[2] They would also frequently direct clients to the Center for Special Problems for additional support, such as identification cards that indicated transsexual status.
[2] The NTCU served as a place where transgender individuals could find services related to employment, mental health, legal problems, and more.
[citation needed] Elliott Blackstone managed the NTCU office as part of his role as liaison from the San Francisco Police Department.
In 1973, some of these reactionary members of the SFPD employed an informant to pose as an individual seeking a romantic relationship with one of the NTCU's peer educators.
[2] The organization survived for a bit longer, but due to Blackstone's departure and a discontinuation of funding from the EEF, the NTCU closed in 1974.