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District of Columbia

Financial crisis prompts employees to close Casa Ruby

Faced eviction from buildings due to unpaid rent; staff unpaid

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Ruby Corado (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Casa Ruby, the D.C. LGBTQ community services center that provided transitional housing services for homeless LGBTQ youth and adults and support for LGBTQ immigrants, has shut down all of its programs after it lost most of its city funding, one of its few remaining employees told the Washington Blade.

Tania Cordova, a Casa Ruby official who has coordinated the groupā€™s LGBTQ immigrant services program, said a failure to pay the rent for Casa Rubyā€™s offices and rental homes for its transitional housing program made it impossible for the remaining staff of about 10 employees to continue any of the groupā€™s programs.

The Casa Ruby shutdown this week took place nine months after Ruby Corado, the groupā€™s founder and longtime executive director, resigned last October. She announced her resignation less than a week after the D.C. Department of Human Services disclosed it would not renew an annual Casa Ruby grant of what was said to be $850,000 to operate a low-barrier shelter for LGBTQ people.

At the time of her resignation, Corado said Casa Rubyā€™s then-Government Affairs Director Alexis Blackmon would assume the position of interim executive director while a search took place for a permanent director. But Blackmon resigned from the interim position a short time later and Casa Ruby announced that Jackie Franco, one of its managers, would serve as interim leader for the group with the title of Chief of Staff.

According to Cordova and others familiar with Casa Ruby, who spoke on condition of not being identified, Corado retained full control of Casa Rubyā€™s finances and made all key decisions despite her claim to have resigned. Cordova and other Casa Ruby staffers have also pointed out that Corado since the time of her announced resignation has spent most of her time in El Salvador operating, among other things, a Casa Ruby she opened in the capital city of San Salvador.

Corado told the Blade in an interview in May that the Casa Ruby board approved the creation of the Casa Ruby in El Salvador. Among its objectives, Corado said, was to provide services for LGBTQ Salvadorans so that they would not be forced to immigrate to the U.S.

Neither Corado nor Franco could immediately be reached this week for comment on the claim by the Casa Ruby staff that they had shut down the D.C. Casa Rubyā€™s operations.

One source familiar with the D.C. Casa Ruby said there were only about 10 staff members left as of June of this year. Cordova said that as of earlier this year, the entire Casa Ruby Board of Directors had resigned, raising the question of whether Casa Ruby could legally operate without a board.  

The Washington Post reported this week that Casa Ruby employed as many as 100 people as of 2020, eight years after Corado founded the group in 2012.

In its 2020 IRS 990 finance report, which all nonprofit organizations are required to file each year, Casa Ruby reported its total revenue for the year was $4,161,905, with most of the funds coming from D.C. government grants. The 2020 report, the latest one the IRS has released, also shows that Coradoā€™s salary and total compensation for that year was $260,416.

Casa Ruby sources said the group filed a request for an extension of the deadline for filing 2021 IRS 990 report because Corado had not provided the needed financial information. The sources said that while the D.C. government has withheld several hundred thousand dollars in grants for Casa Ruby in the past year or two due to ā€œnoncomplianceā€ with the terms of the grants, Casa Ruby has continued to receive funds from private donors. And the staff has not been informed by Corado, according to the sources, on how the private donor funds have been used.

In her interview with the Blade in May, Corado said she believes the Department of Human Services, which has provided much of Casa Rubyā€™s D.C. government funding, as well as the mayorā€™s office, was retaliating against her for her outspoken criticism of the cityā€™s handling of programs for the homeless and other programs.

The Department of Human Services has not responded to repeated requests by the Blade for its specific reasons for determining that Casa Ruby was not in compliance with the DHS grants, which prompted DHS to cut off its funds for those grants.

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, in response to a question from the Blade, reacted to the news on Monday.

“Iā€™m sad about it,” Bowser said. “And a lot of people here know Ruby and know the organization and especially know that organization when it was doing work that nobody else was doing. So, Iā€™m very sad about it. But I also know when we give hundreds of thousands and millions of dollars and vendors arenā€™t being paid and employees arenā€™t being paid, youā€™ve got a problem. Youā€™ve got a problem. So, none of us can turn our back on it. We have to fix the problem.

“So, Iā€™m sad about it because that was an organization that has done the work. We have to figure out what happened and fix it.”

The Menkiti Group, the company that owns the building at 7325 Georgia Ave., N.W., which Casa Ruby used as its headquarters and for the low barrier shelter, claims in a Landlord Tenant Court filing that Casa Ruby owes the company over $1 million in unpaid rent and late fees, among other expenses. Corado told the Blade last year that she withheld some of the rent in a dispute over what she said was the ownerā€™s failure to maintain the building that led to multiple violations in the cityā€™s fire and building code.

A spokesperson for the company told the Blade last year that Corado agreed to a lease that holds the tenant responsible for all needed repairs for the building. Casa Ruby has since moved out of that building.

The landlord for two smaller buildings in the Dupont Circle area in which Casa Ruby rented space have also filed eviction notices for failure to pay the rent.

Cordova said that the Union Temple Baptist Church, which rented four small townhouses to Casa Ruby where Cordova helped to operate the groupā€™s LGBTQ immigrant services program, filed for eviction in court over failure by Casa Ruby to pay the rent. The church owns the buildings. Cordova said the immigrant occupants of the buildings as well as she, who lived in one of them, were forced to move out.

ā€œEverything is closed,ā€ Cordova said. ā€œNobody is going there to get services because there is nobody to provide the services,ā€ she said. ā€œWe donā€™t have an office, we donā€™t have office supplies, we donā€™t have an internet. How are we going to provide services?ā€

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District of Columbia

Bowser budget proposal calls for $5.25 million for 2025 World Pride

AIDS office among agencies facing cuts due to revenue shortfall

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D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowserā€™s proposed 2025 budget includes a request for $5.25 million in funding to support the 2025 World Pride celebration. (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowserā€™s proposed fiscal year 2025 budget includes a request for $5.25 million in funding to support the June 2025 World Pride celebration, which D.C. will host, and which is expected to bring three million or more visitors to the city.

The mayorā€™s proposed budget, which she presented to the D.C. Council for approval earlier this month, also calls for a 7.6 percent increase in funding for the Mayorā€™s Office of LGBTQ Affairs, which amounts to an increase of $132,000 and would bring the officeā€™s total funding to $1.7 million. The office, among other things, provides grants to local organizations that provide  services to the LGBTQ community.

Among the other LGBTQ-related funding requests in the mayorā€™s proposed budget is a call to continue the annual funding of $600,000 to provide workforce development services for transgender and gender non-conforming city residents ā€œexperiencing homelessness and housing instability.ā€ The budget proposal also calls for a separate allocation of $600,000 in new funding to support a new Advanced Technical Center at the Whitman-Walker Healthā€™s Max Robinson Center in Ward 8.

Among the city agencies facing funding cuts under the mayorā€™s proposed budget is the HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis, Sexually Transmitted Disease, and Tuberculosis Administration, known as HAHSTA, which is an arm of the D.C. Department of Health. LGBTQ and AIDS activists have said HAHSTA plays an important role in the cityā€™s HIV prevention and support services. Observers familiar with the agency have said it recently lost federal funding, which the city would have to decide whether to replace.

ā€œWe werenā€™t able to cover the loss of federal funds for HAHSTA with local funds,ā€ Japer  Bowles, director of the Mayorā€™s Office of LGBTQ Affairs, told the Washington Blade. ā€œBut we are working with partners to identify resources to fill those funding  gaps,ā€ Bowles said.

The total proposed budget of $21 billion that Bowser submitted to the D.C. Council includes about $500 million in proposed cuts in various city programs that the mayor said was needed to offset a projected $700 million loss in revenue due, among other things, to an end in pandemic era federal funding and commercial office vacancies also brought about by the post pandemic commercial property and office changes.

Bowserā€™s budget proposal also includes some tax increases limited to sales and business-related taxes, including an additional fee on hotel bookings to offset the expected revenue losses. The mayor said she chose not to propose an increase in income tax or property taxes.

Earlier this year, the D.C. LGBTQ+ Budget Coalition, which consists of several local LGBTQ advocacy organizations, submitted its own fiscal year 2025 budget proposal to both Bowser and the D.C. Council. In a 14-page letter the coalition outlined in detail a wide range of funding proposals, including housing support for LGBTQ youth and LGBTQ seniors; support for LGBTQ youth homeless services; workforce and employment services for transgender and gender non-conforming residents; and harm reduction centers to address the rise in drug overdose deaths.

Another one of the coalitionā€™s proposals is $1.5 million in city funding for the completion of the D.C. Center for the LGBTQ Communityā€™s new building, a former warehouse building in the cityā€™s Shaw neighborhood that is undergoing a build out and renovation to accommodate the LGBTQ Centerā€™s plans to move in later this year. The coalitionā€™s budget proposal also calls for an additional $300,000 in ā€œrecurringā€ city funding for the LGBTQ Center in subsequent years ā€œto support ongoing operational costs and programmatic initiatives.ā€

Bowles noted that Bowser authorized and approved a $1 million grant for the LGBTQ Centerā€™s new building last year but was unable to provide additional funding requested by the budget coalition for the LGBTQ Center for fiscal year 2025.

ā€œWeā€™re still in this with them,ā€ Bowles said. ā€œWeā€™re still looking and working with them to identify funding.ā€

The total amount of funding that the LGBTQ+ Budget Coalition listed in its letter to the mayor and Council associated with its requests for specific LGBTQ programs comes to $43.1 million.

Heidi Ellis, who serves as coordinator of the coalition, said the coalition succeeded in getting some of its proposals included in the mayorā€™s budget but couldnā€™t immediately provide specific amounts.  

ā€œThere are a couple of areas I would argue we had wins,ā€ Ellis told the Blade. ā€œWe were able to maintain funding across different housing services, specifically around youth services that affect folks like SMYAL and Wanda Alston.ā€ She was referring to the LGBTQ youth services group SMYAL and the LGBTQ organization Wanda Alston Foundation, which provides housing for homeless LGBTQ youth.

ā€œWe were also able to secure funding for the transgender, gender non-conforming workforce program,ā€ she said. ā€œWe also had funding for migrant services that weā€™ve been advocating for and some wins on language access,ā€ said Ellis, referring to programs assisting LGBTQ people and others who are immigrants and arenā€™t fluent in speaking English.

Ellis said that although the coalitionā€™s letter sent to the mayor and Council had funding proposals that totaled $43.1 million, she said the coalition used those numbers as examples for programs and policies that it believes would be highly beneficial to those in the LGBTQ community in need.

 ā€œI would say to distill it down to just we ask for $43 million or whatever, thatā€™s not an accurate picture of what weā€™re asking for,ā€ she said. ā€œWeā€™re asking for major investments around a few areas ā€“ housing, healthcare, language access. And for capital investments to make sure the D.C. Center can open,ā€ she said. ā€œItā€™s not like a narrative about the dollar amounts. Itā€™s more like where weā€™re trying to go.ā€

The Blade couldnā€™tā€™ immediately determine how much of the coalitionā€™s funding proposals are included in the Bowser budget. The mayorā€™s press secretary, Daniel Gleick, told the Blade in an email that those funding levels may not have been determined by city agencies.

ā€œAs for specific funding levels for programs that may impact the LGBTQ community, such as individual health programs through the Department of Health, it is too soon in the budget process to determine potential adjustments on individual programs run though city agencies,ā€ Gleick said.

But Bowles said several of the programs funded in the mayorā€™s budget proposal that are not LGBTQ specific will be supportive of LGBTQ programs. Among them, he said, is the budgetā€™s proposal for an increase of $350,000 in funding for senior villages operated by local nonprofit organizations that help support seniors. Asked if that type of program could help LGBTQ seniors, Bowles said, ā€œAbsolutely ā€“ thatā€™s definitely a vehicle for LGBTQ senior services.ā€

He said among the programs the increased funding for the mayorā€™s LGBTQ Affairs office will support is its ongoing cultural competency training for D.C. government employees. He said he and other office staff members conduct the trainings about LGBTQ-related issues at city departments and agencies.

Bowser herself suggested during an April 19 press conference that local businesses, including LGBTQ businesses and organizations, could benefit from a newly launched city ā€œPop-Up Permit Programā€ that greatly shortens the time it takes to open a business in vacant storefront buildings in the downtown area.

Bowser and Nina Albert, D.C. Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development, suggested the new expedited city program for approving permits to open shops and small businesses in vacant storefront spaces could come into play next year when D.C. hosts World Pride, one of the wordā€™s largest LGBTQ events.

ā€œWhile we know that all special events are important, there is an especially big one coming to Washington, D.C. next year,ā€ Bowser said at the press conference. ā€œAnd to that point, we proposed a $5.25 million investment to support World Pride 2025,ā€ she said, adding, ā€œItā€™s going to be pretty great. And so, weā€™re already thinking about how we can include D.C. entrepreneurs, how weā€™re going to include artists, how weā€™re going to celebrate across all eight wards of our city as well,ā€ she said.

Among those attending the press conference were officials of D.C.ā€™s Capital Pride Alliance, which will play a lead role in organizing World Pride 2025 events.

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District of Columbia

Taste of Point returns at critical time for queer students

BIPOC scholar to speak at Room & Board event on May 2

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A scene from the 2022 Taste of Point. (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

The Point Foundation will kick off May with its annual Taste of Point DC event. The event will be hosted at Room & Board on 14th Street and feature a silent auction, food tastings, a speech from a scholar, and more. 

Pointā€™s chief of staff, Kevin Wright, said that at Taste of Point, the scholars are the star of the show.

ā€œPeople never come to an event to hear Point staff speak, they come to hear from the people most impacted by the program,ā€ he said. ā€œAt its core Taste of Point is designed to center and highlight our scholarsā€™ voices and experiences.ā€

This year, a Point BIPOC Scholar, Katherine Guerrero Rivera will speak at the event. 

ā€œIt is a great opportunity to highlight the scholars out there on the front lines making impacts in almost every sector and job field,ā€ Wright said. 

Wright pointed out that this year especially is a pivotal time for LGBTQ students. 

ā€œIn 2023, there were 20 states that passed anti-LGBTQ legislation,ā€ he said. ā€œBy this point in [2024] we already have more.ā€

Wright said the impacts of those legislative attacks are far reaching and that Point is continuously monitoring the impact they have on students on the ground. 

Last month, The Washington Post reported that states with anti-LGBTQ laws in place saw school hate crimes quadruple. This report came a month after a non-binary student, Nex Bennedict, died after being attacked at school. 

ā€œSo, we see this as a critical moment to really step up and help students who are facing these challenges on their campus,ā€ Wright said. ā€œOur mission is to continue to empower our scholars to achieve their full academic and leadership potential.ā€ 

This year Point awarded nearly 600 LGBTQ students with scholarships. These include the flagship scholarship, community college scholarship and the BIPOC scholarship. When the foundation started in 2002, there were only eight scholarships awarded. 

Dr. Harjant Gill is one of those scholars who said the scholarship was pivotal for him. Gill said he spent his undergraduate years creating films and doing activism for the LGBTQ community. 

As a result, his academic record wasnā€™t stellar and although he was admitted into American Universityā€™s graduate program he had no clue how he would fund it. 

Upon arrival to American he was told to apply for a Point scholarship and the rest was history.

ā€œIt ended up being the one thing that kept me going otherwise I would have dropped out,ā€ he said. ā€œPoint was incredibly instrumental in my journey to becoming an academic and a professor.ā€

More than a decade later, Gill serves on the host committee for Taste of Point and is a mentor to young Point scholars. He said that he donates money yearly to Point and that when he is asked what he wants for a gift he will often tell his friends to donate too.

To attend the event on Wednesday, May 2, purchase tickets at the Point website. If you canā€™t attend this yearā€™s Taste of Point DC event but would like to get involved, you can also donate online.Ā 

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District of Columbia

Three of five LGBTQ candidates win race for DNC delegate from D.C.

32 candidates competed for 13 elected seats in party caucus

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John Fanning finished in first place in the race for DNC delegate. (Photo courtesy of Fanning)

Three out of five known LGBTQ candidates running for election as delegates from D.C. to the Democratic National Convention won their races at an April 20 Democratic Party caucus election held at D.C.ā€™s Walter Washington Convention Center.

Ward 2 gay Democratic activist John Fanning finished in first place with 140 votes and Ward 8 gay Democratic activist David Meadows finished in second place with 127 votes in a race in which six male candidates committed to supporting President Biden were competing for three male seats in a section of the city designated as Congressional District 1, which included registered Democratic voters in Wards 1, 2, 6, and 8.

Ward 7 gay Democratic activist Jimmie Williams won his race, finishing in third place with 200 votes in a race in which eight male candidates committed to President Biden competed for four male seats in the Congressional District 2 section of the city that included Wards 3, 4, 5, and 7.

Gay Democratic activist Felipe Afanador lost his race, finishing in sixth place with 47 votes in the Congressional District 2 election for male candidates backing Biden. It couldnā€™t immediately be determined which of the four wards in District 2 he is from.

The Washington Blade didnā€™t learn about Afanadorā€™s status as an LGBTQ candidate until the Capital Stonewall Democrats announced it one day before the April 20 party election in an email statement.

In the Congressional District 2 race among female candidates, in which eight candidates competed for three female seats, transgender rights advocate and Ward 3 Democratic Party activist Monika Nemeth lost her race, finishing in sixth place with 49 votes.

The five LGBTQ candidates were among 32 candidates competing for just 13 elected delegate positions in D.C. D.C. will have a total of 51 delegates to the Democratic Convention, but the other 38 include elected officials and party leaders who are considered ā€œautomaticā€ or appointed delegates. The Democratic Convention will be held in Chicago Aug. 19-23.

Observers familiar with the April 20 party caucus election said Fanning, Meadows, and Williams had participated in local D.C. Democratic Party events and activities for a longer period than Nemeth and Afanador and appear to have been better known among Democratic voters in their respective wards as well as other wards. Those factors contributed to their receiving significantly more votes than most other candidates, observers have said. 

In his candidacy statement posted on the D.C. Democratic Party website, Afanador said he worked on the 2020 Biden presidential election campaign in Pennsylvania. His LinkedIn page says in 2022 he began work in Washington for the Biden administration as an official in the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Nemeth is a past president of D.C.ā€™s Capital Stonewall Democrats, the cityā€™s largest LGBTQ local political group, and has been an active member of the D.C. Democratic State Committee, the local party governing body. She served as a Biden delegate at the 2020 Democratic National Convention.

ā€œIt is important for our D.C. delegation to have strong LGBTQ representation,ā€ Capital Stonewall Democrats said in its April 19 statement. ā€œThere are five LGBQ candidates running to be delegate, and Capital Stonewall Democrats asks that our members support each one,ā€ the statement says.

ā€œUnfortunately, they fell short, but they and all queer Democrats are welcome to attend and participate in convention events and activities sponsored by the national and local party,ā€ Meadows told the Blade in referring to Nemeth and Afanador. ā€œOur shared goal is to unite behind the Biden-Harris ticket to protect our LGBTQ rights from being dismantled by Donald Trump and the GOP,ā€ Meadows said.

ā€œRunning for District Delegate is one of the most grassroots efforts,ā€ Fanning told the Blade. ā€œItā€™s very beneficial to align yourself on a slate with community leaders that have either previously run for District Delegate or have developed a constituency in their community from other civic engagements,ā€ he said, referring to possible reasons for his, Meadows, and Williamsā€™s election victory.

Aside from the D.C. elected LGBTQ delegates, two prominent D.C. LGBTQ Democratic leaders will be appointed as delegates to the 2024 Democratic National Convention in their role as members of the Democratic National Committee from D.C. They are Claire Lucas, a highly acclaimed Democratic Party and LGBTQ rights advocate and party fundraiser; and Earl Fowlkes, one of the lead organizers of D.C.ā€™s annual Black LGBTQ Pride celebration and former president of the Capital Stonewall Democrats. Both are committed to supporting President Biden as the Democratic nominee for re-election.

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