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Saranac Lake hosts Tri-Lakes Pride Festival

The Tri-Lakes Pride festival parade makes its way down Main Street, Saranac Lake, on Sunday, June 25. (News photo — Aaron Marbone)

SARANAC LAKE — The second-ever Tri-Lakes Pride festival in Saranac Lake on Sunday, June 25 was bigger than last year, with more than 200 people gathered in Riverside Park.

This year, organizers added a parade at the start of the event, which comes as hundreds of anti-LGBTQIA-plus bills are proposed in state legislatures around the country.

As the crowd made their way to Riverside Park down Broadway and Main Street, waving flags and cheering, onlookers joined right in, marching with them.

Adirondack North Country Gender Alliance Executive Director Kelly Metzgar, who led the parade, said this was just like the Stonewall riots, which many believe to be the birth of the modern gay liberation movement.

The Stonewall Riots started on June 28, 1969. The riots — a clash between police and members of the LGBTQIA-plus community that stretched over six days — were sparked by a police raid of the Stonewall gay bar in New York City. Police raids in gay bars were common at the time, according to the Library of Congress. It was illegal to serve alcohol to gay people in New York until 1966, and in 1969, being gay was still considered a criminal offense. As a result, many gay bars served alcohol without a liquor license, and police raids of the bars and police brutality against gay people was common. The first Pride march was held in New York City a year after the riots, on June 28, 1970.

Peru resident Sean Brace, who performs under the drag name Mhisty Knights, said Pride is still what it was more than 50 years ago at Stonewall — LGBTQIA-plus people fighting for the right to be who they want to be. That is a fight that is ongoing, Knights said, and LGBTQIA-plus rights are being challenged hard in other states around the country.

Knights said they’re not going to stand by and go back into the closet.

“We’re not going anywhere. We’re not changing who we are. They can pass all the legislation they want. We’re still going to be here,” Knights said. “If Stonewall happens again, go for it.”

Locally, Knights said Malone’s Small Town Pride event was challenged by locals there, including some churches, who called the mayor and chamber of commerce to try to stop the event. Knights was encouraged that that didn’t happen in Saranac Lake.

Two retired reverends from the Adirondack Presbyterian Church in Lake Clear were at Tri-Lakes Pride, as were representatives of the St. Eustace Episcopal Church in Lake Placid and Keene Valley Congregational Church.

Feeling safe was a big part of Pride this year for many in attendance.

The Human Rights Campaign, or HRC, declared its first-ever state of emergency for LGBTQIA-plus Americans on June 6 — the first declaration of its kind in the organization’s more than 40-year history. According to the HRC, 77 anti-LGBTQIA-plus bills were signed into law from Jan. 1 to June 8, 2023. That’s more than double the number of anti-LGBTQIA-plus bills signed into law in all of 2022, which previously held the record for the most anti-LGBTQIA-plus bills passed, according to the HRC. Many of these laws — some of which have been struck down in courts for being unconstitutional — target transgender people. They seek to restrict transgender health care, regulate what bathrooms people can use, attempt to ban trans students from playing on sports teams that align with their gender identity, and limit drag shows.

Meanwhile, violence and intimidation from anti-LGBTQIA-plus hate groups flourish at events and in individual confrontations.

“The fact that it is political at all is ridiculous,” Saphire Ahlers said.

On Sunday morning, Ahlers had seen a map compiled by the transgender independent journalist Erin Reed, showing which states transgender people are at the highest risk in. Florida was labeled as “do not travel.”

This distinction for Florida comes because of a law legislators and the governor passed there last month, making it a crime for a transgender person to use a public bathroom marked with the gender they identify as. Punishments for this crime include up to a year of jail time, which will likely not be in a jail that aligns with their gender, Reed posits.

Ahlers, who described feeling unsafe at times in day-to-day life, said they found out they were nonbinary in college. Before then, they didn’t have vocabulary to describe how they were feeling. They thought they were just an ally.

This was a common theme for the many young LGBTQIA-plus people at the event. They said their feelings of being a different gender than the one they were born as, being attracted to the same gender or feeling genderless, come from inside and that they’re looking for the world to accept and recognize them that way.

In addition to the fashion show and drag performances, a few people delivered speeches at Pride.

Owen Gilbo, an equal opportunity specialist from the state Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation and a trans man from Ticonderoga, said with so much hate toward people like him in America, he was encouraged to see the celebration in Saranac Lake. Driving into town, he was held up in traffic because of the parade. He said it was impressive to see such support in a small community.

“It brought tears to my eyes,” Gilbo said.

He read a proclamation stating that the state of New York is horrified by attacks on LGBTQIA-plus people around the country, in violence and in legislation, and declared that New York is a safe haven for LGBTQIA-plus individuals. On June 25, Gov. Kathy Hochul signed a “Safe Haven” act for transgender youths in New York state. It was passed by the state Assembly and Senate earlier and state Assemblyman Billy Jones, D-Chataugay Lake, voted to support the bill and walked in the parade on Sunday.

“People should be able to express themselves and live their lives the way they want,” he said on Monday. “That’s all what any of us are trying to do.”

Saranac Lake village Trustee Rich Shapiro, Franklin County Legislator Lindy Ellis, Harrietstown Supervisor Jordanna Mallach and the Adirondack North Country Association’s Adirondack Diversity Initiative director Tiffany Rea-Fisher also spoke at the event.

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