Clinton signs DOMA amidst protests Page 4 Pet Shop Boys come out singing, Page 20 The-Carolinas’ Most Comprehensive Gay & Lesbian Newspaper Published Every Two Weeks On Recycled Paper • Volume 11, Number 10 • October 5, 1996 • FREE InlBghting at MAP leaves the agency weakened Local activist leaves the South by David Stout Q-Notes Staff CHARLOTTE—Within the last six months, Metrolina AIDS Project (MAP) has lost a half-dozen employees, including three de partment directors. In August, the executive di rector announced her inten tion to step down at the end of the year. In mid-September, three board members sum marily resigned, including the president. Lisa Piazzi, the former director of the agency’s Agapd Family Center, sums up the situation succinctly, “MAP is in trouble.” The answer to the question “why” boils down to a cluster of intersecting personal con flicts: staff versus executive di rector, staff versus board and board versus board. Piazzi, who was hired in February 1991, lost her job in June because her position was “defunded.” “I thought it was funny that I was being let go because of a lack of funds,” she says, “when I was in a position to know that the program was very healthy. Plus, we were expecting more federal money in about four weeks — which came through to the tune of almost $1 million — from a grant that Barbara [Rein] and I wrote together.” Was Piazzi given the option of tak ing less money and staying on? “No. They didn’t Barbara Rein ask me to take less money; they didn’t ask me to cut my hours. They just let me go.” Piazzi made no secret of the fact that there were ongoing conflicts between some long-term MAP staffers and Executive Director Barbara Rein. She believes that this was the root of her dismissal and the internal tur moil. “There were clear de partment favorites, and client services wasn’t one of those. It was clearly something Barbara wasn’t interested in doing. She made no obvious attempts to be equitable.” Rein denies the charges. “As an MSW [masters degree in social work], client services is my strong point. I spent more time with client services than any other department.” Furthermore, she says that she had nothing to do with the move to defund Piazzi’s posi tion. “That was a decision that came from the board. I had nothing to do with It. New board president Marilyn Goodrich, says, “I really don’t feel comfortable discussing personnel issues. I will say that there were no positions available at the time.” Why wasn’t Piazzi retained with the grant money that was received? “That grant money wasn’t for Agape; it was for a multi-county project targeting women and children.” Goodrich goes on to say that even though^ Piazzi’s work with MAP tar geted women and children, she was ineligible to be paid from the grant because it was ear marked for someone with a master’s degree in social work, which Piazzi does not have. Before she was fired, Kim Funderburke was a three-year MAP employee and the agency’s case management director. She says the reason for her termination was never fully explained and labels the rationale “vague ambiguity.” She echoes her life-partner Piazzi’s sentiments about the working atmosphere at the agency, “Direct service social work is very stressful, but I was not burned out. My frustrations were totally with the administration. Barbara was the only person I had to answer to.” Unresolved frustrations led some staffers to send an unsigned memo to the board in early 1996 requesting their intervention. Q-Noteswas able to secure a copy of the February 9 memo which states in part: “Our Executive Director has consistently displayed an inability to treat all staff equitably and fairly regarding salaries, merit raises, re quests for time off, accountability of program accomplishments and even day-to-day interac tions. These consistent and pervasive acts of favoritism towards certain staff, coupled with her propensity to treat others with disrespect and others still with ambivalence has resulted in a staff that is divisive, defensive and in no way cohesive. We feel the agency, the staff and our clients deserve better. See INFIGHTING on page 16 DURHAM—Derek Charles Livingston re- cendy announced that he is leaving North Caro lina, his home since January 1994, to accept a paid acting apprenticeship at the Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia, PA. Walnut Street is one of the country’s Derek Livingston OutCharlotte workshops will stimulate ideas by Robert Marcus James Special to Q-Notes “One of the most important parts of OutCharlotte is the opportunity we give the community to learn new ideas,” says Brandalyn Grier, workshop coordinator for this year’s fes tival. “We can learn about ourselves, we en courage the non-gay community to learn about CHARLOTTE the LGBT community, and hopefully we all go away open to new and positive ways of looking at our lives.” Nationally known speakers and community activists, as well as local leaders, will present seventeen workshops at OutCharlotte on Sat urday, October 19. Always a hot topic, Chris Glaser of Atlanta will present “Coming Out To God: Reconcil ing Our Sexuality and Spirituality.” The work shop will explore ways to bring personal re sources to the struggle to be both a sexual and a spiritual person. Glaser is the author of Come Home! Reclaiming Spiritually and Community as Gay Men and Lesbians and The Word is Out: The Bible Reclaimed for Lesbians and Gay Men. Glaser’s appearance in Charlotte is sponsored by MCC-Charlotte. The arts will be represented in four work shops. The Freddie Hendricks Youth Ensemble will get workshop participants to create a song. Artist-in-Residence Craig Hickman will lead “Face the Conflama!,” an interactive theatre workshop examining the confusion and flam ing drama of life, seeking to explore a variety of issues including race, gender and sexuality. Greensboro playwright Steve Willis will lead a discussion on opportunities for gay and lesbian playwrights after his play By Her Side is per formed. And Larry Jens Anderson will offer insights into his visual arts exhibition “Where Do Queers Come From?” The variety of workshops is stunning: “Roadblocks to Financial Success, Right to Fi nancial Dignity,” “The Distance Between Adults and Youth in the LGBT Community,” “Out/Law—Gays and Lesbians and the Legal System,” “Racism g in the LGBT Community,” J “Sexual Orientation is a Work- place Issue,” “Building a Stron- ger Lesbian Community,” “Eroticizing Safer Sex,” “Tran scending Gender: Rebel with a Cause,” “Understanding Queer Youth Suicide,” “Countdown to Victory,” and an HIV/AIDS Update. Workshops are free (only Craig Hickman’s workshop requires a ticket). Workshops will be held at the Radisson Plaza Hotel over the course of three sessions starting at 10:30am. 500 Years of Queers Kevin Jennings is an educator, activist, and Executive Director of the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Teachers Network (GI^TN), an orga nization dedicated to fighting homophobia in the nation’s schools. A North Carolina native, Jennings will give a talk entitled “Five Hun dred Years of Queers: America’s Gay and Les bian History from Columbus to Clinton” at a brunch on Sunday, October 20. Jennings is the author of Becoming Visible: A Reader in Gay & Lesbian History for High School and College Students and One Teacher in Ten: Gay and Les bian Educators Tell Their Stories. His appear ance at OutCharlotte is co-sponsored by Time Out Youth. Meet Holly Near Holly Near has agreed to attend a special fundraising reception following her perfor mance of SONGTALK on Wednesday, Octo ber 16. The reception will focus on breast can cer awareness and specifically will help fund mammograms ■ for uninsured women. OutCharlotte has arranged for the Mecklenburg Breast Screening Program of the Carolinas Health Care System to have their mobile mammography unit at the Radisson Plaza Hotel on Saturday, October 19. Fund ing assistance is available for eligible women. Cost of a mammogram is $ 10-$55 sliding scale, and insurance is accepted. Women should sign up in advance by calling the OutCharlotte of fice at (704) 563-2699. OutCharlotte 96 will take place October 16- 20 in various locations around Uptown Char lotte. Tickets for all events are now on sale at Rising Moon Books & Beyond, 316 East Bou levard, Charlotte; Monday-Friday 4:00- 6:00pm, Saturday 2:00-6:00pm, Sunday 3:00- 5:00pm. T IM I- oldest on-going the atre organizations, a total of four appren tices will be working with the company this season. Before moving to North Carolina, Livingston worked as the Gay Commu nity Health Educa tor at Rhode Island Project/AIDS in Provi dence, RI. There he served on the local Pride committee, acted as spokesperson for the Rhode Island Alliance for Lesbian and Gay Civil Rights, and founded the Bayard Bessie Baldwin Bentley Brunch, a social/support group for Af rican-American lesbian, gays and bisexuals. While living in Rhode Island he became in volved in the early stages of the 1993 March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation and served as one of its co-chairs. He was also one of the leaders of a five-hour protest at the Rhode Island Statehouse when the legislature there, for the tenth year, failed to pass a sexual orientation non-discrimi nation bill (Rhode Island went on to become the ninth state with such protection). After a brief stint in Miami as an AIDS edu cator at Health Crisis Network, he moved to North Carolina to serve as Executive Director of the North Carolina Pride PAC for Lesbian and Gay Equality. He served in this position for one year. During his tenth month, his res ignation was made public, having been submit ted to the board of directors a month earlier. In his letter he said he was leaving to “pursue ac tivism in other ways.” After leaving Pride PAC, Livingston, who holds a degree in Theatre Arts from Brown University, re-started his acting career. He ap peared in several training films and commer cials, as well as two independent feature films. The second, “Chesterfields,” is scheduled for local release later this fall. He appeared on Tri angle stages in several productions including four Shakespearean roles (Oberon in Midsummer’s Nights Dream, Capulet in Romeo and Juliet, Horatio in Hamlet and Duke See ACTIVIST on page 12 National Coming Out Day m. Friday October 11 Come Out Proudly For Yourself, Come Out Proudly For The Community!