The Boston Globe

Cheri Pies, 73, researcher guided lesbian couples in becoming parents

- By Alex Williams

Cheri Pies, a professor of public health who broke barriers with her 1985 book, “Considerin­g Parenthood: A Workbook for Lesbians,” a bible of the “gayby boom” of the 1980s and beyond, died July 4 at her home in Berkeley, Calif. She was 73.

The cause was cancer, said her wife, Melina Linder.

Later in life, Dr. Pies became a researcher and professor at the University of California Berkeley School of Public Health, investigat­ing the effects of economic and racial inequality in such matters as infant mortality and health over generation­s.

But she made her name decades before her turn toward academia with her groundbrea­king book. That journey began in the 1970s, when Dr. Pies was working as a health educator for Planned Parenthood, counseling straight women considerin­g motherhood.

Her focus began to shift in 1978, after her female partner adopted a daughter. At that time, the concept of openly gay parents was mostly unheard-of in the culture at large.

Just that year, New York became the first state to say it would not reject applicatio­ns for adoption solely on the basis of homosexual­ity. A year later, a gay couple in California broke barriers as the first known to jointly adopt a child.

Dr. Pies was struck by the lack of support available to same-sex parents, as well as the lack of basic informatio­n about the unique challenges they face. She began running workshops in her home in Oakland, advertisin­g them with flyers in women’s bookshops and other places where lesbians gathered.

By the early 1980s, word of her work had spread beyond the Bay Area, and she was bombarded with letters and phone calls from around the country. In response, Dr. Pies compiled her teachings and experience­s into a book. “Considerin­g Parenthood: A Workbook for Lesbians,” published by the lesbian feminist press Spinsters Ink, provided practical advice on a wide range of topics, including the use of sperm donors, legal issues surroundin­g adoption, and ways to build a support network.

The book, which appeared 30 years before same-sex marriage was legalized nationally, opened the floodgates for countless other books about LGBTQ+ parenthood.

“She was absolutely a pioneer, and those of us who came later built on her work,” said G. Dorsey Green, a psychologi­st and author of “The Lesbian Parenting Book” (with D. Merilee Clunis, 2003), in an obituary about Dr. Pies on Mombian, a website for lesbian parents. “I would recommend her book to clients. That was when lesbian couples were just starting to think about having children as out lesbians. Cheri started that conversati­on.”

Dr. Pies, who earned a master’s degree in social work from Boston University in 1976, would eventually turn to academia, receiving another master’s degree, in maternal and child health, from Berkeley in 1985 and a doctorate in health education there in 1993.

She was serving as the director of family, maternal, and child health programs for Contra Costa County, which borders Berkeley and Oakland, when she heard a lecture in 2003 by Dr. Michael C. Lu, who would go on to become the dean of the Berkeley School of Public Health.

Lu spoke about a concept called life course theory, which centers on the idea that the social and economic conditions at each stage in life, starting with infancy, can have powerful, lasting effects over generation­s. “What surrounds us shapes us,” Dr. Pies explained in a 2014 lecture at the University of Alabama Birmingham. “Some people would say your ZIP code is more important than your genetic code.”

At Berkeley, Dr. Pies would eventually collaborat­e with Lu and others to create the Best Babies Zone initiative, a groundbrea­king program that would study — and, ideally, improve — health conditions in economical­ly challenged neighborho­ods around the country.

The high incidence of low birth weight and sudden infant death syndrome in such communitie­s was a focus of the program. “Babies are the canary in the mine,” Dr. Pies said in her University of Alabama speech. “If babies aren’t born healthy, you know that something isn’t right in the community.”

Cheramy Anne Pies was born Nov. 26, 1949, in Los Angeles, the second of three daughters of Morris Pies, a physician, and Doris (Naboshek) Pies, a nurse.

Growing up in Encino, in the San Fernando Valley, the outgoing, ebullient Cheri was a fan of movies and got an early taste of the medical profession working as a receptioni­st in her father’s office.

She earned a bachelor’s degree in social science from Berkeley in 1971.

Berkeley at the time was a cauldron of Vietnam War-era political passions, after the Free Speech Movement protests rocked the campus starting in 1964. “Even though I was not actively engaged in it, I was certainly exposed to the politics of it,” she later said of the movement.

In addition to her wife, Dr. Pies leaves her sisters, Lois Goldberg and Stacy Pies.

She would eventually channel Berkeley’s 1960s spirit of activism as an author and professor, working to improve the lives of openly lesbian parents of the 1980s and beyond, whose numbers swelled so quickly that by 1996, Newsweek magazine would report that an estimated 6 million to 14 million children in the United States had at least one gay parent.

Many of that generation would acknowledg­e their debt to Dr. Pies for the rest of her life, Linder said in a phone interview: “Cheri and I could be anywhere in the world — on a hike in New Zealand or just walking in the Berkeley Hills — and people would see her and stop to thank her, saying how Ben or Alice or whoever would not be in their life were it not for Cheri.”

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