WeHo celebrates Lesbian and Queer Visibility Week

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The City of West Hollywood and its Lesbian and Gay Advisory Board and Transgender Advisory Board will recognize Lesbian and Queer Women Visibility Week with a week-long celebration beginning Monday, April 25, 2022. Lesbian Visibility Week is an annual observance celebrated in the United States and Europe dedicated to increasing the awareness of lesbian identities and issues. Lesbian Visibility Week will be celebrated worldwide from Monday, April 25, 2022 to Sunday, May 1, 2022. A full list of activities taking place in West Hollywood during the week can be found at www.weho.org/lgbtq.

“Lesbian and Queer Women Visibility Week transforms West Hollywood’s promise of inclusion into reality for a large segment of our community in a way that embraces all Queer women,” said City of West Hollywood Mayor Pro Tempore Sepi Shyne. “I’m thrilled to be celebrating this week in the City and I invite everyone to ‘Meet Me in the Park’ on Saturday, April 30th for an amazing day of educational panels, and lots of fun and games on West Hollywood Park’s Great Lawn.”

“Visibility and awareness are critical tools to help us uplift and celebrate our vibrant LGBTQ community,” said Councilmember John M. Erickson. “As various states enact ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bans, I’m proud that here in West Hollywood we not only say ‘gay’ loudly but we say it proudly! I’m thankful to all of the organizers who are working on West Hollywood’s Lesbian and Queer Women Visibility Week and I look forward to continuing to see the vibrant actions and events they bring to our city, our residents, and our businesses.”

On Monday, April 18, 2022, at its regular meeting, the City Council of the City of West Hollywood will issue a Proclamation to commemorate April 25, 2022 through May 1, 2022 as Lesbian and Queer Women Visibility Week. The City will display the Lesbian Pride flag in medians on Santa Monica Boulevard; West Hollywood City Hall and lanterns over Santa Monica Boulevard between Hancock Avenue and N. Robertson Boulevard will be lit in pink, orange, white, and red to reflect the shades of the Lesbian Pride flag.

On Saturday, April 30, 2022, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., the City will host Meet Me in the Park – a gathering for Lesbian and Queer Women on the Great Lawn at West Hollywood Park, located at 647 N. San Vicente Boulevard. The day will include “You Want Me to Call You What?” a Lesbian Speakers Series panel discussion featuring gender non-confirming, nonbinary, and masculine presenting persons who have created welcoming workspaces for lesbian and queer women of all presentations. Panelists will include: Dr. Diandra Bremond (she/her) Adjunct Professor at USC; Kim Fuentecilla (she/her/they/them) Assistant Principal at Animo Ralph Bunche Charter High School; Madin Lopez (they/them) Executive Director of ProjectQ); Kalela McNeil (she/her) Actor, Comedian, and Entrepreneur); and the panel will be moderated by Zekiah N. Wright (they/them) Labor Attorney and member of the City’s Lesbian and Gay Advisory Board. Meet Me in the Park will also include a dog-meet up and dog contest, sporting activities, and park games. For more information and to RSVP, please visit Eventbrite.

Since incorporation in 1984, the City of West Hollywood has become one of the most influential cities in the nation for its outspoken advocacy on LGBTQ issues. No other city of its size has had a greater impact on the national public policy discourse on fairness and inclusiveness for LGBTQ people. More than 40 percent of residents in West Hollywood identify as LGBTQ and three of the five members of the West Hollywood City Council are openly LGBTQ. The City has advocated for more than three decades for measures to support LGBTQ individuals and has been in the vanguard on efforts to gain and protect equality for all people on a state, national, and international level.

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For more information about the City of West Hollywood’s Lesbian and Queer Women Visibility Week or the City’s Lesbian and Gay Advisory Board or its Transgender Advisory Board, please contact Moya Márquez, the City of West Hollywood’s Community Programs Coordinator, at [email protected] or at (323) 848-6574. For people who are Deaf or hard of hearing, please call TTY (323) 848-6496.

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Merriam-Webster
Merriam-Webster
2 years ago

Merriam-Webster. Queer: Odd, strange, weird. Not exactly a complimentary way to define oneself. Seems self defeating.

LOL Weho
LOL Weho
2 years ago

It’s amazing the people promoting all these things are extremely unattractive. Looking at them, they would turn a funeral in another direction. Especially the She.

greeneyedguy
greeneyedguy
2 years ago
Reply to  LOL Weho

So, you’ll try and use someone’s hometown as an insult, resorted to immature name-calling, and now you’re just calling people ugly.

How low can you go?

:dpb
:dpb
2 years ago

Gawd dang. Between pronouns, another’s flag colors, poetry reading, stringing lights down more of Santa Monica Blvd. and the progressive flag debate, when does this council get a day off? Such a pressing agenda. God help us West Hollywood. God help us, indeed.

J. Daniel Harrington-Tyrell
J. Daniel Harrington-Tyrell
2 years ago

We can make pretty flags for inclusiveness , but we cannot protect those who are marginalized that live in Weho, and if you speak to this hypocrisy you are labeled racist.

Ham Shipey
Ham Shipey
2 years ago

who is “marginalized”?? what does that even mean?

greeneyedguy
greeneyedguy
2 years ago
Reply to  Ham Shipey

Google.com is free

J. Daniel Harrington-Tyrell
J. Daniel Harrington-Tyrell
2 years ago
Reply to  Ham Shipey

The flag represents marginalized people. Sometimes people are brainwashed by their own ignorance.

LOL Weho
LOL Weho
2 years ago
Reply to  Ham Shipey

Marginalized to someone like John Erickson.

jose
jose
2 years ago

Jesus Christ…ENOUGH!
If these morons spent 1/3 of the time on the basics of running a safe, clean small city than they do on LABELS and painted crosswalks, West Hollywood would be a decent, safe city again.

Ham Shipey
Ham Shipey
2 years ago

good grief

What next!
What next!
2 years ago

What about a West Hollywood Citizens Celebration week. Taxpayers who don’t where their sexual preferences on their hoodies like members of the WEHO City Council. Whose endless propaganda makes one feel like they should be celibate. Enough already with this claptrap out of the moths of the SHE. What’s next TransEvangelist Week?

Last edited 2 years ago by What next!
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[…] Márquez, the Metropolis of West Hollywood’s Group Packages Coordinator, at [email protected] or at (323) 848-6574. For people who find themselves Deaf or exhausting of listening to, please […]

Alan Strasburg
Alan Strasburg
2 years ago

Lost in the discussion forced by the identity nazis is choice in expression. I know more than a handful of women who identify as “gay women” because that is their choice. I am not queer, for me that is a triggering word, but the bully brigade of intolerance of expression would seem to force that identity on me. Intolerance on the left is every bit as toxic as intolerance on the right. The irony is the militancy in the lack of individual freedom afforded to the individual in this groupthink era. Please make room for visibility for my gay women… Read more »

Identity
Identity
2 years ago
Reply to  Alan Strasburg

The word “Queer” has always seemed untenable. It is a horrible adjective, pronoun or noun to be adopted by any self respecting individual.

greeneyedguy
greeneyedguy
2 years ago
Reply to  Identity

Queer has been reclaimed by younger members of the community. I understand why some people don’t like it though.

https://www.npr.org/sections/publiceditor/2019/08/21/752330316/a-former-slur-is-reclaimed-and-listeners-have-mixed-feelings

Wacky WeHo
Wacky WeHo
2 years ago

Harken to the new crosswalk color scheme

Jim Nasium
Jim Nasium
2 years ago

Is that another flag?! Oy Vey!