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Florida

Gay Days 2023 will go on despite DeSantis and anti-LGBTQ animus

Tens of thousands expected at Walt Disney World

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Attendees at the Walt Disney World GAY DAYS in June 2017 (Photo courtesy of GayDays®/Facebook)

Equality Florida has issued a travel advisory to LGBTQ people that traveling to the state isn’t safe given the plethora of anti-LGBTQ laws. On May 23, the Human Rights Campaign joined with Equality Florida urging LGBTQ people to avoid travel to Florida.

Citing six anti-LGBTQ bills passed and signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, the two groups noted that while not a blanket recommendation against travel nor a call for boycott, the travel advisory outlines the devastating impacts of laws that are hostile to the LGBTQ community.

As Pride month gets underway Thursday, an annual event that is celebrating its 32nd anniversary this year and draws tens of thousands of LGBTQ people to Walt Disney World and the Disney resort areas near Orlando, is slated to commence over the next four day period.

Wearing red shirts to identify themselves, participants in the unofficial Disney Gay Days celebration gather for parties, meet-ups and enjoying a Disney holiday. In an interview with the Associated Press, Joseph Clark, CEO of Gay Days, Inc., said that he is hoping that this year can see upwards of 150,000 LGBTQ people descending on Central Florida to mark the start of Pride season.

In addition to Disney, the LGBTQ folks will also be visiting the neighboring amusement parks of Universal Studios and SeaWorld. 

Pride celebrations this year in Florida have taken on a different tone, St. Cloud organizers of the ‘PRIDE in St. Cloud’ scheduled for June 10 cancelled the event joining a growing list of Pride events being cancelled as a “climate of fear” has overtaken the state in the wake of DeSantis’ extreme new anti-LGBTQ laws.

The Pride Alliance of the Treasure Coast notified the greater Treasure Coast community that the Pride parade was cancelled and that Pridefest will only be accessible to residents 21-years-old or older.

The Wilton Manors City Commission as well as the city’s mayor voted to amending the permit for Stonewall Pride, Inc., to force compliance of a new state law that expands the definition of “live adult entertainment” to include drag entertainment.

Brandon Wolf, the press secretary for the largest state-wide LGBTQ equality and human rights advocacy group Equality Florida, in a text with the Washington Blade noted: “These are the intended chilling effects of DeSantis’ slate of hate legislation. Just as the Don’t Say LGBTQ law didn’t direct school districts to rip down rainbow stickers, this bill does not ban drag or pride. But it uses vague language and threats to induce self-censorship.”

GayDays® Ticket and Merchandise Center at the Doubletree by Hilton Orlando at SeaWorld. (Photo courtesy of GayDays®)

“We continue to be that blue speck in a sea of red, but ultimately laws are laws, and that is the interesting situation we are in,” Clark told Deadline, adding that many folks have reached out to ask whether it’s safe to visit Florida.

In a Facebook post earlier this week, GayDays® announced the cancellation and “reimagining” of Taste of GayDays® as “due to challenges caused by the current political climate in Florida which recently caused concerns for a large group of our restaurant partners.”

“UPDATE: We’re deeply sorry to announce the cancellation and ‘reimagining’ of Taste of GayDays® due to challenges caused by the current political climate in Florida which recently caused concerns for a large group of our restaurant partners. Because of these circumstances, and though we adamantly tried to recruit additional vendors, it became clear that we would be unable to provide the exceptional experience that our guests have come to expect at the Taste of GayDays® Event.

But FEAR NOT! We’ve planned something special for you all. Join us for the FREE GayDays Orlando 2023 ‘Taste of GayDays® Entertainment Preview Show’ at 6 p.m. on Thursday, June 1! This new event aims to give a preview of several other special events during GayDays® Orlando including performances by some of our Miss GayDays® Pageant competitors, introductions and meet and greets with Mr. GayDays® Leather Competitors and more. Please know — we are committed to delivering extraordinary experiences at GayDays® Orlando.

As we are days away from the start of GayDays Orlando 2023 this was not an announcement we had expected to have to make. We will not let this deter us! We are determined to work towards changing the mindset of people and ensure that future events uphold the high standards that are synonymous with GayDays®. It is because of you, that together, we’ll make a difference,” the group wrote.

GayDays® at Area Theme Parks | #RedShirtDays schedule linked here: (Link)

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Florida

AIDS Healthcare Foundation sues Fla. over ‘illegal’ HIV drug program cuts

Tens of thousands could lose access to medications

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(Photo by Catella via Bigstock)

Following the slashing of hundreds of thousands of dollars from Florida’s AIDS Drug Assistance Program, AIDS Healthcare Foundation filed a lawsuit against the Florida Department of Health over what it says was an illegal change to income eligibility thresholds for the lifesaving program.

The Florida Department of Health announced two weeks ago that it would make sweeping cuts to ADAP, dramatically changing how many Floridians qualify for the state-funded medical coverage — without using the formal process required to change eligibility rules. As a result, AHF filed a petition Tuesday in Tallahassee with the state’s Division of Administrative Hearings, seeking to prevent more than 16,000 Floridians from losing coverage.

The medications covered by ADAP work by suppressing HIV-positive people’s viral load — making the virus undetectable in blood tests and unable to be transmitted to others.

Prior to the eligibility change, the Florida Department of Health covered Floridians earning up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level — or $62,600 annually for an individual. Under the new policy, eligibility would be limited to those making no more than 130 percent of the federal poverty level, or $20,345 per year.

The National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors estimates that more than 16,000 patients in Florida will lose coverage under the state’s ADAP because of this illegal change in department policy. Florida’s eligibility changes would also eliminate access to biktarvy, a widely used once-daily medication for people living with HIV/AIDS.

Under Florida law, when a state agency seeks to make a major policy change, it must either follow a formal rule-making process under the Florida Administrative Procedure Act or obtain direct legislative authorization.

AHF alleges the Florida Department of Health did neither.

Typically, altering eligibility for a statewide program requires either legislative action or adherence to a multistep rule-making process, including: publishing a Notice of Proposed Rule; providing a statement of estimated regulatory costs; allowing public comment; holding hearings if requested; responding to challenges; and formally adopting the rule. According to AHF, none of these steps occurred.

“Rule-making is not a matter of agency discretion. Each statement that an agency like the Department of Health issues that meets the statutory definition of a rule must be adopted through legally mandated rule-making procedures. Florida has simply not done so here,” said Tom Myers, AHF’s chief of public affairs and general counsel. “The whole point of having to follow procedures and rules is to make sure any decisions made are deliberate, thought through, and minimize harm. Floridians living with HIV and the general public’s health are at stake here and jeopardized by these arbitrary and unlawful DOH rule changes.”

AHF has multiple Ryan White CARE Act contracts in Florida, including four under Part B, which covers ADAP. More than 50 percent of people diagnosed with HIV receive assistance from Ryan White programs annually.

According to an AHF advocacy leader who spoke with the Washington Blade, the move appears to have originated at the state level rather than being driven by the federal government — a claim that has circulated among some Democratic officials.

“As far as we can tell, Congress flat-funded the Ryan White and ADAP programs, and the proposed federal cuts were ignored,” the advocacy leader told the Blade on the condition of anonymity. “None of this appears to be coming from Washington — this was initiated in Florida. What we’re trying to understand is why the state is claiming a $120 million shortfall when the program already receives significant federal funding. That lack of transparency is deeply concerning.”

Florida had the third-highest rate of new HIV infections in the nation in 2022, accounting for 11 percent of new diagnoses nationwide, according to KFF, a nonprofit health policy research organization.

During a press conference on Wednesday, multiple AHF officials commented on the situation, and emphasized the need to use proper methods to change something as important as HIV/AIDS coverage availability in the sunshine state. 

“We are receiving dozens, hundreds of calls from patients who are terrified, who are confused, who are full of anxiety and fear,” said Esteban Wood, director of advocacy, legislative affairs, and community engagement at AHF. “These are working Floridians — 16,000 people — receiving letters saying they have weeks left of medication that keeps them alive and costs upwards of $45,000 a year. Patients are asking us, ‘What are we supposed to do? How are we supposed to survive?’ And right now, we don’t have a good answer.”

“This decision was not done in the correct manner. County health programs, community-based organizations, providers across the state — none of them were consulted,” Wood added. “Today is Jan. 28, and we have just 32 days until these proposed changes take effect. Nearly half of the 36,000 people currently on ADAP could be disenrolled in just over a month.”

“Without this medication, people with HIV get sicker,” Myers said during the conference. “They end up in emergency rooms, they lose time at work, and they’re unable to take care of their families. Treatment adherence is also the best way to prevent new HIV infections — people who are consistently on these medications are non-infectious. If these cuts go through, you will have sicker people, more HIV infections, and ultimately much higher costs for the state.”

“Patients receiving care through Ryan White and ADAP have a 91 percent viral suppression rate, compared to about 60 percent nationally,” the advocacy leader added. “That’s as close to a functional cure as we can get, and it allows people to live healthy lives, work, and contribute to their communities. Blowing a hole in a program this successful puts lives at risk and sets a dangerous precedent. If Florida gets away with this, other states facing budget pressure could follow.”

The lawsuit comes days after the Save HIV Funding campaign pressed Congress to build bipartisan support for critical funding for people living with or vulnerable to HIV. In May of last year, President Donald Trump appeared to walk back his 2019 pledge to end HIV as an epidemic, instead proposing the elimination of HIV prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and housing services in his budget request to Congress.

House appropriators, led by the Republican majority, went further, calling for an additional $2 billion in cuts — including $525 million for medical care and support services for people living with HIV. 

While Senate appropriators ultimately chose to maintain level funding in their version of the spending bills, advocates feared final negotiations could result in steep cuts that would reduce services, increase new HIV infections, and lead to more AIDS-related deaths. The final spending package reflected a best-case outcome, with funding levels largely mirroring the Senate’s proposed FY26 allocations.

“What the state has done in unilaterally announcing these changes is not following its own rules,” Myers added. “There is a required process — rule-making, notice and comment, taking evidence — and none of that happened here. Before you cut 16,000 people off from lifesaving medication, you have to study the harms, ask whether you even have the authority to do it, and explore other solutions. That’s what this lawsuit is about.”

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Florida

DNC slams White House for slashing Fla. AIDS funding

State will have to cut medications for more than 16,000 people

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HIV infection, Florida, Hospitality State, gay Florida couples, gay news, Washington Blade

The Trump-Vance administration and congressional Republicans’ “Big Beautiful Bill” could strip more than 10,000 Floridians of life-saving HIV medication.

The Florida Department of Health announced there would be large cuts to the AIDS Drug Assistance Program in the Sunshine State. The program switched from covering those making up to 400 percent of the Federal Poverty Level, which was anyone making $62,600 or less, in 2025, to only covering those making up to 130 percent of the FPL, or $20,345 a year in 2026. 

Cuts to the AIDS Drug Assistance Program, which provides medication to low-income people living with HIV/AIDS, will prevent a dramatic $120 million funding shortfall as a result of the Big Beautiful Bill according to the Florida Department of Health. 

The International Association of Providers of AIDS Care and Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo warned that the situation could easily become a “crisis” without changing the current funding setup.

“It is a serious issue,” Ladapo told the Tampa Bay Times. “It’s a really, really serious issue.”

The Florida Department of Health currently has a “UPDATES TO ADAP” warning on the state’s AIDS Drug Assistance Program webpage, recommending Floridians who once relied on tax credits and subsidies to pay for their costly HIV/AIDS medication to find other avenues to get the crucial medications — including through linking addresses of Florida Association of Community Health Centers and listing Florida Non-Profit HIV/AIDS Organizations rather than have the government pay for it. 

HIV disproportionately impacts low income people, people of color, and LGBTQ people

The Tampa Bay Times first published this story on Thursday, which began gaining attention in the Sunshine State, eventually leading the Democratic Party to, once again, condemn the Big Beautiful Bill pushed by congressional republicans.

“Cruelty is a feature and not a bug of the Trump administration. In the latest attack on the LGBTQ+ community, Donald Trump and Florida Republicans are ripping away life-saving HIV medication from over 10,000 Floridians because they refuse to extend enhanced ACA tax credits,” Democratic National Committee spokesperson Albert Fujii told the Washington Blade. “While Donald Trump and his allies continue to make clear that they don’t give a damn about millions of Americans and our community, Democrats will keep fighting to protect health care for LGBTQ+ Americans across the country.”

More than 4.7 million people in Florida receive health insurance through the federal marketplace, according to KKF, an independent source for health policy research and polling. That is the largest amount of people in any state to be receiving federal health care — despite it only being the third most populous state.

Florida also has one of the largest shares of people who use the AIDS Drug Assistance Program who are on the federal marketplace: about 31 percent as of 2023, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

“I can’t understand why there’s been no transparency,” David Poole also told the Times, who oversaw Florida’s AIDS program from 1993 to 2005. “There is something seriously wrong.”

The National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors estimates that more than 16,000 people will lose coverage

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Cuba

Marytriny, la emperatriz del transformismo

Miami celebrará figura querida el 5 de septiembre, su cumpleaños

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Marytrini (Foto cortesía de Alexis Fernández)

El próximo 5 de septiembre, el arte del transformismo en Miami celebra a una de sus figuras más queridas: Alexis Fernández, conocido en el escenario como Marytriny, la emperatriz del transformismo. Su cumpleaños no es solo una fecha en el calendario: es un recordatorio de que la vida, cuando se vive con entrega y disciplina, se convierte en celebración colectiva. Su historia es testimonio, es lucha y es inspiración.

Marytriny nunca actuó en Cuba en sus inicios, pues su personaje nació en Miami, tierra de libertad. No fue hasta el 2014 cuando, por primera vez, tuvo la oportunidad de presentarse en la isla, como si el destino hubiera conspirado a su favor. Alexis viajó entonces a Cuba en medio de un momento político marcado por el acercamiento entre Barack Obama y La Habana. Su madre estaba enferma y aquel viaje coincidió con una invitación del maestro Raúl de la Rosa al Teatro América.

Al finalizar el espectáculo, en el que Marytriny dio vida a la Guarachera de Cuba, la queridísima Celia Cruz, uno de los directivos del teatro se le acercó y le comentó que su interpretación se sintió como si la misma Celia se hubiera presentado en ese escenario. Vale recordar que, desde su salida en 1960, Celia Cruz nunca volvió a Cuba, salvo durante la crisis de los balseros, cuando cantó a los cubanos que permanecían en la Base Naval de Guantánamo.

En esa ocasión única, Marytriny encarnó a Celia como un acto de rebeldía y de búsqueda personal. Fue la primera y única vez que subió a un escenario en la isla, llevando consigo la fuerza de un arte que en Cuba había sido prohibido y silenciado.

Desde sus primeros pasos en Azúcar Night Club en Miami, Marytriny se convirtió en referencia cultural, ícono de comunidad y símbolo de resistencia. Y aquí surge la primera pregunta: ¿Cómo recuerdas esos primeros pasos en Miami, cuando Marytriny empezaba a nacer bajo las luces de la libertad?

La respuesta de Marytriny refleja la autenticidad de su camino.

“Los primeros momentos fueron duros… era todo desconocido para mí, encontrando un espacio para conectar con un público nuevo. Pero entregué toda mi cubanía, alegría y nostalgia de llegar a un país multicultural como esta ciudad de Miami. Fui yo, auténtico, y de pronto la magia de las risas y el aplauso. Fue como un amor a primera vista entre el público y yo. Ya son 26 años y ese amor a lo que hago sigue igual… la gente lo necesita y agradece. Surge el amor incondicional de este arte”.

La disciplina y la entrega lo llevaron más allá del cabaret.

En Telemundo protagonizó la serie “Decisiones”. En América TV formó parte de la novela de larga duración “La Flor de Hialeah”. También trabajó en el cine y en documentales, entre ellos producciones que narraron la vida de Celia Cruz, confirmando que su talento no conoce fronteras. Y entonces aparece la segunda pregunta: ¿Qué significó para ti abrirte paso en la televisión y el cine, y cómo lograste llevar el espíritu de Marytriny más allá de los escenarios nocturnos?

Su voz, firme y reveladora, responde:

“A medida que fue creciendo mi personaje de Marytriny, su voz fue más fuerte, auténtica y llena de verdades silenciadas. Es la voz de muchos que no saben cuál es el camino para encontrar sus libertades y, sobre todo, a quererse y a liberarse de los prejuicios para recuperar esa libertad que nos arrancaron. Difícil hacerlo desde mi personaje… a pesar del tiempo sigue siendo difícil, sobre todo por muchos conservadores que nos siguen atacando. Pero aquí estamos”.

En 2023, la vida lo enfrentó con un reto inesperado: un diagnóstico de cáncer de próstata. Con la transparencia que lo caracteriza, Alexis lo compartió públicamente. Su comunidad respondió con amor y solidaridad, acompañándolo en cada paso. Tras la cirugía, una rosa blanca en su casa se convirtió en símbolo de fe y renacimiento.

En 2024, dio un paso determinante al participar en “Ser Trans”, una producción de TV Martí que expuso la transfobia en Cuba y recuperó las voces que por décadas habían sido silenciadas. Ese mismo año, la obra fue reconocida con un Suncoast Regional Emmy, un galardón que se convirtió en algo más que un premio: fue la constatación de que esas historias tenían un valor innegable y que ya no podían ser relegadas al silencio.

Y entonces llega la tercera pregunta: ¿Qué aprendiste de ti mismo durante la enfermedad y qué mensaje de esperanza quieres dejar a quienes luchan con sus propias batallas?

Marytriny responde con la fuerza de quien ha vencido la tormenta:

“La vida te pone pruebas duras, pero Dios escoge sus guerreros. Esta enfermedad me sirvió para cambiar mi vida y mi forma de pensar, y para ayudar a otros a tomar conciencia, encontrar la fe y dejar un legado de amor. Tolerancia y disciplina son el camino para lograrlo todo… Por eso digo ¡gracias!, y amor con amor se paga”.

Aunque aún faltan algunos días para la celebración de su cumpleaños, desde ya queremos comenzar a celebrar la vida de Alexis Fernández, un artista con más de dos décadas de trayectoria, mentor, voz y presencia de comunidad. Cada vez que Marytriny aparece en escena, no vemos solo a un personaje: vemos a un hombre que convirtió su arte en un canto de libertad, en una afirmación de identidad y en un motivo de orgullo para quienes lo rodean.

El próximo 5 de septiembre, cuando sople las velas, su cumpleaños no pertenecerá solo a él, sino también a todos los que alguna vez rieron, lloraron o se reconocieron en Marytriny. Porque su vida no es solo espectáculo: es un acto de amor y de resistencia. Y cuando caiga el telón, quedará claro que hemos sido testigos de algo más grande que un show: la vida misma de una emperatriz que brilla más que las estrellas.

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