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LGBTQ+ artists design family-friendly show for Leicester’s Spark Festival

A team of LGBTQ+ artists have designed an event specifically for family audiences, aimed at children aged three to eight, and their families. PALAVAR Parties – an event by Birmingham’s Fatt Projects – which has previously featured at various venues across the UK, will be presented as part of the Spark Festival; an annual children’s arts festival held in Leicester in February.

PALAVER Parties are fun, interactive, glittery events that will include disco-style music and dancing, and interactive crafting activities. Children will have the chance to create individual fancy dress items – crowns, hats etc – and get some glitter face paint, and watch performances (including songs, storytelling, and dance) from a diverse line-up of professional artists, all dressed in fabulous and fantastical outfits.

The organisers of the event say: “Audiences have the option to participate as little or as much as they want. Through gentle encouragement and participating in a range of activities over the course of the party or event, children will be able to feel more confident and feel empowered to express themselves.”

All the artists involved in creating the project were asked ‘what did you need to see when you were younger?’ and have used this as a way to create an event that speaks to their experiences of growing up as an LGBTQ+ person.

The organisers add: “The overall aim is to spread a message of love and acceptance – that all people are equal, and that the things that make us different are the things we should celebrate about ourselves (rather than feeling embarrassed or sad about them).

“We want young people attending these events to understand that they can be whatever they want to be and to feel like they have the power within them to create the things they want. Most importantly, we want everyone to attend to have fun, enjoy themselves, and feel joyful.”

PALAVAR Parties has been designed to create a fun, celebratory, and inclusive atmosphere that aims to provide high-quality and engaging entertainment which also celebrates different kinds of families (where some people have two mums or two dads) and spreads the message that it’s OK to love whoever you want. The organisers say: “Sometimes princesses marry princesses and sometimes princes marry princes.”

The event is just one of many events for children and their families being held as part of The Spark Festival, Leicester, which is celebrating is twentieth anniversary with a line-up that runs from Monday, February 13 to – Sunday, February 19.

More information, including a full festival programme, can be found on their website.

Birmingham Pride Community Foundation seeks volunteers

Birmingham Pride Community Foundation (BPCF), has put a call out for volunteers who will act as trustees to join the group that is responsible for distributing funds from the Birmingham Pride Festival to the LGBTQ+ community groups in Birmingham and the wider West Midlands (Coventry, Dudley, Sandwell, Solihull, Walsall and Wolverhampton).

They are looking to recruit a number of trustees who will help make decisions about how the community fund is spent to support the local LGBTQ+ community. The recruitment process is open to everyone; however, Birmingham Pride want their board of trustees to “actively reflect the wider community which we support, and their lived experiences,” therefore, they are “proactively seeking and encourage applications from the under-represented groups in our community.”

Those interested in volunteering can find out more and request an application by emailing the BPCF Chair, Steve Ball, at drsteveball@hotmail.co.uk. Closing date for applications is February 17.

Census reveals most popular areas of Birmingham for LGBTQ+ people

The latest census (Census 2021) marked the first time that people of England and Wales were asked about their sexuality and gender identity. The figures that have now been released, reveal the most popular areas of Birmingham for those identifying their sexuality as something other than heterosexual (gay, lesbian, bisexual, pansexual, queer or other), and also provide some insight into figures for those who have a gender identity different from their sex registered at birth.

In the Local Authority District (LAD) of Birmingham, 3.01% of people aged 16 years and over are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or other. While 0.88% of people aged 16 years and over have a gender identity different from their sex registered at birth.

It is also possible to see which areas of Birmingham LAD are home to the most LGB+ people; these figures do not include trans and gender non-conforming people who did not also identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or other, as these figures were recorded separately.

At the top of the list of areas is Selly Oak, where 11.33% of people aged 16 years and over are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or other. Birmingham City Centre – home to Birmingham Gay Village – came second on the list of areas with a large LGB+ population with 10.21% of people (1 in 10) aged 16 years and over identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or other. Just below that is Digbeth, where 10.19% of people aged 16 years and over identity as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or other.

Other areas of Birmingham with large populations of lesbian, gay, bisexual and other sexualities include: LadywoodSummer Hill (9.09% of people), Edgbaston South & University (8.61%), Bournville East & Stirchley West (6.65%), Stirchley North & Selly Park (6.45%).

When it comes to people aged 16+ who have a gender identity different from their sex registered at birth, in Central Birmingham this made up 0.96% of the population. In Ladywood – Summer Hill 1.14% of people aged 16 and over have a gender identity different from their sex registered at birth, while in Selly Oak, the figure is 1.10% of the population.

Short film written and directed by Birmingham-based filmmaker to explore AIDS and prejudice

Birmingham-based queer filmmaker Ellie Hodgetts is writer and director of a new short film entitled The Side Ward, which tells the story of a nurse who confronts her own prejudice after building a connection with a patient with AIDS on her ward. Set in 1985 in Liverpool, the film follows Rosie, a middle-aged nurse working the nightshift at a hospital on Christmas Eve.

During this time, Rosie befriends Steven, a patient with AIDS, and as their connection and mutual understanding builds, Rosie begins to confront her own prejudices about HIV, as well as the prejudices of those around her.

“I’m a Birmingham-based filmmaker, particularly motivated to make films centring women and the LGBTQ+ community, with a focus on 20th century queer history,” said Ellie, who also wrote and co-directed BFI and Dublin Pride supported short film Fairview Park – a production based on the homophobic murder of Declan Flynn.

Ellie is joined in the production of The Side Ward by producer Laura Torenbeek, an award-winning filmmaker based in Leeds who was nominated for a best producer award at Underwire in 2015, and who has recently produced her second independent feature film. Laura is interested in telling the stories of marginalised people and producing in a sustainable way.

In their Greenlit project campaign, the team behind The Side Ward explain, “During the AIDS epidemic, there were several cases reported of medical professionals refusing to treat AIDS patients or those believed to be at risk of contracting the disease (namely gay and bisexual men).

“The stigma around the disease was rife, with many men having to not only face their medical condition, but also the deep shame and prejudice imposed on them by a society that refused to help them.

“Through this film, we hope to share messages of tolerance and self-reflection, as well as the importance of human connection in the darkest of times.”

The Side Ward team is currently crowdfunding for the short film project on Greenlit.

Four arrested following ‘hate-related sexual assault’ in Birmingham’s Gay Village

Four men have reportedly been arrested for a violent sexual assault in Birmingham’s Gay Village, following what is being described as a hate-related sexual assault. The victim, who is in her 20s, was subjected to a vicious assault, both verbally and physically, and threatened with a knife on Hurst Street just before 5.30am on Sunday, January 8.

A West Midlands Police spokesperson said, “Our CCTV operators spotted the suspicious activity and when the crime was reported almost an hour later, they were able to back-track on the CCTV and direct officers to the suspects.

“The four [men], aged between 18 and 22, remain in custody for questioning. We do not tolerate hate crime in our city and have recently set up a new StreetWatch in Birmingham’s Gay Village – the first of its kind in the country.”

Despite the support of StreetWatch – a new voluntary patrol service set up following direct feedback during Birmingham Pride – the group Birmingham Against LGBTQI+ Hate said, “[This is] another deeply disturbing hate crime in Birmingham’s Gay Village. More needs to be done to keep our community safe in the centre of a space they should be most secure. StreetWatch is made up of volunteers but we need stronger action from authorities.”

To find out more about StreetWatch and how you can help, read our previous article, email streetwatch@westmidlands.police.uk or visit @StreetWatchWM on Twitter.

Flats planned for former Wolverhampton LGBTQ+ nightclub and carpark given green light

Plans for 145 new flats, which will replace LGBTQ+ friendly Gorgeous nightclub as well as the former Beatties car park in Wolverhampton city centre, have been approved.

In a statement submitted alongside the application, Dave Carroll Planning – the agents acting on behalf of applicants, SSYS Beatties Ltd – said: “The proposal is to demolish the car park, add a car parking basement with a commercial ground floor, and also six full floors of between 19 and 21 flats per floor.

“There will also be seventh and eighth residential floors with shared amenity space. Nearly all the flats will have at least one balcony – but all of them will have access to communal open space in the five amenity decks provided.

“The Gorgeous nightclub will be replaced by commercial floor space and relocated to a different site within the Beatties ‘estate’.”

First opened by James Beattie in 1877, the historic Beattie’s shop premises – which is adjacent to the carpark and Gorgeous nightclub site – has already been given planning permission to SSYS Beatties Ltd, who bought the building and will transform it into an apartment complex of more than 300 luxury flats.

The adjoining car park, including the Gorgeous nightclub on the ground floor, were built much later than the original store, and are set to be re-developed as residential apartments, with Gorgeous nightclub relocating as part of these plans. Their new home will be a purpose-built nightclub for the city in the new future.

Councillor Lynne Moran said: “I think city centres up and down the country are changing in terms of the built and retail environment. Wolverhampton looks forward to large improvements in the city centre, enhancing access and the night-time economy.”

Mayor of the West Midlands and MPs across the region call for more funding for HIV testing

The Mayor of the West Midlands, Andy Street – and other MPs across the region, including the leaders of Birmingham, Coventry and Sandwell – have called on the Health Secretary, Steve Barclay, for funding and action for HIV testing.

In the West Midlands, five out of seven boroughs are deemed as high-prevalence areas for HIV – Wolverhampton (3.47 people per 1,000 adults), Coventry (3.1), Sandwell (2.92), Birmingham (2.69), and Walsall (2.45).

Current government guidance is that everyone having blood taken in A&E in these areas should automatically be tested for HIV unless they ask not to. This ‘opt-out’ testing is proving transformational in London, Blackpool, Brighton, and Manchester. In a press release from Andy Street for Saving Lives and Terrence Higgins Trust, it was reported that: “In 100 days of new funding these areas found 128 people living with undiagnosed HIV and 65 with diagnosed HIV but not getting the care of one of our world-leading clinics and drugs that will make them well.”

Andy Street explains that this “only exaggerates the absence of these funds in the West Midlands. How many people might now know their HIV status and themselves be on a journey to stop the virus attacking their immune system and stopping the onward transmission of HIV? Not enough.

“Every one of those people deserves to know their status like those in the capital do. It would cost just £1.6 million a year for our nine hospitals in high prevalence areas to routinely test. Done together there would be economies of scale, meaning further saving for NHS England or the funds to do tests across Dudley and Solihull’s A&Es too.

“In London and Manchester, they have also included hepatitis B and hepatitis C testing. They were six times as likely to find the former and twice as likely the latter. The same would be true in our region.

“This investment would save money for the NHS within a matter of months and relieve, not cause, pressure in our A&Es. In Croydon, their average time in hospital for a newly diagnosed patient with HIV went from 34.9 days to 2.4 over 32 months. People with undiagnosed blood-borne viruses have a weakened immune system and greater use of the NHS. It is time the NHS stopped their viruses going unseen. Treatment is available, it is effective and it is cost-efficient.”

Andy Street, therefore, has written to the Health Secretary to ask for funding to ensure that Birmingham’s latest edition to the city, The Ribbons – the HIV and AIDS Memorial – is not simply a tribute but also “a reminder that HIV is still happening to many in our lives – right under our noses. In this region we all call home. There is work to do, let’s get to it.”

New volunteer patrol service to begin in Birmingham’s gay village amid safety concerns

Lead Pic: Hilli Fletcher and Stuart Shorthouse (co-ordinator and deputy co-ordinator of Rainbow StreetWatch.

A new patrol service, Rainbow StreetWatch, will begin in Birmingham’s gay village in response to concerns over safety from those in the city’s LGBTQ+ community who frequent the Southside area of Birmingham.

Rainbow StreetWatch – a West Midlands Police initiative – is thought to be the first voluntary service of its kind in the country, and was launched in response to feedback given by the community in a survey during Birmingham Pride, say the police service. The police said that people had reported concern for their personal safety as they travelled from bar to bar in the village following several attacks in the area.

“As well as being a friendly and visible presence to make people feel safer, Rainbow StreetWatch, as they call themselves, will report things like pot holes and broken streetlights to Birmingham City Council,” a spokesperson said.

“They will report any crimes, antisocial or suspicious behaviour they see to our officers, Southside street wardens or bar security teams.”

Rainbow StreetWatch patrols will take place in and around Hurst Street, covering the LGBTQ+ village. The group are currently looking for more people to volunteer and take part, and anyone over 18 can volunteer as long as they are willing to dedicate just two hours per month to patrolling.

This initiative is part of the wider work to make this area of Birmingham safer. To find out more about Rainbow StreetWatch, including how you can help, email streetwatch@westmidlands.police.uk or follow @StreetWatchWM on Twitter.

Birmingham’s Cover-Up HIV Memorial Quilt to go on display

The Cover-Up Quilt Project is an Arts Council-funded community art project, led by Garry Jones, which features 40 quilt panels each of which signify a historic moment or memory – locally, nationally or internationally – in the 40 years since the first HIV diagnosis in the UK. These 40 quilt panels will now go on display in Birmingham city centre from Tuesday, January 10.

The quilt panels – which were used in the World AIDS Day procession ahead of the grand reveal of the city’s new AIDS and HIV memorial The Ribbons – will be displayed in a Centenary Square tour exhibition which will see them exhibited in the Library of Birmingham, the Rep Theatre, the Exchange Building, and Symphony Hall; all of which are located on Centenary Square. Visitors will be able to view them in these venues until Tuesday, January 31.

Each of the 40 quilt panels celebrates, remembers or educates people about a significant moment in the history of HIV and AIDS from It’s A Sin – the celebrated Russell T Davies show which inspired Garry Jones to campaign for a memorial in Birmingham – to the undetectable = untransmittable campaign, which serves as a reminder that HIV positive people on effective antiretrovirals with undetectable levels of the virus in their body cannot pass the virus on to others.

One of the quilts is a homage to Dorothy Towers, a block of flats in the city – officially called the Sentinels – which gained a reputation for being a place where many LGBTQ+ people lived, and during the height of the HIV epidemic in the mid-’90s, many living in these blocks had the virus; some sadly passed away.

Another of the panels is in memory of Tom Matthews, an AIDS campaigner who lived with HIV. He and his partner, Ian Scott, were together for nearly 35 years but initially believed that they would only have two years together. Tom sadly passed away aged 74 from a medical condition unrelated to his HIV+ status, decades after his diagnosis.

Ian told BBC Midlands Today: “He was the most wonderful person. He was just amazing, there was something really inspiring about him.”

A group called Sew Marvellous were involved making the quilts, ensuring each panel was ready for the reveal of the city’s memorial. Sue Sharpe, from the sewing group said it was “quite moving to hear some of the stories. You don’t hear about the 40-odd million or so who’ve died of HIV and if you do, it tends to get categorised with the gay community and it’s not just the gay community, it affects a lot of people.”

After it’s display in the Centenary Square venues, the Cover-Up Quilt will be displayed at Birmingham City University’s Millennium Point from February 1 until February 28.

Birmingham Pride could be forced out of city centre by new development

Birmingham Pride Festival – the city’s largest festival – has been housed at the Smithfield area since 2018, holding three of its events on the site, with a fourth in May 2023 also planned. A new development on this site, however, could force Birmingham Pride’s organisers to move the festival to another site outside of the city centre.

The Smithfield is a 17-hectare site, which was formerly home to Birmingham’s Wholesale Market, and it also hosted various events as part of the 2022 Commonwealth Games including the beach volleyball and the 3×3 basketball competitions.

A new proposal – which will deliver 82,000 sqm of office space, 3,079 new apartments and 44,000 sqm of retail – is due to be built on the site by 2035, with work taking up to ten years.

Lendlease said its planned development will “provide the community with a new public square with space for public art activities.” Birmingham Pride organisers, however, have said that the plans will not be able to accommodate the roughly 20,000 people who attend the LGBTQ+ festival every year.

Lawrence Barton, Director of Birmingham Pride, believes that the proposal falls short of what they were originally promised, leaving a space for public art activities that will only accommodate less than a quarter of the festival’s usual footfall.

Barton told ITV News Central: “The only city-centre site that can accommodate Pride at the size it is now, is Smithfield. This development will force us out of the city centre.

“Moving it away from the gay village, for example, to Cannon Hill Park, would also withdraw all the benefits LGBTQ+ venues get from the festival, which brings thousands of visitors.”

Councillor Ian Ward, Birmingham City Council leader, added: “I’m absolutely committed to ensuring that Birmingham Pride has a long-term future in this city and I’m continually in talks with the organisers. Together we will make sure that Pride has a future here in Birmingham.

“Birmingham Pride is now the largest community festival held in this city. It’s an event that I regularly attend and enjoy and I’ve seen it grow from strength to strength. It has now grown to such a scale that it is difficult to accommodate it, but we will find a permanent solution to the challenges that Pride faces.”

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