“AIDS: Over 1,000 Islanders Diagnosed but Help Exists for Those Affected,” Staten Island Advance, April 17, 1994, G32. This entry was written by project consultant Gale Harris. Renamed the LGBT Pride Center of Staten Island, it became a fully independent organization, owned and operated by its LGBT members, in 2016.
In 2010, this became the LGBT Community Center with Vogel as its executive director. In 2008, CHASI consolidated its services to the LGBT community by establishing the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Health Center at 25 Victory Boulevard.
It continued the community-building precedents set by EAGLE, organizing Rainbow Families of Staten Island, a support group for lesbian and gay parents, their children, and family members, in 2004 and sponsoring Staten Island’s first LGBT Pride March and Festival in 2005. By that point, EAGLE had become the LGBT Health and Wellness Program. In 2004, the Task Force changed its name to Community Health Action of Staten Island (CHASI) to reflect an expansion in its services. Its monthly newsletter, Eagle Update, described upcoming programs and provided a calendar of LGBT events on Staten Island.Īfter 2000, the Task Force moved its headquarters to an office building on Bay Street but retained its Hyatt Street storefront as one of three satellite offices. EAGLE also partnered with Lambda Associates and other LGBT groups for special events, Pride celebrations, and political activities and distributed safer sex materials at o gay bars and other locations frequented by gay men. Periodic workshops focused on HIV/AIDS prevention and harm reduction and trained volunteers to do education and outreach in the LGBT community. Beginning in 1999, there were also twice-monthly “Teen Safe Space” meetings to provide social support to LGBTQ young adults.
In 1996, the program’s name was changed to Education on AIDS in a Gay & Lesbian Environment (EAGLE).ĮAGLE’s programs included weekly support group meetings for HIV+ gay men, monthly men’s and women’s discussion groups, a Transgender Friendship Circle, and LGBT-themed movie nights. These included a Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual HIV Initiative, which was headed by Chris Bauer, an activist involved in Lambda Associates and Democratic politics. Vogel, Director of the Outreach and Volunteer Department. The increased space was needed for four new programs that had been developed by Ralph W. It contained two subsidiary spaces, the “Living Room,” a meeting and gathering place, and the “Resource Room,” a library with treatment information and internet access. In 1995, the Task Force expanded its operations in this building, moving to a larger storefront at 23 Hyatt.
In December 1993, the Task Force moved its main offices to 42 Richmond Terrace, but kept the storefront at 29 Hyatt. As soon as it opened, the storefront attracted a large number of passersby seeking information about AIDS. In November 1992, it leased the storefront at 29 Hyatt Street, adjacent to the theater entrance, as a temporary office. With infections and deaths skyrocketing, the Task Force’s staff grew quickly. The only AIDS service organization on the Island at the time, it began with a staff of three and a handful of volunteers who occupied a small office on the fifth floor of this office building (accessed via the entrance at 25 Hyatt Street), which was erected in conjunction with the St. The Staten Island AIDS Task Force was formed in 1988.