Here & Queer in Winston-Salem: North Star LGBTQ Community Center

What does it look like to create space for LGBTQ individuals in a mid-sized town in the American South? North Star LGBTQ Community Center, located on Burke Street in Winston-Salem, seeks to answer this question — and after two years of significantly reduced programming due to COVID-19, it is back in action.

“It’s never been more important than now to hold this programming,” said Mary Jamis, ex-board member at North Star and local activist and business owner. “COVID-19 has been extremely isolating, especially for queer people. In many respects, North Star is one of a limited selection of resources that LGBTQ folks in Winston-Salem can tap into.”

North Star is a grassroots non-profit organization that seeks to enrich and empower the lives of LGBTQ individuals in the Triad area by offering various social, support, and educational opportunities for adults and youth.

COVID-19 has been a huge obstacle for North Star’s programming. Some programs, like Alcoholics Anonymous “Rainbow Room,” continued to meet on Zoom. Rainbow Room is an opportunity for members of the LGBTQ community who are dealing with addiction to connect and unpack this experience in a space free of homophobia or transphobia.

Beyond Rainbow Room, nearly all other programming paused for the duration of COVID-19 restrictions, with only occasional virtual events. The Center restarted in-person community drop-in hours last month on Saturdays for the first time since 2020.

Engaging the youth demographic in the Triad is a priority for North Star. They aim to make queer youth feel heard and safe. When North Star was founded in the early 2010s, its founders were acutely aware of heightened statistics of homelessness and suicide for LGBTQ youth and aimed to create support for this population, according to Jamis.

North Star’s work with LGBTQ youth continues to take many different forms, including its Youth Leadership Council for middle and high schoolers, a youth book club restarting this month, and events at local schools (like a student-led forum on inclusivity at West Forsyth High School last fall).

Students sometimes travel over an hour to North Star in search of community from neighboring towns like Mount Airy. Ashley Davis, North Star’s intern and coordinator of the Youth Leadership Council, said: “It’s so important to create space for youth to build that community, especially when they are facing problems, whether that is in school, legislation, or otherwise.”

The organization is run by volunteers like Davis, though as funding allows, they sometimes employ a part-time center manager, according to Deb Marke, the Vice Chair of North Star’s Board of Directors. North Star is funded by grants and donations, which pay for rent and programming.

North Star’s work does not happen in a vacuum. In recent weeks, stories on Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law have circulated nationwide. This bill bans classroom instruction about sexual orientation or gender identity, and LGBTQ advocates have said  that it will harm the mental and physical health of LGBTQ students across the state. North Carolina is no stranger to anti-LGBTQ legislation: in 2017, the state legislature passed HB2 or the “bathroom bill”, which targeted transgender people by placing strict regulations on bathroom use.

“This space was created because in all the ways that Winston-Salem is progressive, we are still in North Carolina,” said Marke. “Forms of homophobia and transphobia may not always show up in the most overt ways, they show up in policies.”

What’s next for North Star over the coming months, and even years?

According to Marke, it’s unclear whether Downtown is where the need for North Star is anymore in terms of accessibility. North Star may not remain on a public bus line, which is an important mode of transportation for many visiting the center. North Star’s Board of Directors plans to continue considering this issue as the situation develops. Regardless of North Star’s potential move, Marke expressed enthusiasm for programming and outreach to come.

Image credit: https://www.northstarlgbtcc.com/

Author: Abby Furman