Angry LGBT Speakers Protest LA Pride Plans Before WeHo City Council

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A transgender marcher in the 2015 L.A. Pride parade. (Photo by David Vaughn)
A transgender marcher in the 2015 L.A. Pride parade. (Photo by David Vaughn)

With some members of the LGBT community in an uproar over plans for L.A. Pride, its organizer has scrambled to make last minute changes.

Christopher Street West (CSW) announced at the West Hollywood City Council meeting last night that it now will make Friday’s festival free to those who arrive between 6 and 8 p.m. Previously it had planned to charge $35 for each single day ticket. CSW also said it would restore the country/western dance area, although it would be open only on Sunday. People involved in the planning for that at previous Pride celebrations said they had been told there wasn’t room for it this year. And CSW will give free weekend passes to members of the transgender community, many of whom expressed their anger Monday at what they saw as a reduction in transgender events.

The discussion before the Council was dominated by complaints about CSW’s decision to increase admission charges, a discussion made all the more confusing by misstatements about prices from CSW officials and Councilmember John Duran. CSW this year will sell one-day tickets online from June 3 to June 9 for $30, a 50% increase from last year’s $20 price for early ticket purchases. Tickets purchased after June 9 or at the festival gate will be $35 as compared to $25 last year, an increase of 40%. Tickets to CSW’s exclusive VIP area will be $150 if purchased in advance and $175 if purchased at the gate. Last year they were $50 if purchased in advance and $65 if purchased at the gate.

Speakers also complained about CSW’s efforts to make the annual festival a music event focused on Millennials, a term used to describe people ages 18 to 34. And residents of West Hollywood West, the neighborhood close to the festival’s West Hollywood Park site, complained that the focus on music and the Council’s earlier decision to let the festival stay open until 1 a.m. as well as its suspension of parking permits in the area could cause them problems.

Lesbian activist Ivy Bottini addressed CSW’s focus on Millennials in her comment to the Council. “That letter was probably the most ageist thing I have heard in this community since I got here in 1975,” she said referring to a letter that Classon sent to council members after an opinion piece in WEHOville by Larry Block that made much of the festival controversy public. In his letter, Classon said the festival’s target audience was young people who are best reached through music.

A number of transgender speakers also spoke, saying they felt this year’s festival was excluding them. They noted that in 2014 the festival’s theme was transgender rights and the LGBT festival and parade was rebranded by CSW as a “TLGB” celebration to emphasize that. One speaker, Rachael Rose Luckey, a transgender member of Stonewall Democrats, said she was considering organizing a protest against the event.

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“Hearing that we were given two hours free feels like an afterthought,” said Jaden Fields, a transgender man, commenting on CSW’s initial offer of free admission on Friday during those two hours. Friday night in recent years has been when transgender events were staged. “It feels like we weren’t important any more …. I am a Millennial, and as a trans person of color I am tremendously disappointed in CSW …. We don’t need a gay Coachella.”

Peter Cruz, associate director of APAIT, a non-profit group that provides HIV focused health resources to marginalized communities, said he had met with CSW’s board of directors and had objected to the ticket price increase and CSW’s decision to reduce the time made available for the festival’s transgender celebration.

“This is a blatant commercialization of Pride,” Cruz told the City Council

Larry Block, owner of The Block Party apparel store and a former City Council candidate, noted that the city partially funds the annual event with an estimated $586,000. Because of that, he said, the City of West Hollywood should get several thousand tickets to give to its residents.

One speaker’s comments reflected the conflict that has been taking place on the CSW board over the changes to this year’s festival, “I was a CSW board member until two months ago. Unfortunately many disagreements happened and my leaving thus was prompted,” said Shane Nash, who accused Classen of lying to the LGBT community. Other board members have spoken to WEHOville about their objections to the festival on the condition that their identities not be revealed and create greater conflict with the board. Their complaints largely have been that this year’s festival will not pay appropriate attention to the history of the LGBT community and the LGBT equal rights cause, which sparked the first LA Pride parade in 1970.

CSW has undergone major changes in recent years. In 2013, Rodney Scott resigned as chairman following criticism by the City Council of the way Pride was managed. The organization had experienced a 5% drop in revenue between 2009 and 2013. And while it routinely claimed festival attendance of 400,000 to 500,000 people, calculations by WEHOville using CSW’s IRS reports showed only 28,000 paid for tickets to the 2013 event.

Scott was replaced in 2013 by co-chairs Steve Ganzell and Patti DiLuigi. Now CSW is largely controlled by Classen and Craig Bowers, his partner in Lyst, now renamed Svelte. Svelte is an organization that puts on events for affluent gay men at hotels and restaurants. In one sign of its change, CSW has left its modest offices at 8235 Santa Monica Blvd. and now is housed in at the Pacific Design Center.

After hearing the speakers the Council went ahead and appropriated an additional $20,000 for the Pride event. Of that, $15,000 would pay for 500 free tickets for Friday night that CSW will distribute to non-profits. The city would spend an additional $5,000 on its already planned postal mailer for the event, which it typically uses in place of social media or other digital advertising.

Mayor Lauren Meister pressed CSW President Classen to make the Friday festival free-of-charge from 6 p.m. until it ends at 1 a.m. Classen said extending the free hours would cost CSW $75,000 and it would do that if the city appropriated money to cover the additional cost. No decision was made on that request.

City Councilmembers John D’Amico and John Duran, who previously constituted a subcommittee to work with CSW to resolve the city’s issues with it, agreed to work with the organization in the weeks leading up the the June 10-12 event.

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John King
7 years ago

So CSW moved into the PDC could’nt find more expensive “upscale” office space to fit your new image I guess. Anyone know the address of “Sveltman” or “The Incluence Agency”? RFID wristbands? What a ridiculous waste of money.

Woody McBreairty
Woody McBreairty
7 years ago

Actually I can’t believe most of the WeHo CC is willing to be seen in a VIP section. It is very distasteful & terribly tacky at an event such as this. It might be right up Heilman’s & Duran’s alley, but the others not.

Scott T Imler
Scott T Imler
7 years ago

The “evolution” of Gay Pride toward a wholly commercial endeavor for the young, affluent, and undesignated is painfully reminiscent of the recent Frontiers Media debacle where news, history, politics, and community — not to mention one of our most renowned LGBT journalists Karen Ocamb — were all banished in the service of millennial lifestyle marketing. Christopher Street West Hollywood has long suffered the same identity crisis as the LGBT movement as a whole. In the old days folks complained about too many fat white guys in buttless chaps or too many outrageous drag queens. Then AIDS and addiction moved front… Read more »

Concerned Citizen
Concerned Citizen
7 years ago

Long Beach also needs to be restructured since it is now being run – down by greedy Selfish Board Members that love to spend more money on themselves instead of with the Community…… !!!

Sam
Sam
7 years ago

I am 100% for the changes of PRIDE that CSW is making as a gay man. Everyone that is complaining on this feed seems to want something but not willing to pay for it. I love the musical acts they are brining in and the fact that they are gearing after the younger LGBT audience. THE TIMES ARE CHANGING PEOPLE and so must PRIDE!! It’s progression, It’s Life. IF things were to never change we would never be where we are at now as LGBT. PLEASE stop all the negative comments. What CSW is trying to do is please everyone… Read more »

Peter Cruz
7 years ago

APAIT has launched the NOT OUR PRIDE campaign in response to the changes made to the ‪#‎LAPride2016‬ festival by the Christopher Street West (CSW) Board of Directors. APAIT stands in solidarity with members of the LGBT community who feel that the changes made to this year’s event are a blatant commercialization of Pride. 1) For the past seven years, the Friday night trans celebration has been a free event for the trans community and their allies. For many individuals, this night was their only opportunity to enjoy the Pride festival as they lacked the financial means to purchase tickets to… Read more »

Gary Ban
7 years ago

So fees are being hiked, noise and parking issues extended, vendors and community groups being held hostage until 1am, local bars having business cut, all to cater to, and line the pockets of, elitist profiteers. And this all at we taxpayers expense. This is bullshxt. The entire CSW Board needs to resign on June 30 and those Councilmembers who voted to give even greater support to this disaster need to be recalled.

C.R.
C.R.
7 years ago

So to sum things up, the concessions made amounted to not nearly enough. Add me to the list of those opposing the VIP thing, nobody should be a VIP at Pride, except MAYBE the parade grand marshal. $35 admission is not acceptable for me. I would rather it be a big free gathering with no famous music performers.

Chris
Chris
7 years ago

It’s time to take West Hollywood and CSW out of the equation entirely and move LA Pride to LA. Grand Park in DTLA would be a wonderful place for the Pride Festival and Broadway would be the perfect thoroughfare for the parade. DTLA is ridiculously easy to get to via subway so there are no parking or traffic issues and it’s closer to the center of the population of the entire LA area. West Hollywood has become Beverly Hills East and is now an inappropriate place to hold a Pride celebration in Los Angeles.

Gay Pioneer
Gay Pioneer
7 years ago

Looks like pride has been hijacked by self promoting profiteers. We – the LGBT community – are being excluded from our own event. It seems Mr. Classen and Mr. Bowers have decided to take the ‘gay’ and the ‘pride’ out of LA Gay Pride. They need to be banished and CSW needs a total rethinking. Clearly, Classen and Bowers are using CSW to feather their personal business. But it is at our expense. $700,000 of city tax dollars should not be squandered on this self serving music festival. Where is the city oversight? City management is looking incompetent and reckless.… Read more »

judethomJudeThom
7 years ago

Actually, the trans movement does not belong in the gay and lesbian and bisexual canon!

Art
Art
7 years ago

Does any one know how much the City of Long Beach gives to LB Pride, or San Diego to SD Pride? Is what City of WeHo gives comparable? Why are Prides outside of SoCal usually free and ours is so expensive?

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