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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 6, 2002)
Steam Portland should be ready for action by next month F ull S team A head espite opposition from a few irate neigh bors, a gay bathhouse is slated to open early in 2003 at Northeast 29th Avenue and Sandy Boulevard. Steam Portland is positioning itself as a cleaner and classier alternative to the seedy scene found at many adult establishments. David Anderson, a co-partner in the venture, told Just Out that members will he provided with deluxe towels, a pair of pajama bottoms and flip-flops upon their arrival. “W hat we’re hoping to do is to create an upscale facility that really focuses on the mem bership aspect— that our customers are members, and they get treated specially,” he said. “W hat D we’re gonna try to do is to make it seem like a spa club and bring the whole event out of the closet.” Anderson, 49, hopes to bridge the genera tion gap that is keeping young gay men from checking out bathhouses. “There was once six bathhouses in Port land,” he said. “In the ’80s, public health con cerns really stifled the development of the con cept of a bathhouse and also really limited the number o f users.... W hat we’re trying to do is to completely update an old concept into some thing really new and fresh.” Like most bathhouses, Steam Portland will provide free condoms for members. Anderson also has assured the Multnomah County Health Department that his business will be profession ally staffed with low turnover. “We have two firm rules: No drugs and alco hol, no barebacking,” he said. “Unsafe sex prac tices will not be tolerated by our staff.” However, not everybody is excited to have another adult business around. According to the Hollywood Star, one man gave Central Northeast Neighbors an earful during a recent board meeting “O nce this goes in, the cancer spreads,” Norm Stoll said. “San Francisco has become a sewer, but they outlawed places like this.” Anderson said those people are entitled to their opinions, however misguided. “T he only reason we ended up here was because of zoning. We had looked for almost a year for a building in a different part of the city,” he said. “It’s ironclad: You cannot regulate busi ness in Oregon by content.” Besides, Anderson added, the increase in foot traffic only will benefit area businesses such as Wendy’s. “We anticipate bringing a significant num ber of people into the neighborhood in off hours,” he said. “T hat alone is going to enhance the security of the neighborhood.” Anderson also promises outdoor monitoring to ensure security and to scare of vandals. “The health and safety of our customers, the positive impact on the neighborhood and a living wage for our staff are all responsibilities that we take very seriously.” For more information visit the Internet site www.steamportland.com. L ively R eturns T he former right-hand man to Oregon C iti zens Alliance chairman Lon Mahon has reared his hateful head again. Scott Lively, an attorney who now serves as president o f Abiding Faith Ministries in Sacra mento, Calif., was in Ashland, Ky., last month to protest officials at Boyd County High for granting a seven-month-old request by students to start a Gay Straight Alliance. T h e school’s teacher- parent council voted 3-2 O ct. 28 to let the club meet after rejecting its application several times. In September, Boyd County High received a letter from the Am erican C ivil Liberties U nion stating that barring the G S A violated the feder al Equal Access A ct. T h e law requires schools to treat all noncurricular clubs the same. Ironically, the act was designed to ensure that religious student groups were not barred from campuses. However, it simultaneously requires schools to permit G S A s to meet as they would any other group. More than 420 students— nearly half the stu dent body— skipped classes Nov. 4 to express their objections to the club. As many as 100 of them, with the support of their parents, contin ued to stay home the next week. More than 1,000 people also attended a protest rally Nov. 10. T h e demonstrations were spearheaded in part by Lively, who was brought in by the Boyd C oun ty Ministerial Association. According to the Lex ington Herald-Leader, he hopes Boyd County will become a model for the rest of the nation by fol lowing his idea to develop a curriculum teaching tolerance for gay people while helping students “clearly understand why homosexuality and relat ed alternative lifestyles are wrong and harmful.” “Most places where I fight this, the liberals are in charge,” Lively said. “But I think they made a mistake by pushing this in this community.” Lively also wants to replace the G S A with Free Sp eech Clubs. He envisions students Continued on Page 8 Be Original. i j ! ■ t/M /t. Ü te /* r a i/f m 5% a lc J by vom m © 2002 C00RS BREWING COMPANY, GOLDEN. COLORADO 80401 • BEER • CNW0417 -V * -' *' '¿JA