Local
At the center of LGBTQ Frederick
Group celebrates 2nd anniversary helping youth, others

The Frederick Centerās leaders, from left: executive director Austin Beach; board members Diane IƱiguez, Rev. Dr. Robert Apgar-Taylor, Katherine Jones, Brian Walker, Cindie Beach, Maureen Conners and Peter Brehm. (Blade photo by Steve Charing)
There was a flurry of activity at the public library on E. Patrick Street in the heart of the historic district in Frederick, Md. on a recent Saturday morning. Inside, several people were lugging pamphlets, name tags, business cards, beverages and pastries into the libraryās community room while others were setting up tables and chairs and preparing a Power Point presentation.
Outside the building on this cool October morning, you could peer through the famous spires of Frederick and see the autumn colors on Marylandās mountains in the west. The foliage may as well have been rainbow colors, as the folks performing these tasks inside were getting ready for the second annual general meeting of the LGBTQ Frederick Center or simply The Frederick Center (TFC).
Fifteen years ago, the idea of a gay center in Frederick would have been considered unimaginable. Alex X. Mooney, a virulently anti-gay conservative Republican from Frederick was elected to the state Senate in 1998 using, in part, a message warning voters of the āhomosexual agenda.ā He once said, āHomosexual activists have managed to gain legal recognition as a minority, based solely on their lifestyle choices, through so-called āhate crimesā and domestic partnership laws.ā
Employing divisive rhetoric like that, Mooney was elected two more times, reaffirming Frederickās conservative leanings, but with decreasing margins each time. But Mooney was finally unseated in 2010 by pro-LGBT former Frederick Mayor Ron Young.
Frederick County, an exurb of Washington D.C. and Baltimoreāroughly equidistant to bothāhas seen a growth in population of around 25 percent since 2000. Much of this increase is attributed to an influx of young married white-collar workers and professionals or singles moving into new housing developments. Indeed, the median age in the county is seven years younger than the rest of the state.
With the arrival of younger, more educated residents, a less conservative tilt exists, but the political landscape has not shifted to the point where it is like Montgomery County or Baltimore City. Brian Walker, president of the TFC board, said while there has been progress inside Frederick especially due to the increasing number of affirming churches, āthe attitude toward LGBT folks outside of Frederick has been spotty.ā
But a pro-LGBTQ mindset appears to be on the rise here. Although in 2012, Mitt Romney defeated President Obama by a 50-47 percent margin in Frederick County, voters affirmed Question 6 on same-sex marriage by 2,400 votes or 51-49 percent.
The Frederick Center emerged because its founder realized something was missing.
āI felt there was a need for an LGBTQ center in Frederick because of my experience,ā says Austin Beach, 21, who is also the executive director of TFC. āAs a young man discovering my identity I had no resources that where easily available to me and I felt firsthand how that affected me. I didn’t want anyone else to go through that same process of feeling there was no one there to help them.āĀ In January 2012, TFC was born.
Cindie Beach heads up TFCās youth group, where āover the past two years, there had been a total of 70 youth and of those, seven were at one time homeless.ā She said she also performed four suicide interventions. āTo succeed, the youth must have a roof over their heads and food in their mouths,ā she said. āWe need emergency housing and long-term housing for these kids and a support system in place. Some get thrown out for being LGBT and appear at my door. It breaks my heart.ā
TFC does not have a permanent home as of yet. It holds events in Frederickās affirming churches and other pro-LGBTQ business establishments. But that could change.
āI envision the center being a focal point of support, resources, and education for Marylanders LGBTQ community both inside, but especially outside of the D.C. and Baltimore areas,ā says Austin. āI hope to soon see us having our own space, offering transitional services, counseling, shelter space, etc. to the LGBTQ community and if all goes well, being on the forefront of LGBTQ advocacy in Maryland in the ever-growing area of Frederickā
For more information about The Frederick Center, visit thefrederickcenter.org.
District of Columbia
D.C. Council member honored by LGBTQ homeless youth group
Doni Crawford receives inaugural Wanda Alston Legacy Award
About 100 people turned out Tuesday evening, April 7, for a presentation by D.C.ās Wanda Alston Foundation of its inaugural Wanda Alston Legacy Award to D.C. Council member Doni Crawford (I-At-Large) for her support for the foundationās mission to support homeless LGBTQ youth.
Among those who attended the event was Japer Bowles, director of D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowserās Office of LGBTQ Affairs, who delivered an official proclamation issued by Bowser declaring April 7, 2026 āA Day of Remembrance for Wanda Alston.ā
Alston, a beloved womenās and LGBTQ rights activist, served as the cityās first director of the then newly created Office of LGBTQ Affairs under then-Mayor Anthony Williams from 2004 until her death by murder on March 16, 2005.
To the shock and dismay of fellow LGBTQ rights advocates, police and court records reported Alston, 45, was stabbed to death inside her Northeast D.C. house by a man high on crack cocaine who lived nearby and who stole her credit cards and car. The perpetrator, William Martin Parrott, 38, was arrested by D.C. police the next day and later pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. He was sentenced in July 2005 to 24 years in prison.
Crawford was among those attending the award event who reflected on Alstonās legacy and outspoken advocacy for LGBTQ and feminist causes.
āI am deeply humbled and honored to receive this inaugural award,ā Crawford told the Washington Blade at the conclusion of the event. āI think the world of Wanda Alston. She has set such a great foundation for me and other Council members to build on,ā she said.
āHer focus on inclusivity and intersectionality is really important as we approach this work,ā Crawford added. āAnd itās going to guide my work at the Council every day.ā
Crawford was appointed to the D.C. Council in January of this year to replace then Council member Kenyan McDuffie (I-At-Large), who resigned to run for D.C. mayor as a Democrat. She is being challenged by four other independent candidates in a June 16 special election for the Council seat.
Under the cityās Home Rule Charter written and approved by Congress, the seat is one of two D.C. Council at-large seats that cannot be held by a āmajority partyā candidate, meaning a Democrat.
A statement released by the Alston Foundation last month announcing Crawfordās selection for the Wanda Alston Legacy Award praised Crawfordās record of support for its work on behalf of LGBTQ youth.
āFrom behind the scenes to now serving as an At-Large Council member, she has fought fearlessly for affordable housing, LGBTQ+ funding priorities, and racial justice,ā the statement says. āCouncil member Crawfordās leadership reflects the same courage and conviction that defined Wandaās legacy.ā
Organizers of the event noted that it was held on what would have been Wanda Alstonās 67th birthday.
āTodayās legacy reception was a smashing success,ā said Cesar Toledo, the Alston Foundationās executive director. āNot only did we come together to celebrate Wanda Alston on her birthday, but we also were able to raise over $10,000 for our homeless LGBTQ youth here in D.C.,ā Toledo told the Blade.
āIn addition to that, we celebrated and we acknowledged a rising star in our community,ā he said. āAnd that is At-Large Council member Doni Crawford, who we named the inaugural Wanda Alston Legacy Award recipient.ā
At the request of D.C. Council Chair Phil Mendelson (D-At-Large) the Council voted unanimously on Jan. 20, 2026, to appoint Crawford to the Council seat being vacated by McDuffie.
Council records show she joined McDuffieās Council staff in 2022 as a policy adviser and later became his legislative director before McDuffie appointed her as staff director for the Councilās Committee on Business and Economic Development for which McDuffie served as chair.
District of Columbia
Police mental health struggles gain growing attention
āMy body begins to manifest physically, through depression, stressā
When Scott Silverii began his career as a police officer, he faced daily exposure to traumatic incidents with little guidance or support, particularly in distressed neighborhoods where officers were expected to respond decisively under pressure.
āWhen I started, the only thing they offered was to suck it up and get over it,ā Silverii said. āAny indication that you were hurt meant that you were weak, and if you were weak, it meant you could not be trusted.ā
Years later, when Silverii became a police chief, he chose a different approach. Rather than reinforcing silence around trauma, he made mental health support a visible part of his leadership.
āIn every critical incident that we had, I would bring the critical incident stress debriefing team in ā and I would participate in it,ā Silverii said. āI wanted to promote it from the top. Thatās what itās going to continue to take to change the culture.ā
Silveriiās experience reflects a broader reality in law enforcement. Across the country, police officers face ongoing mental health challenges linked to repeated exposure to violent crime scenes, fatal accidents, and human suffering ā experiences that most civilians never encounter. Long shifts and the responsibility of protecting the public have long been documented to further intensify emotional strain, particularly when officers fear making mistakes with serious consequences.
Silverii, former Thibodaux, La., chief of police and current National Law Enforcement Initiative Manager at Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), said coping mechanisms in the past were often unhealthy.
āA lot of officers, they would drink ā sometimes prescription drug use, just different ways,ā of coping, he said. Today, he said, the trauma can linger long after an incident: āā¦you become affected by the trauma. It doesnāt have to happen to you. But when officers respond to a crash, youāre involved⦠You carry this trauma.āĀ
In some cases, he says, the impact resurfaces every year. āMy body begins to manifest physically, through depression, through stress⦠once I realize itās the anniversary, I can start dealing with it,ā he said.
For decades, police culture discouraged officers from seeking mental health support, often treating emotional distress as a weakness rather than an occupational hazard. In recent years, however, departments have begun expanding access to counseling, peer-support programs, and crisis-intervention training.
In Baltimore, a shift in police culture is tackling the long-standing “shrug it off” mentality toward officer mental health. The Baltimore Police Departmentās Officer Safety and Wellness Section, started in 2018, changed how the agency handles trauma, depression, and substance abuse by treating these issues as medical needs rather than disciplinary failures.
A core component of the program is its confidential alcohol addiction treatment, which has seen more than 250 officers voluntarily sign themselves in without fear of termination. This proactive approach has led to a dramatic drop in internal interventions ā falling from 250 in 2018 to 48 in 2024 ā alongside a decrease in citizen complaints and use-of-force incidents.Ā
The need for such programs is underscored by national data from the Police1 2024 State of the Industry report, which found that 76% of officers cite a lack of time due to heavy workloads as the primary barrier to maintaining their health.Ā More than 50% of respondents report that a significant stigma still surrounds seeking mental health services. Perhaps most tellingĀ ā 12% of officers nationwide report having no access to mental health resources at all, and 33% have considered calling themselves out of service due to emotional distress or exhaustion.
Chris Asplen, executive director of the National Criminal Justice Association, is a former Washington prosecutor who handled child abuse and other high-stakes cases. He said the emotional weight of the work eventually led him to step away after becoming a parent.
āIt became too mentally and emotionally difficult after I had my own child,ā Asplen said.
Asplen said his understanding of trauma was also shaped in part by his upbringing. Raised by a parent who struggled with mental illness, he described growing up feeling overlooked. āMy fatherās mental health issues made me essentially invisible to him,ā he said ā an experience that later informed how he approached victims in the justice system.
Asplen also pointed to disparities in how mental health crises are handled. His familyās middle-class background, he said, afforded protections and support not available to many others. āMental health issues for people who are not white and middle class are often treated as criminal matters,ā he said.
Experts warn that when mental health challenges go unaddressed, they can affect officersā judgment, job performance, and interactions with the public. In response, lawmakers and communities have begun exploring preventive approaches. In 2023, Congress passed the De-escalation Act, providing funding for training focused on crisis response, de-escalation, and officer wellness.
In addition to legislative efforts, some communities are turning to violence intervention programs aimed at reducing harm before police are required to respond. One such organization, Roca, was founded in Massachusetts in 1988 and has operated in Baltimore since 2018. According to the organizationās impact data, 87% of its participants have had no new incarcerations after entering the program for at least 24 months.
Police officers in Baltimore and several other cities have been trained by Rocaās nonprofit coaching arm, the Roca Impact Institute, to use cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) to regulate their emotions and understand the impact of trauma on officers and community members. The training reduced stress, loss of temper and use of force incidents, according to the institute.
A 2024 report by the D.C. Office of the Attorney General showed the cityās violence intervention program’s efforts contributed to an 18% decrease in shootings and a 26% decrease in gun homicides across its target neighborhoods in 2023. Based on the national Cure Violence Global model, the programs treat violence as a public health epidemic through the use of what it calls ācredible messengersā to de-escalate conflicts.
But a Washington Post investigation published Feb. 3 found excessive spending that City Administrator Kevin Donahue called a ācompletely inappropriate use of public money.ā A week later, the publication reported that two DC violence interrupters were charged with murder in the death of a Baltimore man in a DC nightclub in 2023.
When done correctly, these programs can offer a secondary benefit by reducing the volume of high-stress calls handled by law enforcement. Advocates say such approaches can lessen the emotional toll on officers by preventing traumatic encounters altogether.
āIf we can reduce the amount of trauma that occurs at the scene,ā Asplen said, āthen weāre a lot further along.ā
(Carl Barbett is a senior at Bard High School Early College DC, one of Youthcast Media Groupās journalism class partners. This story was produced under the mentorship of Edith Mwangi, a Kenyan multimedia journalist based in D.C. with a background in international reporting and politics.)
District of Columbia
Key lifestyle changes can help patients cope with diabetes
Small daily choices make a big difference in oneās health
One Tuesday evening after my family finished dinner, I noticed my grandmother sitting on the couch, sweating more than usual. The family room wasnāt hot, and she hadnāt eaten a lot of salty food that day, so seeing her like that made me worry.
My grandmother, Shirley Mitchell, is a 72-year-old who lives with Type 2 diabetes, and moments like this, when her blood sugar gets dangerously low, can happen without warning. Watching her reach for her glucose tablets reminded me how serious her condition is.
Each day, millions of people living with diabetes face a choice that can either play a role in protecting their health or putting it at riskā namely, what they eat. Nationally, 12 percent of the population lives with diabetes, according to the Centers for Disease Control. In D.C., nine percent of residents are known to have diabetes, with likely many more undiagnosed, said Dr. Marcy Oppenheimer, a family medicine doctor who practices in Northeast D.C.
āItās super common, especially as you get older,ā she said, estimating that 15 to 20 percent of her patients have diabetes, and another 20 percent have pre-diabetes, where blood sugar is higher than normal but not yet at the level to trigger a diabetes diagnosis.Ā
What is diabetes?
Diabetes is a long-term condition that affects how the body controls blood sugar. When blood sugar levels are not managed properly, they can rise too high and cause serious damage to the body. This happens when the body does not make enough insulin or cannot use insulin correctly, which means sugar stays in the blood instead of being moved into the bodyās cells where itās needed for energy.
Having high levels of sugar in the blood over long periods of time causes damage to just about every body system, said Oppenheimer. āIt can pretty much cause any part of your body to start failing over the long term, if you have high sugar for a long time.ā
While food isnāt the only factor that affects diabetes ā genetics play an even bigger role ā certain foods can worsen diabetes by spiking the amount of sugar in the blood.
What foods should you eat if you have diabetes?
Healthy food choices play a major role in helping people with diabetes manage their condition. Foods such as vegetables, whole grains, lean proteins like fish and chicken, beans, nuts, and healthy fats digest slowly and provide steady energy. These foods help prevent sudden spikes in blood sugar, which are dangerous for people with diabetes.
Many people with diabetes learn that planning meals, watching portion sizes, and choosing healthier options can make a big difference in how they feel each day.
āI had to slow down and pay attention to what I ate because everything affected my sugar levels,ā says Mitchell.
Even small choices, like drinking a lot of soda or eating too much white bread, can cause blood sugar levels to rise quickly, said Oppenheimer.
Which foods can increase the risk or harm of diabetes?
Unhealthy food choices like these can seriously harm those with diabetes. Sugary foods such as candies, cake, cookies, and sweetened drinks cause blood sugar to spike quickly. Processed foods, white bread, and fast food are also harmful because they can be high in unhealthy saturated fats and refined carbohydrates.
When these foods are eaten often, they can lead to weight gain and they make diabetes harder to control and increase the risk of long-term health problems, said Oppenheimer.
Over time, poor eating habits that lead to prolonged high blood sugar can lead to heart disease, nerve damage, kidney problems, and even vision loss.
āBasically, diabetes is an all-body condition or disease, and it just varies from person to person in how it affects you,ā said Oppenheimer. āIf you have uncontrolled diabetes, it definitely has a negative impact on both your daily life and your long-term health.ā
Anyone with diabetes can develop serious complications like blindness ā or diabetic retinopathy ā and the risk factors are higher for Black, Latino and American Indian or Alaska Native groups, according to the CDC.
What you or a loved one can do to manage diabetes
Mitchell warns others not to ignore the impact of food on their health. āDonāt ignore your health,ā she says. āFix your problems early before they get worse.ā
Making lifestyle changes is key because, after all, diabetes changes your entire lifestyle, says Mitchell. āWalking throughout the day has helped me feel better.ā
Daniel Dow, a middle school coach at Friendship Blow Pierce Elementary & Middle School in Northeast D.C. who also has diabetes agreed with Mitchell.
āDon’t wait to change your habits, start right away,ā he says. āI learned that what I eat before practice affects my sugar for the whole day.ā
Mitchellās and Dowās experiences show that small daily choices can make a big difference in oneās health. By paying attention to what you eat and how your body responds, you can prevent problems before they get worse. Starting healthy habits early can help you stay strong, focused, and in control of your well-being.
(This article was written by a student in the journalism program at Bard High School Early College DC. This work is part of a partnership between the Washington Blade Foundation and Youthcast Media Group, funded through the FY26 Community Development Grant from the Office of D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser.)
