Los Angeles LGBT Center Mourns the Death of Former Board of Directors Member Rose Greene - Los Angeles LGBT Center

Los Angeles LGBT Center Mourns the Death of Former Board of Directors Member Rose Greene

July 12, 2019
Contact: Media Relations

In response to the passing of Rose Greene, who died on Thursday, Center CEO Lorri L. Jean issued the following statement:

“Today the Center joins our community in mourning the loss of a true warrior in the fight for LGBT equality, health, and happiness. Rose dedicated much of her life to building and strengthening the Center. She served on the Center's Board of Directors on two different occasions: for six years from 1989–1995 and again from 2006–2011. She was Board Co-Chair during the courageous and historic capital campaign (the first in the LGBT world) to purchase the Center's 44,000-square-foot headquarters in Hollywood, now known as the McDonald/Wright Building and one of nine locations. The Center's success in that campaign inspired others throughout the nation, among them the New York LGBT Center and the Human Rights Campaign.

“She presided over the Board during difficult times, including Governor Pete Wilson's veto of AB101—a bill that would prohibit employment discrimination based on sexual orientation—and the imposition of Don't Ask Don't Tell, and during heady times, such as the decision to mount a second capital campaign to purchase and renovate what became The Village at Ed Gould Plaza. As Board Co-Chair, Rose also helped develop, and then rode, in the first California AIDS Ride in 1994, a 545-mile bike ride from San Francisco to Los Angeles that raises money for HIV and AIDS related services at the Center. Now known as AIDS/LifeCycle, the event has raised more than $280 million in the fight against the disease. Under her leadership, the Center also opened the Jeffrey Goodman Special Care Clinic in 1993, which expanded free and comprehensive early intervention HIV and AIDS medical care. She also was a strong advocate of the Center's Board moving to the next level in giving and fundraising so that more could be accomplished to serve the most vulnerable in our community. The Center is what it is today, thanks in part to Rose's leadership and vision.

“I'll never forget that day in the summer of 1992 when my San Francisco office phone rang, and it was Rose whom I had never met. Her mission was to recruit me to apply for the job of Executive Director at the Center. Her passion was infectious. Her commitment impressive. She succeeded, and that pivotal moment changed my life. Rose left this Earth way too early at the age of 72. But she went out fighting following a stem cell transplant in her quest to defeat bone cancer.

“Today the Center lauds this tireless champion of the oppressed, this extraordinary, amazing, powerful, hilarious, and loving woman. May she rest in peace.”

About the Los Angeles LGBT Center

Since 1969 the Los Angeles LGBT Center has cared for, championed, and celebrated LGBT individuals and families in Los Angeles and beyond. Today the Center's nearly 800 employees provide services for more LGBT people than any other organization in the world, offering programs, services, and global advocacy that span four broad categories: Health, Social Services and Housing, Culture and Education, Leadership and Advocacy. We are an unstoppable force in the fight against bigotry and the struggle to build a better world; a world in which LGBT people thrive as healthy, equal, and complete members of society. Learn more at lalgbtcenter.org.

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