Gay Parent Mecca Chelsea? Nope The Bronx! New York Post
By Luke Dennehy, Peter Kadushin, and Dan Mangan
August 27, 2008
While Manhattan's gay couples are hitting the city's hot nightclubs, their
counterparts in The Bronx are more likely to be reading kids bedtime stories, a
new survey has found.
Despite being home to barely 11 percent of the city's gay couples, The Bronx
accounts for 32 percent of all children in the Big Apple being raised by such
partners, the city's highest rate.
In contrast, Manhattan's gay couples are much less likely to have kids. Just
8.5 percent of children in the city's same-sex households live in Manhattan,
despite the borough having 38 percent of New York City's gay homes, according to
a report from UCLA's Williams Institute.
Nearly half of The Bronx's gay households are raising kids - a rate that
nearly matches the 55 percent of married straight couples in the borough who
have children. "I've never seen any jurisdiction [in the United States] where
those figures are that close," said Gary Gates, senior research fellow at the
Williams Institute. Gates added that same-sex couples of ethnic minorities "are
much more likely" than their white counterparts to have children, a factor that
could explain The Bronx's higher rate of gay-household kids.
Another factor is that in areas like The Bronx that have relatively low
numbers of gay couples, such couples are much more likely to have children, he
said.
The opposite trend is seen in gay-heavy areas such at Manhattan's Chelsea
neighborhood, Gates said. "The numbers are surprising," said Tawana Avery, a
black lesbian who, with partner Lisa Burton, is raising an adopted 5-year-old
son, Nasir, in The Bronx's Highbridge section. "We don't have neighborhoods like
the Village or Chelsea. There is only one community center for [gays] in The
Bronx."
Gordon Sanchez, a 34-year-old Chelsea waiter, said, "Most of the gay men in
this area are very self-obsessed and only concerned about their careers, the gym
and clubs on the weekend. So having children is the furthest thing from their
mind."
Chelsea resident Joe Hilder, 34, who works in finance, said, "As a gay man
who wants to have children one day, I wouldn't raise them in Manhattan,
especially in Chelsea, as this area isn't as child-friendly as the outer
boroughs."