on “La Comay,” a Puerto Rican television show hosted by a large puppet with the same name, to discuss her administration’s response to the coronavirus pandemic. WAPA, a Puerto Rican television station, in 2013 cancelled the program after a producer made homophobic comments about a man who was murdered prompted a boycott. “La Comay” currently airs on Mega TV, another Puerto Rico-based television station.

Two transgender women murdered in Puerto Rico Michael K. Lavers of The Washington Blade, Courtesy of the National LGBT Media

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wo transgender women were murdered in Puerto Rico on April 22. Primera Hora, a Puerto Rican newspaper, reported authorities found Serena Angelique Velázquez and Layla Pelaez’s bodies in a car under a bridge in Humacao, a municipality on the island’s southeast coast. Reports indicate Velázquez and Pelaez had been shot. El Nuevo Día, another Puerto Rican newspaper, notes the car in which Velázquez and Pelaez were found was set on fire with their bodies inside. Captain Teddy Morales of the Puerto Rico Police Department’s Criminal Investigation Unit in Humacao told Primera Hora that detectives are trying to identify and interview those who may have seen Velázquez and Pelaez before they were killed. Morales also said investigators have not identified a possible motive. El Comité Amplio para la Búsqueda de la Equidad, a coalition of Puerto Rican LGBTQ advocacy groups known by the acronym CABE, urged authorities to investigate the murders as hate crimes.

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April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com


talking points

56%

Today I regret every single second of worry back in the uninformed 80’s, wondering how the world was going to treat my brilliant little boy who loved to twirl. Little did I know that he was going to kick that old world’s ass to the curb and create a brand new one. — Screenwriter Deborah Divine tweeting about her son Dan Levy before the series finale of his show, “Schitt’s Creek”

LGBTQ-focused content leads challenged books list

T

he American Library Association released its annual list of books most “challenged” by parents and other community members April 20. The top three were Alex Gino’s “George,” Susan Kuklin’s “Beyond Magenta: Transgender Teens Speak Out” and the best-selling “Late Week Tonight with John Oliver Presents a Day in the Life of Marlon Bundo.” Five other books were listed in the Top 10 due to LGBTQ content: “Prince & Knight,” “I Am Jazz,” “Drama,” “And Tango Makes Three” and “Sex Is a Funny Word.” The only non-LGBTQ books listed in the Top 10 were J.K. Rowling’s “Harry Potter” books and Margaret Atwood’s dystopian “The Handmaid’s Tale.” The list is part of the association’s annual State of America’s Libraries report, released during National Library Week.

of people polled in the U.S.

oppose allowing a small business owner to

refuse service ‘Moana’ star Auli’I Cravalho comes out as bisexual

A

uli’I Cravalho, who voiced the titular character in Walt Disney’s animated hit film “Moana,” came out as bisexual on TikTok April 8. The video was the 19-year-old’s first on the popular social media platform. In it, she lip syncs to “Those Kinda Nights,” an Enimem song featuring Ed Sheeran. “Seriously though, joke’s aside / How you doin’? You straight? / She said, ‘No, I’m bi.’ /… I’m checkin’ out the chick, she said / ‘So am I,’” the lyrics read. Cravalho, who also played Ariel in ABC’s televised “The Little Mermaid Live” last year, subsequently addressed her coming out via Twitter. Responding to a fan seeking confirmation, she directed them to her video.

Bowen Yang to star in Fire Island rom-com series

“S

aturday Night Live” cast member Bowen Yang will star opposite comedian Joel Kim Booster in the new series “Trip.” The series, which was created by Booster, is a “modern day rom-com inspired by Jane Austin’s ‘Pride and Prejudice’” set on Fire Island, according to Deadline. “Trip” will center around two best friends, played by Yang and Booster, who head out to the legendary Fire Island for a week-long summer vacation. “Trip” will be released on the new mobile video platform Quibi, launched on April 6. Quibi features shows that consist of 10-minutes-or-less episodes called “quick bites” and are designed to be viewed only on mobile devices. “Trip” does not have a release date yet.

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‘Angel’ actor J. August Richards comes out as gay

A

ctor J. August Richards, best known for playing Gunn in the “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” spinoff “Angel” and Deathlok in Marvel’s “Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.,” came out as gay in an online video conversation with actress Sarah Wayne Callies, his co-star in the new NBC series “Council of Dads.” In the show, Richards plays Dr. Oliver Post, a gay dad who acts as a father figure to the kids of his friend who died of cancer. “I knew that I could not portray this gay man honestly without letting you all know that I was a gay man myself,” Richards said in the video, which he posted to his Instagram account. The video has been viewed more than 13,000 times. “Council of Dads” airs Thursdays at 9 p.m. on NBC.

to

LGBTQ people.

37%

support such denials of service.

April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com

—Public Religion Research Institute

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April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com


viewpoint

Rep. Jennifer Webb

Covid-19 and the Community

Y

ou didn’t lose your

job. You didn’t quit your job. You were asked to stay home. You did your part to step up, stay in and flatten that curve, and together we did it! We are past the (first) peak in Florida. So why aren’t Floridians collectively celebrating this success?

Because our families, entrepreneurs and local businesses are beyond broke and outraged because government has failed to uphold its end of the bargain. The deal was simple: Floridians would shelter in place and the state would then distribute unemployment to workers so they could at least keep food on the table. The state, however, has failed to keep its promise to you. As of April 25, 74.6% of Floridians have not received a cent from the state – and let’s be clear, the state portion of unemployment is NOT revenue from the government. This is money from Florida employers redistributed back to Florida workers. Employers are rightly angry as well. Me, I am infuriated and horrified. Infuriated because my constituents are suffering through no fault of their own. Horrified because, as an elected state representative, I am part of that government. I remain a steadfast advocate and a fierce fighter

for Florida’s families, but the legislature has been sidelined; it has been four weeks since the executive office has held a call with members of the legislature. We are stronger as a body than we are individually, so I have called on our members to speak with one voice in conversations with the executive branch. We need to: 1. Give the people of Florida a date that they can expect to receive their first unemployment check and make it happen. They deserve this simple notice at least. Even if it is weeks away, this information will allow families to budget and plan. 2. Increase transparency and clarity regarding the process for fixing systems/processes and for distributing state and federal funds, and 3. Do the right thing by retroactively paying unemployment to the date the applicants first became unemployed. The governor first mentioned this weeks ago and continues to speak about it. Floridians are tired of promises; we need action. This can be done by executive order. Furthermore, I believe that we legislators should reconvene for a special session. Not only must we work to ensure that the broken unemployment system is fixed, but we need to work together to make certain our budgetary priorities are responsive to this health and economic crisis. The budget must now reflect the reduced revenue anticipated for the coming fiscal year. During times of uncertainty, transparency and accuracy are especially important. Convening a special session would ensure that decisions are made in the sunshine and with the added

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attention that a special session garners. In response to an outpour of concern, the governor has made some important changes. These changes seem to be moving us two steps forward and one step back. He issued an executive order to waive both the job search requirement and, now, the requirement to reassert every two weeks that a claimant is still

check from the federal government. Both the governor and Secretary Satter indicated an important announcement will be coming regarding retroactivity of unemployment benefits. As of today, no such announcement has been made. And, when it comes to giving folks a date by which we can expect the majority of unemployment

feeding folks and helping them apply for SNAP, WIC and other programs. Many restaurants are handing out food to those who are hungry, and neighbors are sharing groceries and running errands for those unable to leave their home. Now is the time to either give or receive assistance. There are so many ways to receive (and give) help. If you need to be connected to resources,

unemployed. While this makes sense within the state, it has created problems for folks waiting on the $600 additional payment from the federal government. This payment is contingent upon individuals following a state’s process to receive unemployment that was in place before the additional $600 became available. The governor also appointed Secretary Jonathan Satter to oversee the changes needed to make the unemployment system function again. Secretary Satter oversees the Department of Management Services, which is basically the state’s IT and data management folks. Early indications show that Secretary Satter seems to be making wise workflow decisions. The unemployment system is revving up (fingers crossed). According to their dashboard, created to provide increase transparency, the percentage of claimants receiving a check is up to 25.4%. I would not have believed these numbers had I not had word from my first constituent that he not only received his first $275 deposit from the state, but also that he received a $600

payments to reach laid-off workers, neither the governor nor secretary will say – and there has been no indication that we are closer to calling a special session. I didn’t run for public office to sit on the sidelines when my constituents need me most. I ran to solve every day problems. I ran to make life just a little better for everyday Floridians year after year. My goal was to create a Florida that works better for all of our families and local businesses. Many of my colleagues feel the same. Anyone who has worked with me knows that I work very hard to solve the day-to-day problems that affect my district. I focus on the nitty gritty issues that unite my constituents. I’ve earned friends and respect from across the political spectrum – not because we agree on all issues – but because I am earnest in my endeavors and transparent in my effort. In this way I am very much a daughter of my district. Where the state has failed and flailed, our community, constituents, cities and counties have come together. I am so proud of us. Pinellas County Schools and our community nonprofits are busy

call 2-1-1. It is important that everyone know that the county is expanding a program to help families and small businesses. This program will pay your bills for you if you or your small business cannot afford to pay them, up to a certain amount of money. There is no income limitation on this program at this time because so many are struggling financially. For a list of more resources in our district, unemployment application assistance, or questions, please do not hesitate to reach out to my office.

Floridians are tired of promises; we need action.

April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com

Rep. Jennifer Webb is a micro-entrepreneur who specializes in business strategy and development. She is the first openly LGBTQ woman elected to higher office in the state of Florida. She and her spouse, Cynthia, live with their puppy, Ringo, and bird, Bandit, in Gulfport. Rep. Webb represents District 69, which includes 12 cities throughout Gulfport, Pinellas Park, St. Pete Beach, St. Petersburg and more. To contact her district office, located at 6798 Crosswinds Dr. N. in St. Petersburg, call 727-341-7385. A Freshman Democrat, she is also up for re-election Nov. 3, 2020. For more information about her campaign, visit ElectJenniferWebb.com.

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COVID-19 resources

Tampa Bay

Central Florida

FINANCIAL RESOURCES

FINANCIAL RESOURCES

One Tampa: Relief Now, Rise Together Fund, OneTampa.org

St. Petersburg Fighting Chance Fund, StPete.org

The city of Tampa is seeking to help small businesses and individuals with emergency grants focused on rent and essential utilities. Eligible individuals/families may receive up to $1,000 for rent or mortgage and up to $250 for utilities. Small businesses may receive up to $4,000 and $1,000.

The city of St. Petersburg has created an emergency grant for locally-owned and independently-operated small businesses and impacted individuals. Businesses may receive up to $5,000 and individuals may receive up to $500 from an allocated $6.8 million.

FOOD/HEALTH CARE/SERVICE RESOURCES 211 Tampa Bay Cares, 211TampaBay.org, 727-210-4211

Love the Golden Rule, LoveTheGoldenRule.com, 727-826-0700

Call 211 from any phone or text your zip code to 898211 for help with housing, food, child care, suicide prevention, health care, disaster planning and much more.

Primary and specialized care offering free visits on Fridays for those who are unemployed, laid off, have no insurance and have no COVID-19 symptoms or exposure. Call for more details.

CAN Community Health, CANCommunityHealth.org, 941-366-0134

Metro Inclusive Health, MetroTampaBay.org, 727-321-3854

Use computers or mobile devices to access health care services remotely and manage health care needs. For detailed information about Telehealth and more, visit their website.

Receive access to primary care, counseling, hormone replacement therapy and PrEP via Telehealth. To schedule an appointment, dial ext. 1575. For virtual programming, information about prescriptions by mail and more, visit their website.

Empath Partners in Care (EPIC) Food Pantry, MyEPIC.org

Pinellas County Schools Meal Distribution, PCSB.org, 727-588-6000

Food and personal products for clients are provided in Clearwater, St. Petersburg and Tampa. To schedule pickups or donations, call 727-328-3260 in Pinellas County or 813-237-3066 in Hillsborough County. Call for health care and service details.

A week of meals are available for students ages 18 and younger. Meals will be distributed Wednesdays through May 27 from 10:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.

Feeding Tampa Bay, FeedingTampaBay.org, 813-254-1190 Offering mobile pantries, meals, a market, senior grocery resources, homebound help and more. Hours, sites and locations vary. Some locations are closing without advance notice to adhere to regulations, call for up to date information.

St. Petersburg Free Clinic, StPetersburgFreeClinic.org, 727-821-1200 The We Help Food Pantry drive-thru is located at 863 3rd Ave. N. and available Mondays and Tuesdays, 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m. and Thursdays, 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Mobile locations at First Baptist Church of St. Petersburg and Childs Park YMCA are open various Wednesdays from 10:30 a.m.-noon.

TESTING LOCATIONS BayCare Testing, BayCare.org, 1-800-BayCare Pre-screening is necessary before accessing a COVID-19 testing site and is available via virtual visit at BayCareAnywhere.org. For patients without insurance, tests are $85 at any BayCare facility but not due at testing. BayCare is working with governmental agencies to secure funding. For patients with insurance, the federal government has noted all payors should cover tests. Contact your insurance company for more information. BayCare Urgent Care (Carillon) tests 8-11 a.m. on weekdays at 900 Carillon Parkway, Ste. 106 in St. Petersburg. Gulf High School tests weekdays from 8-11 a.m. at 5355 School Rd. in Port Richey.

Hillsborough County Government Testing, HillsboroughCounty.org, 813-272-5900 Pre-screening and registration are required at all sites. Testing will be administered to individuals who have registered weekdays from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. There is no charge for the test and residents are not required to have health insurance. Testing sites include Raymond James Stadium, at 4201 N. Dale Mabry Hwy. in Tampa; Lee Davis Community Resource Center, at 3402 N. 22nd St. in Tampa; Plant City Community Resource Center, at 307 N. Michigan Ave. in Plant City and SouthShore Community Resource Center, at 201 14th Ave. SE in Ruskin. Raymond James offers drive-thru only.

watermark Your LGBTQ life.

Central Florida LGBTQ+ Relief Fund, OneOrlandoAlliance.org/donate The Central Florida LGBTQ+ Relief Fund, launched by Contigo Fund and led by One Orlando Alliance, is meant to assist Orlando area LGBTQ+ community members who are most in need as a result of the COVID-19 crisis. Funds are distributed in two rounds, a one-time contribution of $100 per applicant, then a contribution of $250 per applicant, who meet the criteria. The initial rounds of funding are reserved for LGBTQ+ people living and/or working in Orange, Osceola, Seminole and Volusia Counties.

Bounce Back Orlando, BounceBackOrlando.com 321-800-3946 Launching May 1, The Pride Chamber’s Bounce Back Orlando will be a directory of small businesses

in Orlando and the surrounding metro that will encourage residents and visitors to patronize our local small businesses. If you own a small business in the Greater Orlando Metro area you can register your business at the website free of charge.

CareerSource Central Florida (CSCF), CareerSourceCentralFlorida.com/ Coronavirus-Support, 800-757-4598 CSCF is providing virtual reemployment assistance for those who have lost their job due to COVID-19. CSCF can assist you in filling out the Department of Economic Opportunity application online. T You can also take advantage of the CSCF’s virtual services such as career guidance, resume review, workshops and online learning free of charge.

FOOD/HEALTH CARE/SERVICE RESOURCES 26Health, 26Health.org, 321-800-2922 26Health is offering a number of its weekly support groups virtually. A full schedule is available on the website. Most services are being offered through virtual care; however they are offering emergency support services including behavioral health, patient care and HIV testing and prevention.

Hope & Help, HopeAndHelp.org, 407-645-2577 Hope & Help is offering virtual medical appointments. Call the main number to schedule an appointment.

Orange County Public Schools, OCPS.net Grab-and-Go meals are available for students in need. On both Mondays and Wednesdays, two days of meals will be distributed; and on Fridays, three days of meals will be distributed. Meals are available for pick-up between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m., Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Site locations can be found on their website.

Osceola County School District, OsceolaSchools.net The district’s School Nutrition Services Department will provide FREE breakfast and lunch to children 18 years and under during the extended school closure. Meals will be available for pickup between 9:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m. at each location. Families can go to school/site nearest them to pick up food even if they do not attend that school. Families will drive up in the bus loops, and they will be handed meals through the vehicle window. Meals can be provided to children not of school age if they are in the group picking up the food. Site locations can be found on their website.

Seminole County Public Schools, SCPS.k12.fl.us Seminole County Public Schools will be providing FREE Breakfast and Lunch meals for its students (18 years old and younger) during the extended school closure period. Meals will be available for pick-up between 10:30 a.m.-1:00 p.m. (Pine Crest Elementary 10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m.) in the car loop of each school site. District staff will distribute the meals directly to those in their vehicle (drive-thru service) upon arrival. In addition, district staff will hand-out meals directly to any walkers and/or bike riders that may lack motor-vehicle transportation. Site locations can be found on their website.

TESTING locations Orange County Government, OCFL.net/COVID19 Orange County is offering free mobile testing, M-F, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., by appointment only. Testing is free, for those 18 or older and available to Orange County residents only. Call 407-723-5004 to make your appointment. Visit the website to find which mobile testing site is closest to you. Non-mobile testing sites are available at the Orange County Convention Center daily, starting at 9 a.m. until the daily limit is reached. No appointment needed. This site is a drive-thru site and is open only to individuals with respiratory symptoms, preexisting conditions, first responders, heath care workers and those who believe they have had close contact with someone who tested positive.

April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com

AdventHealth has a non-mobile testing site at the Mall at Millenia by appointment only. For more information, visit AdventHealth.com

UCF, in partnership with Aventus Biolabs, has a non-mobile testing site available by appointment only at its main campus. For more information, visit AventusBiolabs.com. There is also a non-mobile testing site at UCF’s Lake Nona Cancer Center. Testing is by appointment only and requires either an order for a test from your health care provider or requires you to be a patient at UCF Health. UCF employees may also be tested at this site. For more information, visit UCF.edu.

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April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com


Essential

Heroes

LGBTQ workers reflect on COVID-19 from the frontlines Jeremy Williams and Ryan Williams-Jent

W

hile the world is still

grappling with its effects, the COVID-19 pandemic has already taught us many lessons about society. It has shown us how vulnerable the world is to a health crisis, how resilient and innovative people can be and, most importantly, that no single profession is more needed than any other in our communities.

The phrase “essential workers” began filtering into our daily lexicon as Stay-At-Home orders, social distancing guidelines and self-quarantining measures became a part of our routines. They are the people who put their lives on the line to go to work every day so the rest of us can stay safe and healthy in our homes. They’re also those who help lift our spirits while we’re there. They are the nurses and doctors, the food service workers, the grocery store clerks and stockers, truck drivers, factory workers, police officers, entertainers and countless others. They not only provide the goods and services needed to keep us going, they risk their own mental and physical health for each of us in the process. We spoke to LGBTQ workers in four of these essential industries, a patient care technician, a server, a food delivery driver and an entertainer, to learn what it’s like for these heroes as they keep our communities moving from the frontlines. Continued on pg. 19 | uu |

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Serving With Care

Delivering Hope Tanaine Jenkins, DoorDash food deliver

Mocha Skye, Pom Pom’s server

Jeremy Williams

Jeremy Williams

T

millions of gig workers in the state. Gig worker has become a catchall term for those who work in nontraditional employment like freelancers, performers and those who are self-employed.

Florida’s workforce is estimated to be about 20% gig workers, the highest of any state, and most of them work several different gigs. “I am actually a YouTuber, a freelance writer and a published author,” Jenkins says. “I also do food delivery for DoorDash. I’ve been a Dasher for about two and a half years.” While Jenkins enjoys the work, she actually stepped away from doing food deliveries earlier this year to focus on some of her other gigs, and then the COVID-19 pandemic came to the U.S. “When the lockdown happened, I started back up because I knew food requests would increase and I wanted to make sure everyone was still able to get their orders,” she says. Jenkins is now back to delivering fulltime. In an eight hour day she makes about 30 deliveries, a significant increase from what she and other Dashers were doing prior to Stay-At-Home orders. While the worry of catching COVID-19 is always there, Jenkins says that she is taking all of the necessary precautions and that DoorDash is helping her and all of their drivers to make sure that is happening. “[Dashers] all got an email when this started to happen from DoorDash saying the company would be providing all of us with gloves, masks and hand sanitizer for free,” she says. In these unprecedented times, what it means to be an essential worker has changed for everyone in the country, but the importance of delivery service workers hit home for Jenkins when she made a recent delivery. “In some cases we’re people’s lifeline,” Jenkins says. “I delivered to a woman not too long ago and I put the food at her door because she had requested a no contact delivery. So I put it at her door and I stood back by my car to make sure that she got the order. When she came to the door to get the order, she saw me and she told me how much she appreciated us because she herself has an autoimmune disorder and cannot go out. She was telling me how thankful she was for services like this and that she didn’t know how she would survive right now without it.” Jenkins is overwhelmed by the community response to essential workers right now and hopes that people still remember this feeling after things start to get back to normal. “I want people to understand that we were here when they needed us most, and the same respect that they’re giving us now, I want them to continue to give us that respect whenever this all goes back,” she says. “Sometimes people look at those in fast food or food delivery as like they can’t do anything else. I do a lot of other things, but I do this because I enjoy it and everyone’s always happy to see me.”

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estaurants are some of the

anaine Jenkins is one of the

hardest hit businesses during these trying times. Between social distancing and Stay-At-Home orders people have not been going out to eat and won’t be able to for the foreseeable future. In a booming tourism town like Orlando that has resulted in a lot of uncertainty for many people.

Mocha Skye is a server at two of Orlando’s hottest LGBTQ eateries — Hamburger Mary’s and Pom Pom’s Teahouse. Pom Pom’s is down to filling takeout and delivery orders. Hamburger Mary’s has closed until further notice. “[Hamburger Mary’s] didn’t want to put their own workers in danger with what’s going on,” Skye says. She was furloughed, along with the rest of the staff, on March 17. April 1 would have been Skye’s 3-year mark at Mary’s. Now her sole job is working at Pom Pom’s, where she started working last October, filling takeout orders. “People came to Pom’s in part because of the atmosphere,” Skye says. “We want to provide that service to our guests and give them the complete experience but now that has been eliminated. That was the heart and soul for me of what we provide to the community. Pom’s isn’t just a restaurant; it’s a safe space for the community.” While she misses seeing her customers in the restaurant, Skye realizes what she and the crew at Pom Pom’s is doing now is still an essential service. “Essential workers are the ones who make sure that our community is still up and running,” she says. “Yes, it’s the nurses and the paramedics and the firemen and the police officers; but at the same time, without your grocery store clerk, without your server, without a cook, there are certain needs in our society that just don’t get met.” Even with losing one job and having the hours cut back on another, Skye still has helping others on her mind. “To help keep my mind focused and clear, I have been making masks for people,” she says. Skye has been sewing since she was 8 years old and was planning on starting her own business sewing underwear for trans women before the world came to a stop. She had a collection of fabrics in various colors and patterns as well as a stockpile of elastic that she repurposed to make masks. The masks are also helping Skye to supplement some of the income she has lost because of COVID-19. She sells them for $10, and she does custom orders for $15.

April 3 0 - M ay 13, 2020 // Issue 27.0 9 wat e r m a r konline .com


streaming relief

healing with heart

Kirk DaVinci, virtual virtuoso

Angelique Padro, patient care technician

Ryan Williams-Jent

Ryan Williams-Jent

W

ith more than 10 pageant

titles under his belt, performer Kirk DaVinci knows how to captivate audiences.

With each of the Tampa Bay and Central Florida performer’s wins, which most recently include Mr. Polk Pride 2019 and Mr. Tampa Pride 2020, he strives to exhibit persistence, resilience, involvement, dedication and education throughout his reign. COVID-19 has presented new challenges for that and for the LGBTQ entertainment industry as a whole, he says. Entertainers financially dependent on booking fees and tips have been severely impacted by statewide social distancing guidelines, event cancellations and venue closures. While made in the necessary efforts to reduce COVID-19’s spread, DaVinci explains, “it’s a huge source of income that has been lost.” As Mr. Tampa Pride, it’s part of what led him to spearhead a digital Tampa Pride weekend with the organization’s support after in-person festivities were postponed. He welcomed nearly 50 of the previously scheduled performers to screens March 27-29 to raise awareness, funds and lift socially-distant spirits. “We put the whole weekend together in 48 hours,” DaVinci reflects. “Once it all came together, we had to add more entertainers to the lineup. People had fun, they were entertained and the performers made some money.” The response prompted him to launch DaVinci’s Digital Days the following weekend. The recurring, three-day digital experience is held Fridays from 10-11 p.m., Saturdays from 9-10 p.m. and Sundays from 12:30-1:30 p.m. and welcomes four entertainers per day who accept tips via Cash App, PayPal and Venmo. They’re each allotted 15-minute timeslots to engage viewers. “We have to use the means we have when we can,” DaVinci explains. “A few entertainers have told me that they’ve made $100 in their 15 minutes.” DaVinci says the benefits aren’t strictly monetary, noting that the experience has been surprising from entertainers and audiences alike. “We’re all struggling right now, we’re all going through it,” he explains, “but even if people are unable to tip, it’s helpful just to see the amount of people who are watching. It’s nice to see that you’re entertaining people again, that you’re encouraging them and giving them something to enjoy during this time.” That desire is the bedrock of the group, which currently welcomes nearly 2,000 people to its public Facebook page. “God put me on this earth to make people laugh and put a smile on people’s faces,” DaVinci says. “Whether I’m hosting, singing or performing, I’m always trying to make sure everybody’s having a good time.” To that end, he welcomes any and all to join the group, which shares videos from each performer for public viewing in one digital locale. Previous performances are also available, dating back to Tampa Pride’s digital weekend, accessible by searching and joining “DaVinci’s Digital Days” on Facebook. “We provide entertainment for others, but it’s also beneficial for us,” DaVinci says. “I have a motto that I go by – live life, love life and have individuality. We know this is a rough time for everyone, but don’t forget to love yourself. Don’t give up.”

watermark Your LGBTQ life.

A

ngelique Padro entered medical

school to make a difference. Not just for herself but for the Tampa Bay community who had supported her as the performer Lady Janet for more than 10 years.

She had always seen helping others as the most rewarding aspect of taking the stage, from volunteering for fundraisers to helping others forget their troubles one song at a time. It informed her new career in unexpected ways – and while she still entertains, she now finds herself in scrubs more often than she does in the spotlight. “I went on the journey of going to school because I wanted a better quality of life, but most of all because I wanted to inspire my other trans sisters,” Padro explains. “To let them know that we are capable of fulfilling any job in any industry.” After graduating with top honors, Padro completed her clinical training with BayCare, learning hands-on skills directly from Tampa Bay’s leading not-for-profit health care system until she was subsequently hired full time. She fully expected to love her new field, but didn’t expect to enter it at the height of a pandemic. “It’s very challenging,” she says. “I literally got out of school to start dealing with COVID-19, to something so major – people are really, really sick and we have a lot of testing for the coronavirus. It’s very scary.” In part, that’s because personal protective equipment (PPE) has been greatly diminished. “Before COVID-19 you could find masks on every door in every room,” she says of her hospital. “People started taking them and even me, working there, I have to sign paperwork to get masks.” Padro is responsible for working directly with patients and other medical professionals on numerous tasks. They’re completed in 12-hour shifts three days per week, beginning each morning at 6:45 a.m. She works additional days when able and longer hours when necessary – noting that rest is critical to protect herself and those she’s helping – but fears that rest could soon become a luxury. “It’s do or die and it seems like a lot of people haven’t realized that yet,” she says. “People want to reopen places,” she continues, “but what happens when this gets worse? People that work in the health care field are not machines.” That’s evident in her empathy. Padro uses it earnestly to reflect on the front lines of the pandemic. “It breaks my heart that people are dying alone,” she says. “When my mother died I could hold her hand, I could speak to her; families can’t do that with these patients.” It’s her hope that the general public considers health care workers when making decisions about social distancing. “You need to stay home. Hospitals could become overrun and there will not be enough resources to save people,” she says. “It’s going to be choosing which person is going to live and which person’s going to die. I’m really scared, I’m not going to lie.” Padro asserts that she fully understands and accepts the risks, however serious they become. “If one of our patients gets it, there is the possibility that I will be contaminated,” she explains. “But this is what I signed up for, it’s what I love to do. That’s my duty.”

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announcements

tampa bay in + out

CONDOLENCES

Brandon’s PJ McClelland died April 11 from COVID-19 complications. They will be missed. Lakeland’s Jesse Robbins died April 23. He will be missed.

CONGRATULATIONS

Daryn Bauer was named Community Engagement Director at The Florida Orchestra April 9. The Players Centre for Performing Arts officially celebrated their 90th anniversary April 18. Equality Florida raised $56,817 during its nearly eight-hour virtual fundraiser April 26.

CANCELLATIONS/ POSTPONEMENTS

The Straz Center for the Performing Arts has extended the suspension of all events through May 31. Until they can reopen, they and Jobsite Theater have launched a number of virtual events on social media and their websites. Polk Pride, originally scheduled for June 13-20, has been rescheduled to Sept. 26-Oct. 4. The Polk Pride System has cancelled its 2020 Polk Pride pageant.

Local Birthdays

Tampa licensed mental health counselor Anthony Quaglieri, St. Petersburg mainstay Russell Sutherland (April 30); St. Petersburg communication pro Josh Cruz, St. Petersburg city and coffee lover Corey Malyszka, myXOadventures owner Daniel Milks, FedEx ground employee Marcus Brewer (May 2); Tampa Pride president Carrie West (May 3); Tampa Crowbar owner Bonnie Plumbtree, St. Petersburg author Richard Randall, St Pete Pride husband Robert Brennan, St. Petersburg Officer Chris Bragg (May 5); Enigma bartender Justin Palmer, Tampa Bay bartender Jon Jusino (May 6); Tampa Bay performer Tim Cain (May 7); St. Petersburg server Jason Grawey (May 8); Mad Hatters Ethnobotanical Kava Bar manager Sarah Wilson, Travel advisor Terry Thompson (May 9); St. Petersburg gender therapist Tristan Byrnes, former USF executive admin assistant Eric Anderson, Metro Inclusive Health program specialist Hannah Powell (May 10); Tampa Bay massage therapist Alexis Acevedo, Pasco County Democratic Chairwoman Alison Berke Morano, Tampa nursing home director Scott J. Allen, Tampa insurance executive Jeff Giles, CitySide Lounge owner James Encke, Ybor City Barbering Co. co-owner Lauren Harmon, Florida Trans Proud founder Denise Johnson (May 11); Lutz real estate agent Kenny Braverman, Tampa activist Stephanie Leaf (May 12); Tampa Bay super volunteer Jeremy Wade Neiman, Sarasota medical specialist Dr. Sporty Damon Paul Harper (May 13)

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HAIR CARE: Nick Cardello (R) cuts husband Kurt’s hair from home, a first after 28 years. PHOTO COURTESY NICK CARDELLO

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BEDTIME BEAUTY: Stephanie Stuart streams Pasco Pride’s virtual storytime reading April 20. PHOTO COURTESY VYN SUAZION

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#STRONGERTOGETHER: Tampa Bay LGBT Chamber President Justice Gennari steps outside to launch a cross-chamber “We Are Stronger Together” campaign April 27. PHOTO

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COURTESY TB LGBT CHAMBER

4

LIFESAVERS: Tombolo Books Founder Alsace Walentine reps her fundraising merch April 16.

PHOTO COURTESY TOMBOLO BOOKS

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MCGREAT: Matthew McGee entertains during Equality Florida Live from freeFall Theatre April 26. PHOTO

COURTESY EQUALITY FLORIDA

6

FAM-TASTIC: (L-R) Andy, Koda, Reilly and Sasha Citino proudly expand their family April 25. PHOTO COURTESY ANDY CITINO

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GUITAR HERO: Vyn Suazion promotes Pasco Pride’s “Music with Mr. V” April 24. PHOTO COURTESY VYN SUAZION

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IN THE KITCHEN: Chefs Jim (L) and Jon Jusino volunteer with Project No Labels to help supply food for Food Not Bombs. PHOTO

COURTESY PROJECT NO LABELS

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Head over to WatermarkOnline. com and click on the Digital Publications link to read a digital version of the printed newspaper!


announcements

central florida in + out

Virtual Shows

Heather Abood’s next Bathtub Cabaret Happy Hour will be on Facebook Live May 2.

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April Fresh hosts an online, Mother’s Day edition of Comedy Brunch May 10. The LGBT+ Center Orlando will virtually host “Drag Queen Story Hour: After Dark” May 14. One Orlando Alliance kicked off a virtual version of its annual “Acts of Love and Kindness” movement April 25. From now until June 12, OOA encourages individuals to safely perform simple acts of love and kindness and post about them using the hashtag #ActLoveGive.

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Orlando Fringe is hosting virtual, filmed shows from some of your favorite Fringe performers at TheLawn. OrlandoFringe.org. Check out the virtual lawn for shows, times and ways you can donate. Enzian Theater is offering Enzian On Demand as a way to bring independent cinema to you at home. Visit Enzian.org for a list of available films.

Local Birthdays

UCF’s former GLBSU president Jessica Osborn (April 30); Orlando DJ Brianna Lee from Parliament House, Orlando Shakes marketing director Christian Knightly (May 1); Central Florida entertainer BeeJay Aubertin Clinton (May 2); Central Florida entertainer Jamie Lee (aka Sassy Divine), Southern Nights Orlando bartender Autumn Michelle (May 3); MBA Orlando leadership committee’s Katherine Bardelon (May 4); Sierra Club senior campaign representative Susannah Randolph, Fantastic parent and man about town Clay Emerson (May 5); Orange County officer Lance Colford (May 6); The Pride Chamber’s Sherri Absher, Wet Nurse drummer Vanessa Brewster (May 7); Watermark cover model Al Pfeiffer (May 8); DJ extraordinaire Scott Robert (May 9); Southern Nights bartender Gabrielle Juliana (May 10); Pulse Orlando legend Cindy Barbalock.

Do you have an announcement? Having a birthday or anniversary? Did you get a new job or promotion? See your news in Watermark! Send your announcement to Editor@WatermarkOnline.com or go to WatermarkOnline.com/Submit-a-Transition.

It’s that easy!

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courstesy Debo Ofsowitz

courtesy Gina Duncan

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College Park Couple: 26Health’s Debo Ofsowitz (L) and wife Milena spend quality time together at their College Park home. Photo

Hair Today: Parliament House’s Darcel Stevens shows off his new bearded look from his Orlando home. Photo courtesy of Darcel Stevens

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Pour me a Drink: Singer Billy Mick (L) and husband Brian spend their time quarantining to share a few glasses of wine. Photo courtesy Billy Mick

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Two’s Company: Savoy owner Brandon Bracale-Llewellyn (L) and Alan Bracamonte follow the Stay-At-Home order together in Orlando. Photo courtesy

Brandon Bracale-Llewellyn

Words Matter: Equality Florida’s Gina Duncan sends words of encouragement as she is in quarantine at her home in Central Florida. Photo

Self(ie)-isolation: The Center’s George Wallace grabs a selfie while he follows the Stay-At-Home order.

Photo courtesy George Wallace

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Masked Singers: Broadway Brunch Bunch’s Jimmi Rossi (L) and Justin Shakeri use their quarantine time to make masks for people.

Photo courtesy Justin Shakeri

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Cute Companion: The Center’s Roxy Santiago hangs out with her cat, “who wants me out of the house,” during the Stay-At-Home order in Orlando.

Photo courtesy Roxy Santiago

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Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.