Monterey Herald

Same-sex marriages found in half million homes in the US

- By Mike Schneider

ORLANDO, FLA. >> Five years after the U.S. Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriages around the U.S., more than a half million households are made up of married same-sex couples, according to figures the U.S. Census Bureau released Thursday.

Since 2014, the year before the U.S. Supreme Court legalized same sex marriages, the number of married same-sex households has increased by almost 70%, rising to 568,110 couples in 2019, according to the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey.

Of the 980,000 samesex couple households reported in 2019, 58% were married couples and 42% were unmarried partners, the survey showed.

There were slightly more female couple households than male couple households.

“Opponents of marriage equality frequently argued that same-sex couples really weren’t all that interested in marriage. But the large increase in marriages among same-sex couples since marriage equality became legal nationwide offers evidence of the clear desire for marriage among same-sex couples,” said Gary Gates, a demographe­r specializi­ng in LGBT issues.

The survey revealed noticeable economic difference­s between male couples and female couples, as well as same-sex couples and opposite-sex couples.

Same-sex married couples had a higher median income than opposite-sex married couples, $107,210 compared to $96,932. In same-sex marriages, though, male couples earned more than female couples, $123,646 versus $87,690. According to the survey, same-sex married households were more likely to be in the workforce than oppositese­x married households, 84.6% compared to 80.4%.

However, there was a difference between gay and lesbian couples. Married women in same-sex households were much more likely to be working than married women in opposite-sex households, but the reverse was true for married men in samesex households. They were less likely to be working than married men in opposite-sex households, according to the Census Bureau.

“While most research shows that gay and bisexual men, on average, do not earn more than their comparable heterosexu­al male counterpar­ts, that research also shows that they tend to earn more than lesbian and bisexual women,” Gates said. “Unfortunat­ely, gender discrimina­tion is present, regardless of sexual orientatio­n.”

Separate survey results also released Thursday show almost 15% of same-sex couples had at least one child under age 18, compared to 37.8% of opposite-sex couples. Of the nearly 300,000 children living in a homes with same-sex couples, 66% were children of both partners or spouses, compared to 95% for oppositese­x couples, according to the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey.

The District of Columbia had the greatest concentrat­ion of same-sex households, at 2.4% of households, followed by Delaware (1.3%), Oregon (1.2%), Massachuse­tts (1.2%) and Washington State (1.1%), according to the American Community Survey.

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