Exploring growth of Louisville's gay population
The Courier-Journal
By Gary J. Gates
December 2, 2007The well-publicized failure of Gov.
Ernie Fletcher's campaign to secure a last-minute surge in
conservative voters by telling them that Gov.-elect Steven
Beshear would recreate Kentucky as a "new San Francisco"
marks an important change in both Kentucky and national
political strategies.
New analyses of Census Bureau data suggest that this
failed "gay card" strategy may in part be a result of a
dramatically more visible lesbian and gay population in
some of the most conservative parts of the country --
including Kentucky's largest city, Louisville.
Since 1990, the Census Bureau has tracked the presence
of same-sex "unmarried partners," commonly understood to
be lesbian and gay couples. From an initial count of about
145,000 same-sex couples in 1990, the 2006 data show that
this population has increased fivefold to nearly 780,000
couples. The number of same-sex couples grew more than 21
times faster than did the U.S. population.
Kentucky has seen an astounding twelve-fold increase
from 862 same-sex couples counted in 1990 to more than
10,300 in 2006. In the same time period, the number of
self-identified same-sex couples in other socially
conservative Mountain, Midwest and Southern states
exceeded a six-fold increase. Compare that with liberal
East and West Coast states, where increases have been less
than four-fold. Now either there's been a wildly
successful gay recruitment campaign, or lots more lesbian
and gay couples are "coming out" on government surveys.
Evidence strongly points to the latter. In a 1992
survey by the University of Chicago, 2.8 percent of men
and 1.4 percent women identified themselves as lesbian,
gay or bisexual. Ten years later, a National Center for
Health Statistics study pegged that figure at 4.1 percent
-- almost one-and-a-half times more men and three times
more women.
At the same time, national support for gay people
grows. In the late 1980s, Gallup polls found about 30
percent of Americans thought "homosexual relations between
consenting adults" should be legal. A May 2007 poll finds
this figure has risen to 59 percent.
Louisville, now home to nearly 2,000 same-sex couples,
serves as the bellwether for these changes in Kentucky.
Since 2000, the city experienced the biggest percentage
increases (151 percent) among the nation's 50 largest
cities. As a result, its ranking among those cities for
the percent of same-sex couples in the population has
moved from 41st in 1990 to 28th in 2006.
While Louisville's increases in same-sex couples are
consistent with those seen in other parts of the South,
the reasons for the increase are a bit different. States
in the upper South have experienced relatively modest
population growth, suggesting that most of the increases
in same-sex couples are likely a product of more gay
visibility among natives, rather than a large-scale
migration to the area. In contrast, Louisville has
experienced above-average population increases that no
doubt include an influx of gay people. Such changes are
moving the social and political climate barometer (drawing
on those ubiquitous red and blue maps) in a decidedly
purple direction.
Kentucky now has five openly lesbian or gay officials,
including council members in Louisville and Lexington, the
vice-mayor of Lexington and a state senator. That's more
than in regional neighbors Tennessee, Alabama and
Mississippi combined. Louisville has an ordinance banning
discrimination based on sexual orientation, and last year
the University of Louisville began offering domestic
partner benefits for same-sex couples. And now it looks
like the Jefferson school board is about to expand
harassment and employment policies to protect gay and
lesbian workers. Sounds pretty purple to me.
Closets are emptying in Kentucky and across the
heartland, belying the notion that the rights of gay men
and lesbians are somehow separate from those of mainstream
America. As Americans across the country meet their
lesbian and gay neighbors, all evidence suggests that they
will become more supportive of gay rights. Politicians
beware -- playing the gay card may just assure a losing
hand.
Gary J. Gates is a senior research fellow at the
UCLA School of Law's Williams Institute and co-author of
The Gay and Lesbian Atlas.
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