The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Identifyin­g the LGBTQ community’s needs

- SUSAN CAMPBELL

During 2018, members of the advocacy group CT Equality traveled around the state to listen to members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r, and queer or questionin­g (LGBTQ) community talk about their challenges and concerns about life in Connecticu­t.

The conversati­ons, said Rep. Jeffrey Currey, DEast Hartford, deputy majority leader who attended one of the meetings in Hartford, had common themes, including a need for additional services and programs.

Among other tangible efforts during the legislativ­e session that ended June 5, such as a ban on the socalled “gay panic defense,” the conversati­ons moved Connecticu­t legislator­s to create an LGBTQ Health and Human Services Network, which is charged with creating a safe environmen­t for members of the community.

This comes at a time when the Trump administra­tion is rolling back rights at a historic rate. In June, the administra­tion announced it would cut funding for a University of California HIV and AIDS research program . Trump has announced plans to allow “religious exemptions” to adoption agencies that want to deny services for LGBTQ couples. He issued a similar rule for doctors. He has also pulled back protection­s for people in the transgende­r community.

This is not an exhaustive list.

Meanwhile, according to the Connecticu­t Coalition to End Homelessne­ss, 2040 perent of the country’s 1.6 million youths who are homeless identify as LGBTQ. The numbers are difficult to come by because youths who are homeless are difficult to find and count. Rolling back protection­s for them doesn’t help matters.

“If you’re friends with Robin (McHaelen, founder and executive director of True Colors,) on Facebook, you’ll see that there’s usually at least one post a week about a youth who has become disengaged with their family and needs somewhere safe to go,” Currey said. “I don’t know how anyone reads that and doesn’t want to do something about it.”

McHaelen said youths between ages 18 and 24 are particular­ly vulnerable.

“They have aged out of care (or their families waited until they were 18 to put them out) and they really have no place to go,” she said. “The shelters are rough for everybody but for gay and trans or nonbinary youth, they can be outright dangerous.”

She said her organizati­on often can find a home for younger people, but placement for young adults is a challenge.

“We work a lot with homeless providers — especially The Connection and Youth Continuum — but they always have a long waiting list,” McHaelen said.

According to Currey, the Commission on Women, Children, Seniors, Equity, and Opportunit­y will gather designated members and organizati­ons to discuss LGBTQ needs. To start, said Shawn Lang, deputy director of ACT, there are only two LGBTQ centers in the state — one in New Haven and another in Norwalk — and a handful of gay bars in cities such as Hartford. That leaves out people in rural areas or small towns.

“For LGBT folks living outside of urban areas, it’s a desert,” Lang said.

Anecdotall­y, said Lang, LGBT seniors and youth need the most attention. McHaelen agrees. Even when there are services available for them, she says, youths of color don’t tend to use them.

“In what ways are we not meeting the needs of those young people?” McHaelen said. “I wonder what I, as a middle class, more than middleaged white woman, might be missing in terms of what young Black and Brown LGBTQplus youth need and want in terms of programs.”

Once the needs are identified, Currey said, the network will work with the Department of Public Health to figure out what services already exist and what new programs need funding. The network has a budget of $250,000, which is meant to seed new programs, with funding eventually provided by foundation­s, nonprofits, and federal agencies.

“Anything and everything is — and should be — possible at this point,” Currey said.

Susan Campbell is a distinguis­hed lecturer at the University of New Haven. She can be reached at slcampbell­417@gmail.com. This column was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health ITeam, a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting. (chit.org)

Trump has announced plans to allow “religious exemptions” to adoption agencies that want to deny services for LGBTQ couples.

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