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
Mayor Bowser signs bill requiring insurers to cover PrEP
āThis is a win in the fight against HIV/AIDSā
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser on March 20 signed a bill approved by the D.C. Council that requires health insurance companies to cover the costs of HIV prevention or PrEP drugs for D.C. residents at risk for HIV infection.
Like all legislation approved by the Council and signed by the mayor, the bill, called the PrEP D.C. Amendment Act, was sent to Capitol Hill for a required 30-day congressional review period before it takes effect as D.C. law.
Gay D.C. Council member Zachary Parker (D-Ward 5) last year introduced the bill.
Insurance coverage for PrEP drugs has been provided through coverage standards included in the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare. But AIDS advocacy organizations have called on states and D.C. to pass their own legislation requiring insurance coverage of PrEP as a safeguard in case federal policies are weakened or removed by the Trump administration, which has already reduced federal funding for HIV/AIDS-related programs.
Like legislation passed by other states, the PrEP D.C. Amendment Act requires insurers to cover all PrEP drugs approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Studies have shown that PrEP drugs, which can be taken as pills or by injection just twice a year, are highly effective in preventing HIV infection.
āI think this is a win for our community,ā Parker said after the D.C. Council voted unanimously to approve the bill on its first vote on the measure in February. āAnd this is a win in the fight against HIV/AIDS.ā Ā
District of Columbia
Blade editor to be inducted into D.C. Society of Professional Journalists Hall of Fame
Kevin Naff marks 24 years with publication this year
Longtime Washington Blade Editor Kevin Naff will be inducted into D.C.ās Society of Professional Journalists Hall of Fame in June, the group announced this week.
Hall of Fame honorees are chosen by the Society of Professional Journalistsā Washington, D.C., Pro Chapter. Naff and two other inductees ā Seth Borenstein, a Washington-based national science writer for the AP and Cheryl W. Thompson, an award-winning correspondent for National Public Radio ā will be celebrated at the chapterās Dateline Awards dinner on Tuesday, June 9, at the National Press Club. The dinnerās emcee will be Kojo Nnamdi, host of WAMU radioās weekly āPolitics Hour.ā
āI am tremendously honored by this recognition,ā Naff said. āI have spent a lifetime in the D.C. area learning from so many talented journalists and am humbled to be considered in their company. Thank you to SPJ and to all the LGBTQ pioneers who came before me who made this possible.ā
Naff joined the Blade in 2002 after years in print and digital journalism. He worked as a financial reporter for Reuters in New York before moving to Baltimore in 1996 to launch the Baltimore Sunās website. He spent four years at the Sun before leaving for an internet startup and later joining the mobile data group at Verizon Wireless working on the first generation of mobile apps.
He then moved to the Blade and has served as the publicationās longest-tenured editor. In 2023, Naff published his first book, āHow We Won the War for LGBTQ Equality ā And How Our Enemies Could Take It All Away.ā
Previous Hall of Fame inductees include luminaries in journalism like Wolf Blitzer, Benjamin Bradlee, Bob Woodward, Andrea Mitchell, and Edgar Allen Poe. The Bladeās senior news reporter Lou Chibbaro Jr. was inducted in 2015.
Maryland
Supreme Court ruling against conversion therapy bans could affect Md. law
Then-Gov. Larry Hogan signed statute in 2018
By PAMELA WOOD, JOHN-JOHN WILLIAMS IV, and MADELEINE OāNEILL | The U.S. Supreme CourtĀ on Tuesday ruled against a law banning āconversion therapyā for LGBTQ kids in Colorado, a ruling that also could apply to Marylandās ban on the discredited practice.
An 8-1 high court majority sided with a Christian counselor who argues the law banning talk therapy violates the First Amendment. The justices agreed that the law raises free speech concerns and sent it back to a lower court to decide whether it meets a legal standard that few laws pass.
Justice Neil Gorsuch, writing for the courtās majority, said the law ācensors speech based on viewpoint.ā The First Amendment, he wrote, āstands as a shield against any effort to enforce orthodoxy in thought or speech in this country.ā
The rest of this article can be read on the Baltimore Bannerās website.
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