The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett school board’s Blair comes out

Its first black member says he’s gay, hopes he can be role model.

- By Arlinda Smith Broady abroady@ajc.com

When Everton Blair won the District 4 seat for the Gwinnett County Board of Education, he made history. As the first black man on the board as well as the youngest, voters looked to him to be a breath of fresh air among members who were old enough to be his grandparen­ts. His base skewed young and minority.

“I want the community to have representa­tion by someone who looks more like them and that they can relate to on different levels,” he said.

Now he’s adding another first to the list as he declares on National Coming Out Day that he identifies as gay.

“It’s not something that I’m hiding or that I’m ashamed of anymore,” he said. “I looked at it as a nonissue, but as I live my life publicly, I don’t want people to be timid about it or dance around it.”

He says he also wants LGBTQ students to have someone they can relate to and aspire to be like.

“I didn’t attend the most prestigiou­s schools growing up, but I worked hard to achieve what I’ve become. And I don’t have a special skill that others don’t possess. I want kids to know that.”

He also wants them to know that he’s gone through what some of them are experienci­ng now: the bullying, the hiding, the feeling of being less than others, grappling with identity.

“Everybody can reach out to me, but I want those kids to know that I’m not just an advocate, I’m a member of the group.”

Blair is among a growing demographi­c in politics. Although he’s now one of three openly gay Gwinnett County officials — the others being Rep. Sam Park, D-Lawrencevi­lle, and Ben Ku, Gwinnett County commission­er for District 2 — metro Atlanta has had several elected officials and many more candidates from the LGBTQ community.

Cathy Woolard first ran for Atlanta City Council in 1997 and eventually became council president. She ran for mayor of Atlanta in 2017. She was the first openly gay elected official in Georgia history. Most recently Antonio Brown won a seat on Atlanta City Council that was left vacant after the death of Councilman Ivory Lee Young Jr., 56, from cancer in November.

Rep. Karla Drenner, D-Avondale Estates, was the first openly gay member of the Georgia General Assembly, and Joseph Geierman is the first openly gay mayor of Doraville.

Even though society appears to be more open to “nontraditi­onal” candidates, coming out isn’t necessaril­y a political advantage, said Scott Ainsworth, head of the political science department at the University of Georgia.

“Obviously at t itudes have changed in the last several decades, but it probably doesn’t

add support,” he said. “At best it’s neutral.”

But Annise Parker, president and CEO of LGBTQ Victory Fund, a nonpartisa­n political action committee dedicated to increasing the number of openly LGBTQ public officials in the United States, believes being open about one’s sexuality can garner points for honesty.

“You’ll probably see more people who say they don’t agree with the candidate’s ‘lifestyle,’ but if they were honest about that, they’re more apt to be honest about other things.”

As a former mayor of Houston, Parker was the first openly LGBTQ person elected mayor of a major American city. But every election is important, she said, adding that 2018 was a “watershed moment” for the LGBTQ community, with more than 700 “out” candidates.

An estimated 4.5% of U.S. adults identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgende­r, and they tend to be younger and poorer than the population at large, according to an analysis of polling data released in March by the Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law.

The Williams Institute, which specialize­s in LGBT research for law and public policy, also concluded that most U.S. adults estimate that nearly one in four Americans (23.6%) are gay or lesbian. Gallup has previously found that Americans have greatly overestima­ted the U.S. gay population, recording similar average estimates of 24.6% in 2011 and 23.2% in 2015.

No matter the perception or the reality, Blair said at the end of the day he’s just a man trying to serve his community.

“I’ve been in situations where I’m too black in the gay community or too gay in the black community, but I’m both, and I’m a person who cares about education and policy, and that’s what I want my constituen­ts to remember most.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Gwinnett County Board of Education member Everton Blair introduces Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., during her March campaign rally at Morehouse College in Atlanta. Blair is among a growing demographi­c in politics. He’s now one of three openly gay Gwinnett County officials.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Gwinnett County Board of Education member Everton Blair introduces Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., during her March campaign rally at Morehouse College in Atlanta. Blair is among a growing demographi­c in politics. He’s now one of three openly gay Gwinnett County officials.
 ?? CASEY SYKES / FOR THE AJC ?? Everton Blair and his parents exult after learning victory was nearly certain in the Gwinnett County Board of Education’s District 4 race at an election night party at his Snellville home last November.
CASEY SYKES / FOR THE AJC Everton Blair and his parents exult after learning victory was nearly certain in the Gwinnett County Board of Education’s District 4 race at an election night party at his Snellville home last November.

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