CSW Acknowledges LA Pride Parade Will Be Replaced by Protest March

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Equality California marching for equal rights. (Photo by Derek Wear of Unikorn Photography)

With West Hollywood Park construction reducing the space available for the annual pride festival and a protest march replacing the pride parade, this year’s LA Pride in June may prove to be a vastly different experience from recent years.

That was the message coming out of a community meeting on Wednesday night where leaders of the Resist March and Christopher Street West (CSW), the group that produces L.A. Pride, discussed this year’s pride events.

“We’re doing everything we can to make sure that the people who come to the city, sometimes only once or twice a year, are going to see something familiar [at the pride festival],” reported CSW board president Chris Classen, conceding that accomplishing that goal was proving challenging.

The Pride Festival will be a ticketed event, as always (likely $20 per day), scheduled for Saturday and Sunday, June 10-11 in West Hollywood Park, plus a free transgender event and Sizzle sober area on Friday, June 9. However, the entire festival will have to be downsized as a three-year construction project that began in January has closed off a significant portion of the park.

CSW is losing almost 70% of the “footprint” it had available in 2016, Classen reported. Consequently, only West Hollywood Park’s great lawn and the auditorium, plus San Vicente Boulevard between Melrose Avenue and Santa Monica Boulevard, are currently available for this year’s Pride Festival.

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Officials with the City of West Hollywood are negotiating on behalf of CSW to see if part of the Pacific Design Center lot and/or the adjacent Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) lot can be used for the pride festival. CSW hopes to have a final answer about the available footprint following the April 3 City Council meeting when L.A. Pride will next be on the agenda.

As a result of this uncertainty, CSW currently does not know how many entertainment stages it will have. It may only be able to accommodate one stage (last year they had three) and consequently has not been able to begin booking talent.

“I’m not happy that we’re this late in the process. We’re 90 days away [from the festival] and I don’t know where we’re putting things, but we’re going to get there,” Classen assured the two dozen people attending the meeting. He added they expect to use more DJs and less live talent this year.

While the 2016 event was branded as a “music festival” due to the large number of musical acts performing, this year’s will not have that branding.

Meanwhile, the annual pride parade has been canceled, ceding to the nationwide LGBT Resist March that is scheduled in many U.S. cities for Sunday, June 11, the day the Los Angeles pride parade would normally occur.

Similar to the giant Women’s March that took place in dozens of cities across America on Jan. 21, the Resist March in Los Angeles will step off from Hollywood and Highland, since there is a subway station there allowing participants to arrive by mass transit. The march will follow a 3.1 mile path down La Brea Avenue, turning onto Santa Monica Boulevard and ending at San Vicente Boulevard, the entrance to the Pride festival.

With a quarter-million to a half-million people expected to participate in the march, John Erickson, a Resist March committee member, said they expect to have several simultaneous smaller marches in surrounding areas that feed into the larger march going down Santa Monica Boulevard. Resist March committee member Paul Katami reported they will figure out a way to provide transportation back to Hollywood and Highland from San Vicente Boulevard.

With so many people expected to be in the streets, it is impractical to incorporate aspects of the pride parade such as cars and floats into the protest march. “It’s very difficult to mix pedestrians and vehicles,” said Classen, who expects the pride parade to return in 2018.

Since a possible 500,000 people will be marching down Santa Monica Boulevard to the entrance of the L.A. Pride festival at San Vicente Boulevard, many may decide to attend the festival. However, with the smaller festival footprint, it may not be possible to let them all in.

“Security insurance costs the same [whatever the attendance], but I can’t pay for that if I don’t have the footprint to let enough people in to buy tickets and food and beverages. Sixty percent of our income comes from people coming to this festival,” Classen said. “Add on to that the fact that we may have half a million people who come on the march. If I only have room for 5,000 people on San Vicente, where do they go?”

Resident David Reid suggested the pride festival could move to the large Poinsettia Park, which is just across the West Hollywood border in Los Angeles on Romaine Street at Poinsettia Place. Classen said that was a consideration, but pointed out there are advantages to having the pride festival in West Hollywood Park since it is immediately adjacent to the Boystown LGBT entertainment area.

A recent report showed that the pride events generate an estimated $5 million in revenue for West Hollywood businesses, especially those in Boystown. Classen noted that one of the things which makes L.A. Pride unique was its adjacency to the gay entertainment district. He pointed out that in places like San Francisco and San Diego, their festivals are held more than a mile away from the gay districts.

Responding to charges about its finances, Classen reported that the festival has lost money for 10 of the past 17 years. CSW board member Craig Bowers reported that CSW reduced office expenses by 67% after moving from its longtime offices on Santa Monica Boulevard at Harper Avenue to new offices in a back corridor of the Pacific Design Center blue building.

Staffed entirely by a volunteer board, CSW does hire consultants in the period leading up to the festival, but currently has no plans to hire any full time staff such as an executive director, Classen said.

CSW also owns an AIDS hospice, Casa Del Sol, in East Hollywood, which is operated by AIDS Project Los Angeles. Additionally, CSW funds a yearly LGBT scholarship to the University of Southern California (USC).

Wednesday night’s meeting was originally scheduled to be a special meeting of the city’s Lesbian and Gay Advisory Board (LGAB). However, LGAB did not achieve a quorum as only four people of its 10 board members showed up. Consequently, the meeting was transformed into an informal community meeting where CSW and Resist made their presentations.

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story stated that a study found that the annual Pride event generates an additional $9 million in revenue for local workers and businesses. The revenue generated actually is estimated at $5 million. The story has been updated to reflect that.

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Marc Hamilton
Marc Hamilton
7 years ago

I’ve given up of LA Pride, although Long Beach Pride is consistently well run and attended. Recommend Christopher Street West (CSW) explore consolidation of LA Pride and Long Pride into a singular annual event in Long Beach perhaps called SoCal Pride. Engaging Orange County to participate would also be grand. Long Beach is an outstanding venue with superb professional City governance and well maintained and varied facilities which may accommodate annual changes to theme and offerings each year. Return the Pride Parade as a celebration of our community and assign special interest political activism to separate events as it tends… Read more »

Ken Jensen
Ken Jensen
7 years ago
Reply to  Marc Hamilton

EXCELLENT point!!!!!!! I think everyone has given up on LA Pride!!! Seems like nobody cares!

Ken Jensen
Ken Jensen
7 years ago

Will this be the beginning of the end for CSW????

Randy
Randy
7 years ago

Mitch, not a bad idea, but you do realize that that route is more than twice was long as what they are proposing? It is over 7 miles. The entire width of the San Francisco peninsula. I don’t know how many people would be up for a march that long. I think quite a few would bail in the middle.

Mitch Bart
Mitch Bart
7 years ago

I support the Resist March for this year (and maybe until Trump is NOT President!) Sorry Weho but it is time to change the whole design. Go back to the City of LA roots of the event (it’s an LA Pride Event after all). Start the March (or Parade) at Hollywood and Highland or Hollywood and Vine and go EAST on Hollywood and Sunset Blvds through East Hollywood, Los Feliz, Silver Lake and Echo Park ending with the festival at Grand Park DTLA. Grand Park was literally designed for this type of festival! Plus that route is MetroRail accesible at… Read more »

Sean Gotcher
Sean Gotcher
7 years ago

The parade is always such an exciting time. All the floats, all the love, all the laughter. Why can’t we have the parade and follow the last float with a solidarity march?

George Hirst
George Hirst
7 years ago
Reply to  Sean Gotcher

Sean, These are scary times we are living in with the evil GOP/Trump in power. They are not our friends. If it were up to Paul Ryan and Mike Pence they would wipe us off the face of the earth if they could. A unifying march is more inline with what is needed. RESIST!

George Hirst
George Hirst
7 years ago

Plumber park would be best. They have trans already carting people to boystown bars on the weekend. Grand park downtown would be good but the gay bars in WH would likely not make as much money due to the distance. It has always been in WH but things change. Not sure what the heck is going on with all the development at WH park? Talk about wasteful spending.

Bill and Jay McMahon
Bill and Jay McMahon
7 years ago

Yes, sadly, this has resulted in weho and la wanting and getting support and popularity with those who hate at its core value, and there is no room in this event for those who are lovers. Anyway, Hollywood and West Hollywood are known as loveless neighborhoods, and now letting the haters taking over, sad, very sad. All the other suggestions are just political, business, and so out of touch with what the people want and need. Los Angeles should have a counter parade for those who love and want to see love and want to be around people who love,… Read more »

JESS - Registered Voter

Yet ANOTHER Giant Fail for the City of West Hollywood. No Longer a “Gay Mecca” but a sell out to big business. 99% of people do not have a clue about Christopher St. Stonewall Bar circumstances. Ignorant of out history. It is no wonder the ‘straight world’ hates us! We do more harm to ourselves than any one in the straight world could do to us. WE do not have a clue how to be a real “community” how to support one another. Even gay bar business is down, primarily because of lack of security. How long has it been… Read more »

jc
jc
7 years ago

WeHo. You are being extremely DIVISIVE. Half the country voted for Trump. Why alienate half of everybody? Just find a different hobby for next 4 years instead of giving yourselves tumors. Last time there was a “antiTrump” protest in WeHo there was 35 protesters but there was also 35 proTrump ralliers. If you have a protest there will be a rally. I live in WeHo and am happy for the country with our POTUS. The media and sites like this are divisive. There are many Gays for Trump. Why support the media & democrats (for votes) agenda of Islam when… Read more »

Manny
Manny
7 years ago

Has anyone asked the residents on Martel, Willoughby, Fuller, Romaine and Poinsettia how they feel about using Poinsettia Park?……Maybe someone should.

David how about you?

Bill
Bill
7 years ago

All the positive and love that comes out of the parade is going to be replaced with hate for tRump and the other half of America.

Isn’t there a better option?

Follow the Money
Follow the Money
7 years ago

Scott Schmidt = Lauren Meister campaign manager = CSW consultant = Delay in Decision Making = Loss of Pride 2017planning. Lauren’s campaign manager was also receiving money as CSW consultant. 8/22/2016 article WehoVille: CSW budgeted $12,000, apparently for the services of Scott Schmidt, the election compaign manager for and former City Council deputy to Mayor Lauren Meister. As of the date of the financial report, Schmidt had been paid $5,000. City law bars former council deputies from lobbying the City Council, So in August 2016 two months after last years Pride, and when 2017 Pride decisions are being made Scott… Read more »


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