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LGBTQs needed on homeless panel

San Francisco Mayor London Breed has had a mixed record on appointments, particularly regarding the LGBTQ community. While she has nominated and seen approved many LGBTQ people over the years, there have been missteps. In 2021, she nominated four straight people (over a period of time) to the city’s Historic Preservation Commission. One of them, Christina Dikas, was rejected by the Board of Supervisors rules committee and ended up withdrawing her nomination after realizing she would not have the support of the board. This whole episode occurred when Breed chose not to reappoint two gay members of the preservation panel. Breed then nominated an LGBTQ person, Jason Wright, to the preservation panel, and he was approved.

Last year, Breed named three straight women to the school board after the recall of three commissioners. One of them, Ann Hsu, wrote a racist response on a candidate questionnaire that sunk her campaign for a full four-year term and was ousted last November. (Breed’s other two nominees, Lisa Weissman-Ward and Lainie Motamedi, were successful in their election campaigns.)

Now comes news that one of Breed’s nominees to the city’s new homelessness oversight commission, Vikrum Aiyer, a straight man, fudged his resume regarding his education and, worse, billed U.S. taxpayers for personal expenses that totaled more than $15,000 when he worked in former President Barack Obama’s administration. Aiyer, a technology executive, now calls those actions “a grave mistake,” according to published reports in the San Francisco Chronicle and San Francisco Standard.

Breed was aware of the transgressions, which included Aiyer stating on his resume that he had a master’s degree when he left a graduate program early, and the mayor’s office told the Chronicle that he accepted his mistakes.

Suffice it to say, Aiyer should withdraw from consideration, and failing that, the Board of Supervisors should not approve him for the post. Indeed, the Chronicle reported Tuesday that Aiyer does not have six votes that would be required for approval. This homelessness oversight commission, which was created when voters approved Proposition C last year, is brand new and needs stellar members, including those who have experienced homelessness and LGBTQ people, many of whom are impacted by homelessness, especially queer youth and trans people. Breed should nominate a qualified LGBTQ person if Aiyer withdraws or is rejected by the supervisors. (The Board of Supervisors will nominate the other three members of the homelessness commission and its picks should include an LGBTQ person as well.)

The mayor, who did not support the ballot measure that created the new oversight panel, also nominated three other people: Katie Albright, CEO of Safe and Sound; Jonathan Butler, Ph.D., a social epidemiologist and associate director of the Black Health Initiative at UCSF and executive director of the San Francisco African American FaithBased Coalition; and Sharky Laguana, the former president of the city’s Small Business Commission and nightlife advocate.