{"id":115,"date":"2026-06-01T09:11:37","date_gmt":"2026-06-01T09:11:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/businessrelocationdigest.com\/?p=115"},"modified":"2026-06-01T09:11:37","modified_gmt":"2026-06-01T09:11:37","slug":"every-borough-is-represented-in-the-city-councils-queer-caucus","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/businessrelocationdigest.com\/?p=115","title":{"rendered":"Every borough is represented in the City Council\u2019s queer caucus"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<p>When Christine Quinn joined the New York City Council as a staffer in 1992, the city\u2019s elected officials were not well acquainted with New York\u2019s queer communities.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/businessrelocationdigest.com\/?p=113\">Who else might Mamdani endorse?<\/a><\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhen I first started out \u2013 back in the Dark Ages\u00a0\u2013 other elected officials, they all thought every gay person lived in the 3rd Council District,\u201d she said. \u201cThat\u2019s what they thought.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Quinn was working for Tom Duane, one of the first out gay men in the council, who represented that Manhattan seat comprising Hell\u2019s Kitchen, Chelsea and the West Village. She was later elected to the same seat and then became the first out gay speaker of the City Council.<\/p>\n<p>District 3, home of The Stonewall Inn, is in fact a seat with a legacy of gay representation.\u00a0Its current member, recently elected Council Member Carl Wilson, is an out gay man. But today, the City Council\u2019s out LGBTQ+ contingent \u2013\u00a0formally organized into the LGBTQIA+ Caucus \u2013 is far more vast and diverse, through virtually every lens one might consider that term.<\/p>\n<p>The seven current members of the council\u2019s LGBTQIA+ Caucus include a self-described socialist abolitionist and a Trump-supporting Republican.Its members endorsed Zohran Mamdani, Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Sliwa in last year\u2019s mayoral election. All five boroughs are represented. It has Black, Asian, Latino and white members, a co-chair of the Progressive Caucus and a co-chair of the Jewish Caucus. Members are in their late 20s and late 60s \u2013 and the several decades in between. Its new co-chairs, Chi Oss\u00e9 and Justin Sanchez, are two of the council\u2019s youngest members.<\/p>\n<p>That diversity brings together unlikely allies like Lynn Schulman, a moderate Democrat from Forest Hills, Queens, and Tiffany Cab\u00e1n, a socialist representing the north end of the Commie Corridor on the western side of the borough, who are both queer women trying to convince local hospitals not to cave to pressure from the Trump administration to end healthcare programs for transgender youth.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI think it speaks to our experiences as being queer people in community \u2013\u00a0always incredibly respectful, always super thoughtful,\u201d said Cab\u00e1n, who was a co-chair of the caucus for the past four years, of the members coming together despite their differences.<\/p>\n<p>But the caucus\u2019s diversity can also make for some awkwardness. Carr, the first and only Republican in the caucus, is from the same party whose leadership most other caucus members deride as the source of the most urgent threats to LGBTQ+ people in New York, particularly to transgender people.<\/p>\n<p>Members speak respectfully of each other but acknowledge that the body\u2019s decision-making comes down to a simple provision: Majority rules. Disagreements often end with Carr simply being outvoted on whether the caucus will put out a statement or support a given policy. The caucus meets regularly \u2013 somewhere between quarterly and monthly, according to the co-chairs \u2013\u00a0but in budget season, its leaders talk more informally almost daily.<\/p>\n<p>Schulman said there are issues that the seven members can broadly agree on \u2013\u00a0supporting treatments for HIV\/AIDS, health clinics and addressing youth homelessness. \u201cI think where the diversity becomes an issue is some of the political stuff,\u201d she said, pointing to when caucus members called out former Mayor Eric Adams or when they call out the Trump administration. The latter happens a lot.<\/p>\n<p>But Carr, who also serves as minority leader of the massively outnumbered Republican conference of the council, is not exactly new to being outvoted.Still, Carr, who lives with his husband on Staten Island, said he feels he has a voice in the caucus and has been able to advocate for funding for the borough\u2019s Pride Center \u2013\u00a0which provides a wide array of programming and health services for LGBTQ+ New Yorkers, and which credited Carr with helping grow its resources.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cMy general approach is just to sort of send a message to LGBT New Yorkers that we come in all kinds of different political stripes, and that there\u2019s no one political party that has a monopoly on us,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd I\u2019m always just trying to bring my unique perspective as a Staten Islander to the table. We\u2019ve never had a direct voice in that way before.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI think the makeup of the caucus we see today is in a lot of ways a real reflection of the diversity of the LGBTQ community within the city,\u201d said Democratic strategist Amit Singh Bagga. \u201cOne could, I think accurately, presume that, by and large, you are talking about a group of people that are relatively liberal. But that is not exclusively the case.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>This year\u2019s caucus is only just starting up, but it\u2019s newly empowered. For the first time, it has been allocated funding to hire an executive director and a couple of paid interns \u2013\u00a0a move caucus leaders credit to Speaker Julie Menin. Rather than having the co-chairs\u2019 own staffers moonlight as caucus staffers, the new resources will help the caucus organize and advocate for funding for LGBTQ+ organizations around the city \u2013\u00a0a major part of its work over the past few years, alongside laying out a policy agenda.<\/p>\n<p>In an April video announcing the news \u2013 in Oss\u00e9\u2019s signature social media style \u2013 the new Executive Director Yanery Cruz laid out the caucus\u2019s mission plainly: \u201c(It) will ensure our city remains a queer and liberated one.\u201d Cruz, former director of advocacy and programs at the New York Transgender Advocacy Group, is a trans woman herself.<\/p>\n<p>As the Trump administration has focused on rolling back rights for transgender people \u2013 from a military service ban to threatening funding for hospitals providing gender-affirming care \u2013\u00a0Oss\u00e9 said fighting for funding for organizations serving trans people is a top priority. \u201cWe want to make sure that in the same way that this is a sanctuary city for immigrants, that this is a sanctuary city and a safe place for trans people to live and to receive the health care that they deserve and need in order to survive,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p>Unlike council committees, which have a formal role in the legislative process, caucuses in the New York City Council can be what their leadership makes of them.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/businessrelocationdigest.com\/?p=111\">Opinion: Make the Charter Revision Commission count<\/a><\/p>\n<p>When former Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer was a member \u2013\u00a0a tenure that overlapped with the council\u2019s second out gay speaker, Corey Johnson \u2013\u00a0there was a focus on advocating for funding for LGBTQ+ nonprofits that he had long been underfunded but which were providing crucial services like youth shelters or HIV and sexually transmitted infection testing.<\/p>\n<p>In those years, the caucus ranged from four to seven members. The more prominent the caucus was, the greater impression it could make on the Budget Negotiating Team and council leadership. \u201cWe had a lot of great allies who are not queer, obviously, but it is different when queer people are at the table and when we bring numbers and when we\u2019re unified,\u201d Van Bramer said. \u201cThat produces wins.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In the past few years, the LGBTQIA+ Caucus (renamed in 2022) has continued to fight for funding for those and many more organizations in the city budget. Last year, the caucus celebrated the inclusion of more than $13 million to LGBTQ+ organizations in the city budget, including what caucus leaders called historic funding for organizations serving trans people in particular.<\/p>\n<p>As this year\u2019s budget deadline approaches, advocacy groups want to see that funding grow. As of the time of writing, Oss\u00e9 and Sanchez said conversations with the caucus and council leadership are still ongoing over funding priorities, but that they\u2019re pushing to at least maintain last year\u2019s investments.<\/p>\n<p>The caucus held a roundtable in April with nearly 30 organizations to hear about their needs. Taylor Brown, the executive director of the new Mayor\u2019s Office of LGBTQIA+ Affairs and a trans woman, was there, and caucus leaders are hoping she and the broader Mamdani administration will be a partner in the budget negotiations.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt has been such a breath of fresh air to really see an administration that really, truly centers some of our most vulnerable and really understands the crisis that our community is in,\u201d Sanchez said. While Sanchez is new to the council, several returning members said Mayor Eric Adams\u2019 administration was not always a helpful partner, and criticized comments he made last year about wanting to revisit school policy allowing students to use bathrooms based on their gender identity.<\/p>\n<p>Post-budget, the caucus also aims to build on a  released in 2023 under co-chairs Cab\u00e1n and Council Member Crystal Hudson \u2013\u00a0updated the next year under Cab\u00e1n and then-Council Member Erik Bottcher \u2013 which laid out a wide range of legislative and other priorities for queer New Yorkers, in particular Black and brown people. Policy objectives ranged from supporting the decriminalization of sex work to opening more shelters tailored to young adults. The framework also pushed for a Mayor\u2019s Office of LGBTQIA+ Affairs \u2013\u00a0which Mamdani created this year.<\/p>\n<p>While the caucus\u2019s new leaders may put their own spin on what was first called the Marsha and Sylvia Plan, lots of the work still remains. Cruz said she\u2019s hoping to revive at least one issue that was included in the initial plan: ensuring trans people going into city jails aren\u2019t discriminated against, starting with where they\u2019re placed.<\/p>\n<p>Though caucus members raised a wide range of issues they hope to work on in the next year \u2013 addressing an uptick in HIV cases, securing funding for cultural and arts initiatives, building on a union hiring program \u2013\u00a0multiple members continually returned to trans health care and services as a particularly urgent need under the Trump administration.<\/p>\n<p>That is an issue Carr hasn\u2019t been vocal about. When asked about Trump\u2019s various trans-related orders, Carr said he thinks everyone should be able to serve in the military, but declined to say outright if he agreed or disagreed with threats to NYU Langone Health for offering gender-affirming care to people under 18 or efforts to bar trans women from playing on women\u2019s sports teams.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI think that every person deserves to be treated with respect and dignity. That\u2019s always how I come at everything, and the trans community is no different,\u201d he said. \u201cI have trans members of my own family. I love them dearly, and always want to support them. I think that\u2019s generally what\u2019s informed my approach. I think that where we come into difficulty with everything is that one person\u2019s rights end where another begins.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>If it\u2019s an area of disagreement with the broader LGBTQIA+ Caucus, it may not be one with many operational consequences, but an area where Carr is simply outvoted. \u201cThe Republican Party and Donald Trump have been targeting a group of people that make up less than 1% of the population, and I see it as this caucus\u2019s priority to support those people, and you know, really want to work with all members of this caucus on being loud about that,\u201d Oss\u00e9 said. \u201cMany folks within this caucus have been loud champions, and, you know, some could be a bit louder.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>There\u2019s an undeniable urgency to the issues that caucus members and the organizations they work with raise as priorities. \u201cSome would like to say we\u2019re at kind of a post-gay era. We\u2019re not,\u201d Quinn said. \u201cThe community faces terrible challenges right now, in the city, state and country.\u201d In addition to Trump\u2019s trans actions, she cited hate crimes and bullying in schools, as well as higher unemployment and lagging salaries.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe\u2019ve gained a lot,\u201d Hudson said, referring to same-sex marriage, \u201cand yet we still have very far to go. We have Black trans women that are being killed. We have the trans community under a constant attack.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Even with that urgency, the new caucus is eager to celebrate at this month\u2019s annual Pride event: what Sanchez and Cruz said will be the first \u201cCity Hall Ball,\u201d a celebration of Ballroom culture in the chamber. \u201cThe idea behind it is five boroughs, three categories, one crown,\u201d Sanchez said, keeping those categories close to the vest.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cBallroom is about self-expression. Ballroom is about truly tapping into whatever fantasy that you want to be for that day, that night, that hour,\u201d Sanchez said. \u201cAnd it is about achieving dreams that usually were unachievable.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/businessrelocationdigest.com\/?p=109\">Mamdani\u2019s EDC, still leaderless, still stressing out the NYC business community<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>With a new executive director and a citywide mandate, the bipartisan (!) group is getting to work. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":114,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[71,30],"tags":[73,31],"class_list":["post-115","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-new-york-city-council","category-personality","tag-new-york-city-council","tag-personality"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - 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