The Columbus Dispatch

Diverse group of cities have highest rates of gay households

- Mike Schneider

ORLANDO, Fla. – Once known for singer Anita Bryant’s anti-gay rights campaign and a ban on gay and lesbian adoptions, Florida is now home to two metro areas with among the highest concentrat­ions of gay and lesbian coupled households in the U.S., according to a new report released by the U.S. Census Bureau.

Orlando and Miami had the fourthand sixth-highest percentage­s, respective­ly, of same-sex coupled households in the U.S., according to the report released this week using data from the bureau’s 2019 American Community Survey.

San Francisco, Portland and Seattle topped the list. Austin was No. 5 and Boston came in at No. 7. But they were joined in the top 10 by some unexpected metro areas like Baltimore, Denver and Phoenix. Noticeably absent were three of the nation’s largest metros: New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. Though they have some of the nation’s most visible LGBTQ communitie­s, the vastness of their metro areas dilutes the concentrat­ion.

The appearance of these metros on the list shows that tolerance isn’t limited to large coastal cities, gay-rights advocates said.

“You often think of LGBTQ people in large cities like San Francisco, but we’re everywhere,” said Jeremy Lamaster executive director of Freestate Justice, a Baltimore-based LGBTQ advocacy organizati­on for Maryland.

The report focused on same-sex couples, married and unmarried, and not gay and lesbians who are single. About 1.5% of all coupled households nationwide were same sex. The cities on the top 10 list ranged in concentrat­ion from San Francisco’s 2.8% to Baltimore’s 2%.

In the District of Columbia, which was categorize­d along with states in the report, 7.1% of coupled households were same sex.

In Florida, acceptance of LGBTQ communitie­s has been driven at the local level, with passage of human-rights ordinances, fast-growing population­s from all over the world and gay-friendly companies from the hospitalit­y and entertainm­ent industries, said Nadine Smith, executive director of Equality Florida, an LGBTQ advocacy group.

While Orlando already had a visible gay community with elected officials and workforces like Disney World with large numbers of gays and lesbians, the collective grief from the massacre at the gay Pulse nightclub in 2016 helped push that acceptance into more conservati­ve

corners of civic churches.

“Miami is a port city and Orlando is the epicenter of amusement parks and hospitalit­y, so it makes perfect sense,” Smith said of the high concentrat­ions of same sex households. “The cities have led the way for sure, rebuilding Florida’s image from a really hateful history.”

That history stretches back to the 1970s. That’s when Bryant, an early-1960s pop singer and brand ambassador for the Florida Citrus Commission, headed a campaign that led to the repeal of an ordinance in Miami-dade County prohibitin­g discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n in one of the earliest organized fights against gay rights. Florida also was the last state in the U.S. to end its ban on gay and lesbian adoption when a court ruled it violated equal protection rights in 2010.

Austin, Orlando and Phoenix have been among the metropolit­an areas

life such as local

with the largest population growth in recent years.

Phoenix’s general meritocrac­y, which comes from being a relatively young community with a constant influx of new arrivals, has made it welcoming to gay and lesbians, said Angela Hughey, president of ONE Community, a business coalition that advocates for inclusion and equality.

“It’s a very broad city and we are in every neighborho­od,” Hughey said Thursday.

In Baltimore, residents have had an appreciati­on for a camp aesthetic that now would overlap with queer culture. A favorite son is filmmaker John Waters, and the city celebrates the unconventi­onal, as evidenced by the annual HONFEST where celebrants sport beehive hairdos and cat-eye sunglasses. The city also has a vibrant vogue ball scene.

“Part of me feels like I need to give a

shout-out to John Waters,” said Lamaster, referring to the filmmaker behind cult movies made in Baltimore, such as “Pink Flamingos” and “Hairspray.” “But it’s not just John Waters. There is a rich heritage and history that can be found here.”

Lamaster, who lived in New York City before moving to Baltimore, said the Maryland city lacked the visible gay scene found in a neighborho­od like Chelsea in New York City. But Baltimore made sense for same-sex couples wanting to set up households in a state that has been a leader in laws prohibitin­g discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity, as well as allowing second-parent adoptions, he said.

“The work isn’t done. That’s my takeaway,” La Master said. “Even though there has been tremendous progress, I think there’s always room for improvemen­t.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP ?? Orlando and Miami, Florida, had the fourth- and sixth- highest concentrat­ions of same sex coupled households in the U.S., according to a new report released by the U.S. Census Bureau.
LYNNE SLADKY/AP Orlando and Miami, Florida, had the fourth- and sixth- highest concentrat­ions of same sex coupled households in the U.S., according to a new report released by the U.S. Census Bureau.

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