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LGBTQ baby boomers encounter more hurdles

Did you know LGBTQ individuals in America represent about 4% of the population as of 2016?

Senior citizens who identify with this group face unique challenges on every level. Unfortunately, being such a small percentage means that their complications, issues or problems are all too often ignored or unacknowledged. According to a 2017 study by Dr. Karen I. Fredriksen-Goldsen, a professor at the University of Washington, these challenges will almost certainly increase.

Today, more than 1.1 million Americans who are 65 or older identify as a member of the LGBTQ community, and there is no indication that this number will decrease. In fact, experts expect it to double within the next few decades.

Back in 1978, a small group of LGBTQ activists in New York City recognized that older members of their community had needs that were not being addressed. They founded Services and Advocacy for GLBT Elders, or SAGE. Since then, SAGE has expanded nationwide, and it now offers a wide range of support, including support for older adults living with HIV or AIDS.

The SAGENet affiliates have expanded far beyond New York City to 20 states and the District of Columbia. The organization is active in advocacy work on the local level. To contact this groundbreaking organization, email sage@GLBThotline.org or call (888) 234-SAGE.

One challenge older LGBTQ individuals frequently confront is discrimination within nursing homes or other care facilities. All too often, residents and/or workers have been known to be unkind to LGBTQ individuals because of their sexual preference. Treatment reminiscent of high school bullying, cliques, ostracizing and taunting openly exist in some senior living facilities. As a result, older LGBTQ individuals who are forced to live in a primarily heterosexual environment frequently choose to hide their sexuality.

The good news is that affordable housing for LGBTQ seniors is on the rise. In Fort Myers, Florida, Carefree Boulevard has become a welcoming community for older lesbians. In Philadelphia, the John C. Anderson Apartments occupy a six-story building and are so sought after that the waitlist was capped at 100 right when it opened. In late 2016, the Openhouse Community of 50 residents opened in San Francisco after a 20-year planning process. In Chicago, the 79-unit Town Hall Apartments opened in 2014, and about 400 people applied. Located on 10 acres with 70 apartments and bungalows in California wine country, Fountaingrove Lodge in Santa Rosa, has been an upscale — and successful — LGBTQ retirement option. Some developments like Rainbow Vision in New Mexico have not fared as well.

Though many LGBTQ seniors have experienced some sort of discrimination for most of their lives, at last, property developers and social activists are working together to retire those types of unsavory experiences.

• Marilyn Murray Willison is the author of The Self-Empowered Woman blog and the award-winning memoir “One Woman, Four Decades, Eight Wishes.” She can be reached at www.marilynwillison.com.

© 2021 Creators.com

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