In July 1987
Eric Rofes and Richard Burns convened a gathering of lesbian and gay community center leaders at the
Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Community Center in conjunction with the
National Gay and Lesbian Health Association annual conference, seeking to build peer support and an exchange of ideas. the heads of the Dallas, Denver, Los Angeles, Minneapolis and New York Centers (respectively, John Thomas, Kat Morgan,
Lorri L. Jean, Ann DeGroot and Richard Burns) launched the National Association of LGBT Community Centers as part of the celebrations marking the 25th Anniversary of the
Stonewall Rebellion with the goal of strengthening the movement of LGBT community centers. At that time, more than thirty centers gathered for an all-day meeting at the
Lesbian & Gay Community Services Center of New York during the Stonewall 25 commemorations. The Association began organizing twice-yearly annual meetings, in conjunction with the Health Association conference and the
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force's Creating Change Conference. Regional meetings also were organized around the country. Without paid staff, the Association relied for many years on the leadership and coordination efforts of an annually elected Executive Committee composed of seven leaders of member centers. In January 2004, CenterLink hired its first executive director and opened a national office in Washington, DC. In 2008 the Association changed its name to CenterLink. ==References==