Coalition says redistricting plan splinters LGBTQ cultural districts
LGBTQ cultural districts would be splintered under a redistricting proposal that would pull the Tenderloin from D6 and move it into a new D5.
LGBTQ cultural districts would be splintered under a redistricting proposal that would pull the Tenderloin from D6 and move it into a new D5.
As San Francisco is set to redraw its district lines, a coalition of LGBTQ groups on Wednesday blasted a proposed plan that, according to the coalition, would separate LGBTQ communities.
The city’s nine-member Redistricting Task Force is set to approve a new district map that better reflects the latest census results by April 15.
Recently, the task force approved moving forward with a draft map that would move the Tenderloin from District 6 to a newly redrawn District 5, separating the Tenderloin from the South of Market area and enjoining it with the Western Addition neighborhood.
According to the coalition, the move, although not final, could displace some of the city’s most disadvantaged residents, as well as disconnect Compton’s Transgender Cultural District — the world’s first and only transgender cultural district — from nearby SoMa.
The coalition is calling for the Tenderloin and SoMa, both home to LGBTQ communities, be kept within the same district.
The coalition is made up several groups, including the Transgender District, the Harvey Milk Democratic Club, the Leather and LGBTQ Cultural District, the Alice B Toklas LGBTQ Democratic Club and the Tenderloin People’s Congress.
Transgender District Director of Social Justice and Empowerment Initiatives Jupiter Peraza said in a statement:
“The Tenderloin represents one of the last vestiges of housing affordability, socio-economic and racial diversity, trans and queer cultural heritage, and a dense concentration of legacy businesses that have been long-lasting community centers for all of San Francisco.”
Peraza added:
“Keeping the Tenderloin and SoMa together in District 6 is an urgent and imperative matter — one that if not defended, could displace vulnerable communities that are already fleeing San Francisco at alarming rates.”
Leather and LGBTQ Cultural District Board President Bob Brown said:
“Despite mobilizing dozens of community members to speak at the Task Force hearings, the current proposals do not maintain the current cultural district boundaries within the same district. We are united in making this collaborative effort to ensure that communities of interest have their voices heard.”
Harvey Milk LGBTQ Democratic Club President Edward Wright said:
“LGBTQ people are not accurately or adequately counted in the census. The Redistricting Task Force has to do more to listen and engage with queer and trans people to keep our communities intact.”
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