Local
D.C. Center lands $25,000 donation
Crew Club contribution to help renovate new space in Reeves building


‘We decided it was important for the Center to be there for all of us in the community,’ said Crew Club owner D.C. Allen (Washington Blade file photo by Pete Exis)
The owners of the Crew Club, a D.C. health club and sauna that caters to gay men, presented the D.C. Center for the LGBT Community with a $25,000 donation on Tuesday at a reception to kick-off a fundraising drive to help finance the center’s move to a new home.
Center Vice President Michelle Ross, who heads the center’s relocation committee, said the donation by the Crew Club through it co-owners D.C. Allen and his husband, Ken Flick, provides a major boost in raising the estimated $75,000 needed to renovate the LGBT Center’s new space in the city’s Reeves Center municipal building at 14th and U streets, N.W.
Ross and D.C. Center President Michael Sessa have said the 15-year lease the Center just signed with the city to rent space in the highly desirable location at the Reeves Center required that they accept the space “as is” and pay for getting it ready for occupancy.
Although the renovation work needed is more extensive than originally anticipated, the two said community supporters like Allen and Flick and other donors along with supporters who are providing pro bono work related to the renovation should make it possible to complete the project by late June, Ross said.
“We decided it was important for the center to be there for all of us in the community,” Allen told the Blade.
Allen said he and Flick have been impressed with the center’s varied programs that help support a diverse cross section of the LGBT community, including programs for LGBT military veterans and LGBT immigrants and those seeking U.S. political asylum. Sports and career development programs as well as addiction and recovery related efforts, including the center’s longstanding crystal meth program, are among many other center activities, Allen said.
“We felt it was extremely important that this not drag on and that they start their renovation and get in there as soon as possible,” he said.
Ross is urging members of the community to visit the center’s website for details of the renovation plans, including floor plans and drawings prepared by an architect and interior designer who are helping with the project. The renovation plans can be viewed at www.thedccenter.org/home.
The need to find a new home for the center surfaced after center officials were told they would have to leave their current space at 1318 U St., N.W., because the building in which they are located will soon be taken down to make way for a new high-rise office building.
The renovation and design plans shown on the center’s website call for naming rooms after large donors and displaying permanent plaques on the walls of the new space bearing the names of contributors.
“Be a permanent part of the Center and purchase a piece of history,” the site says.
Virginia
Va. LG opposed marriage equality affirmation bill in handwritten note
Winsome Earle-Sears constitutionally required to sign HB 174 as Senate president

Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears last year in a handwritten note indicated her opposition to marriage rights for same-sex couples when she signed a bill that affirmed marriage equality in the state.
Brandon Jarvis of Virginia Scope on May 1 published Earle-Sears’s note on House Bill 174, which state Del. Rozia Henson, a Prince William County Democrat who is gay, introduced.
The Virginia Senate passed HB 174 by a 22-17 vote margin, and the state constitution required Earle-Sears to sign it as the chamber’s president. Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed the measure into law after it received bipartisan support.
“As the lieutenant governor, I recognize and respect my constitutional obligation to adhere to procedures set out in the constitution of Virginia,” wrote Earle-Sears in her note. “However, I remain morally opposed to the content of HB 174 as passed by the General Assembly.”
Earle-Sears, a former U.S. Marine who served in the Virginia House of Delegates from 2002-2004, in 2021 became the first woman elected Virginia’s lieutenant governor. Activists have criticized her for her opposition to LGBTQ rights in Virginia.
She sparked controversy last year when she misgendered state Sen. Danica Roem (D-Manassas), who is transgender, on the Senate floor. Earle-Sears has also spoken at the Conservative Political Action Conference.
Earle-Sears is running to succeed Youngkin as governor once his term ends in January 2026. She will likely face former U.S. Rep. Abigail Spanberger, a Democrat who previously represented Virginia’s 7th Congressional District.
John Reid, a conservative talk show host who is openly gay, last month secured the Republican nomination to succeed Earle-Sears as lieutenant governor. Youngkin has called for Reid to end his campaign amid reports that he posted “pornographic content” on social media.
Reid has strongly denied the reports.
World Pride 2025
D.C. liquor board extends drinking hours for WorldPride
Gay bars, other liquor-serving establishments can stay open 24 hours

D.C.’s Alcoholic Beverage and Cannabis Board, which regulates liquor sales for the city’s bars, restaurants, nightclubs, and other establishments licensed to serve alcoholic beverages, has approved extended hours for alcohol service and sales during the days when most WorldPride events will be held in the nation’s capital.
In a May 2 announcement, the Alcoholic Beverage and Cannabis Administration, which works with the board, said the extended liquor serving and sales hours for WorldPride will take place beginning Friday, May 30, through 4 a.m. Monday, June 9.
Although the official schedule for WorldPride events shows the events will take place May 17-June 8, most of the large events, including a two-day Pride street festival, parade, and concert, were expected to take place between May 30 and June 8.
According to the ABCA announcement and an ABCA spokesperson, liquor servicing establishments with the appropriate license can stay open for 24 hours and serve alcoholic beverages from 6 a.m. through the day and evening until 4 a.m., with no liquor sales allowed from 4 a.m. to 6 a.m. during the May 30-June 9 period.
The ABCA announcement says liquor serving establishments must apply for the extended hours option and pay a $100 registration fee by a deadline on May 27.
Sources familiar with the liquor board have said the board has for many years approved the extension of liquor serving and sales hours for important events and for certain holidays such as New Year’s Eve.
At the time it approved the extended hours for WorldPride the liquor board also approved extended hours during the time when games for a World Cup soccer tournament will be held in the city on June 18, June 22, and June 26.
It couldn’t immediately be determined how many of D.C.’s 22 LGBTQ bars plan to apply for the extended drinking hours. David Perruzza, owner of the Adams Morgan gay bar Pitchers and its adjoining lesbian bar A League of Her Own, said he will apply for the 4 a.m. extended hours option but he does not intend to keep the two bars open for the full 23 hours.
Under the city’s current alcoholic beverage regulations, licensed liquor serving establishments may serve alcoholic beverages until 2 a.m. on weekdays and 3 a.m. on weekends.
World Pride 2025
Episcopal bishop to speak at WorldPride human rights conference
Trump demanded apology from Mariann Edgar Budde over post-Inauguration sermon

The Right Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde is among those who are scheduled to speak at the WorldPride 2025 Human Rights Conference that will take place from June 4-6.
Budde, who is the bishop of the Diocese of Washington, in January urged President Donald Trump “to have mercy” on LGBTQ people, immigrants, and others “who are scared right now” during a post-Inauguration service that he and Vice President JD Vance attended at the Washington National Cathedral. Trump criticized Budde’s comments and demanded an apology.
The Right Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde speaks at the Washington National Cathedral on Jan. 21, 2025. (PBS NewsHour clip)
A press release the Washington Blade received notes Icelandic Industries Minister Hanna Katrín Friðriksson, UK Black Pride founder Phyll Opoku-Gyimah, and Bob the Drag Queen are among those who are also expected to participate in the conference.
The conference will take place at the JW Marriott (1331 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.) and registration is open here.
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