Pride Month event Queerbomb may not happen due to lack of volunteers
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Local community-organized event Queerbomb is at risk of not happening this year due to a lack of volunteer organizers, according to a long-time organizer of the event.
The event is one of the first during LGBTQ+ Pride Month. It features a rally, march and party—all of which typically take dozens of labor hours to set up.
The event began 15 years ago to 'counter the whitewashed, reductionist, corporate, 'family-friendly' pride that has become the status quo across the country,' according to a social media post.
Organizer Sage West, who has worked on the event's administrative side since 2016, told KXAN that many volunteers never returned following the COVID-19 pandemic.
'What I always wanted Pride to be': Queerbomb Austin returns after pandemic pause
'We used to have an average of probably a dozen, dozen and a half people on a regular basis, and then it would increase day of,' they said. 'Oftentimes [now], there's less than half a dozen of us, usually about half of that that attend regular meetings. All of these organizers, save for myself, work for either the government or nonprofits that are dependent upon the government for funding, so they are in real danger of potentially losing their jobs [in the current moment].'
Queerbomb is planned via group calls over the course of the year. Volunteers set up fundraiser events and the actual event on those calls, voting on decisions as needed. But a repeated decision to get march permits has drawn a lot of criticism online.
A march will draw police presence to block off intersections along the route regardless of permitting. Volunteers explored alternatives in previous years but ultimately voted to get permits to avoid liability.
West noted that community donations have never been used to pay Austin Police and that police officers are not present during other parts of the event.
'They have never been allowed in the actual event…we've never called the cops for an issue,' they said. 'The problem is that they're there at all in any aspect. That is what people are pushing back upon.'
For 2025, whether or not law enforcement will be present hasn't been decided, because no decisions about the event have been made yet.
'NOTHING has been decided for the Queerbomb and is why we're so desperate for people to come out and help us organize,' read a Queerbomb post replying to the criticism. 'If you don't want cops it is not some miraculous effort that takes years to make happen.'
West said that critics of the event are welcome to join the meetings on the second Tuesday of each month.
'Anyone can come and comment and join the crew and make their voice heard,' they said. 'Those who show up make it happen. So if you want something different, come make it happen — Be the change you want to see.'
The next Queerbomb general meeting is on March 11.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
First readings of spay/neuter and canine control ordinances scheduled
princeton – A proposed county spay/neuter ordinance and canine control ordinance with goals of controlling the local homeless pet population are scheduled for first reading today before the Mercer County Commission. A canine control ordinance's first reading is an early item on today's commission meeting agenda. This meeting begins at 10 a.m., at the Mercer County Courthouse. County Commissioner Greg Puckett said this ordinance for canine control is a change in the current leash law. 'This helps clarify that dogs do not need to be tethered to be controlled,' he said. The ordinance states that tethering or putting a dog on a leash is a form of control, but not the only way to control a dog, Puckett said. Keeping dogs behind a fence so they can't wander around a community is another way to control them. Making the ways pet owners can keep their dogs under control clearer is a better way to address the county's animal issues, he said. In March, Matoaka residents spoke to the county commission about the problems they were having with stray dogs tearing into trash and harassing people. 'We've had these issues for decades,' Puckett said. 'We did have that public meeting and a lot of what came out of that public meeting was ways to solve a lot of these problems. I want to thank everybody who came out. The solutions that are being supported have come out of that public meeting. We want to thank the community and assure them that we heard them loud and clear.' The canine control ordinance would include getting a county dog warden. Sheriff A.P. Christian said that under West Virginia Code 19-20-16, counties are authorized to hire dog warden. The sheriff's department would not be the agency hiring a warden. The county has animal control officers, but their duties are focused on dogs and cats being treated inhumanely, Christian said. Dog wardens are authorized to pick up stray and unlicensed dogs that are roaming the county. After the canine control ordinance's first reading, Puckett is scheduled to do the first reading a county spay/neuter ordinance. The county tried to institute a spay/neuter ordinance in 2019 before the COVID-19 pandemic. The goal of passing an ordinance is to manage Mercer County's large population of homeless dogs and cats. Both last year and this year, the Mercer County Animal Shelter has declared Code Red situations whenever its facilities were too full, Puckett said. Code Red is declared when euthanasia may be considered to make more room. In October 2024, the Furever Fixed low-cost spay/neuter clinic opened near the county animal shelter to help decrease the homeless pet population. The nonprofit clinic has been busy with both dogs and cats, said Director Connie Gillespie. 'Oh gosh yes,' Gillespie said. 'We had that dry spell when we were between veterinarians. We do have a full-time veterinarian now four days a week. We do have a waiting list that we are working on with still over 300.' The spay/neuter clinic recently completed over 300 spays and neuters through the West Virginia Spay/Neuter Program with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Gillespie said. Since April 1, the program has helped pet owners from Mercer, Monroe, McDowell, Raleigh and Summers Counties. There are clients who do not show up for appointments, but the clinic also helps the neighboring animal shelter by doing spay and neuter procedures. 'We are nonprofit but we are not a government-run solution,' she said. 'Every animal that leaves our facility that is spayed or netuered has a certification of sterilization their owners can show landlords and anybody else that needs to know their animals are fixed.' Farmers and hunters told the commission the last time a spay/neuter ordinance was proposed was that it would harm their work dogs and hunting dogs. Puckett said the proposed ordinance has variances for hunters, breeders and other owners that don't want to spay or neuter their dogs. Contact Greg Jordan at gjordan@
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
New super PAC launches anti-Mamdani ad push amid criticism over pro-Palestinian stance
NEW YORK — A group of executives in New York's finance, law and communications sectors has launched a new super PAC to oppose Zohran Mamdani's mayoral run, kicking off with an ad accusing the socialist of pushing to 'defund the police' amid an increase in pro-Palestinian protests in the city. The PAC, called Sensible City, Inc., disclosed in filings released Tuesday it has raised $211,000 so far to oppose Mamdani, who has consistently polled as the runner-up to Andrew Cuomo, the favorite to win the June 24 Democratic mayoral primary. The ad's focus on pro-Palestinian protests comes as Cuomo and other moderate Democrats have accused Mamdani of aligning himself with antisemitic causes due to his outspoken criticism of Israel's war in Gaza. Mamdani has rejected those accusations as politically motivated, saying he's adamant about fighting all forms of hate. Asked if he recognizes Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state, Mamdani has said Israel has a right to exist as a state with 'equal rights for all.' The PAC was launched by Alan Sash and Daniel Horwitz, partners at two prominent New York law firms, as well as investor Eric Eve and PR professional Lisa Wolford, paperwork shows. The largest single donation to the PAC to date came from Rob Stavis, a partner of Bessemer, a venture capital firm, who gave $100,000. Other contributors include Eagle Capital Management founder Ravenel Curry, who gave $50,000, and designer Danyelle Freeman, who also gave $50,000. Filings show the PAC has already plunked down $100,524 on airing the new ad slamming Mamdani. The ad started going out on digital platforms over the weekend. 'It doesn't stop: day after day, streets blocked, demonstrations, some calling for killing, destruction, it's not safe. Institution walls defaced with symbols to remind us of what can happen only because of who we are. The haters mean every word they utter. What can we do?' a voice in the digital ad says as imagery flashes across the screen of pro-Palestinian protests and anti-Israel vandalism playing out on New York City streets. 'Zohran Mamdani wants to defund the police, we need a mayor who puts more cops on the street. What's your June 24 Democratic primary choice?' A rep for the new PAC didn't immediately return a request for comment from the Daily News. Mamdani, a Queens Assembly member and democratic socialist, has in the past supported calls for defunding the police. As a mayoral candidate on the 2025 campaign trail, he has called for keeping NYPD staffing levels flat. Mamdani spokesman Andrew Epstein called the new PAC expenditure a 'desperate' attempt to push back on the candidate's left-wing agenda, which includes vows to increase taxes on corporations and millionaires to bankroll expanded free child care and public transit. 'It's always amusing when some of the richest people in the city are so outraged at the idea of paying just a little more in taxes that they spend tens of thousands of dollars on deceitful and slanderous attack ads,' Epstein said. 'New Yorkers will see this for exactly what it is: desperate.' The new PAC spending comes as recent polls have shown Mamdani closing in on Cuomo. A May 28 poll from Emerson University put Mamdani just 8% behind Cuomo. A separate PAC, Fix the City, has raised more than $12 million, mostly from billionaires and powerful business executives, to boost Cuomo with ads and other political messaging. The Fix the City expenditure is the largest super PAC spend on a single election in New York history. _____

Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Councilor wants paid parking at Willard Beach for non-residents
Jun. 10—The city of South Portland is considering charging people from out of town to park at Willard Beach as early as next summer. On Thursday, Councilor Natalie West will request that the City Council set up a workshop to discuss the potential parking change. This is a preliminary step, and at least two other councilors must support this workshop for it to move forward. In her request, West argued that the city needs to identify a revenue source to maintain Willard Beach, and that it is appropriate that non-residents contribute to covering these costs. She recommended converting the Willard Beach parking lot, which has approximately 60 parking spaces, and the Willard Hose parcel, which could potentially fit 75 parking spaces, into paid parking lots for non-residents. She also proposed the creation of a seven-person subcommittee with two councilors and members from the Conservation, Economic Development and the Bike-Ped committees to look into the practicalities of instituting paid parking for non-residents. The Willard Beach Master Plan, a comprehensive document that was approved by the City Council in 2023, first recommended the idea of paid parking for non-residents. This document presented a number of considerations for the implementation of paid parking: the need for additional staff, the purchase of residential stickers, the installation of a digital parking machine and the bounds for which the paid parking should extend within the neighborhood. Approval of the master plan stipulated that if the city wanted to move forward with any of the suggestions, they would need to bring it forth in the workshopping process. If approved on Thursday, that process would begin. Copy the Story Link