Gay Marriage Pays Off for Massachusetts The Detroit News
by Deb Price
May 27, 2009
Mark Schuster and Jeffrey Webb are immigrants of
a different sort.
So are Lynn Adler and Paige Warren.
The gay American couples resettled in
Massachusetts, where they are treated -- legally and
socially -- like any other married folks.
They moved in part because they wanted their
children to grow up in a welcoming environment.
"There's a real difference you feel living in
Massachusetts," says Schuster, who moved from Los
Angeles with Webb and their now 5-year-old twin sons
to take a job as a professor of pediatrics at
Harvard Medical School. "Gay married couples are now
just a part of Massachusetts life."
Adler, who took a job as a professor of plant,
soil and insect sciences at the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst, married Warren once they
moved to the state. They now have a 3-year-old boy.
"There's a real peace of mind living here. So
many of the kinds of worries you have elsewhere --
about how you'll be treated in a hospital situation
or getting equal benefits -- are just taken off your
shoulders," Adler says.
This month marks the fifth anniversary of
Massachusetts' breakthrough -- opening marriage to
gay couples: More than 12,000 have since tied the
knot there.
Three new studies document wonderful results: Gay
matrimony has been a $111 million boost to the
state's economy. The average gay couple spends
$7,400 on a wedding. Almost one in 10 spends $20,000
or more, according to the Williams Institute.
It's sparked a migration boomlet, the California
think tank reports.
Also, the Massachusetts Department of Public
Health found that gay couples say marrying
strengthened their relationships and made them more
likely to be out:
• Nearly three-quarters of married gay couples
now feel more committed to their partners and more
accepted by their communities.
• 89 percent said all or most family members
support their marriage.
• Of the 28 percent raising children, 93 percent
said their kids are happier because of their
marriage.
The Williams Institute says the migration of gay
couples to Massachusetts is especially noticeable
among young, highly skilled professionals like
Schuster and Adler, the very workers states need to
thrive in the global economy.
Such "creative class" individuals in gay
relationships were 2.5 times more likely to move to
Massachusetts in the three years after marriage
became an option than the previous three years, the
institute found.
Study author Gary Gates notes that by attracting
very skilled gay workers, same-sex marriage "has the
potential to have a long-term positive economic
impact."
It can also produce a "coattail effect." Schuster
says he has mentioned Massachusetts'
marriage-friendly climate when wooing out-of-state
professionals to Harvard.
The strength of that appeal was documented in the
state government survey, Gates points out. Half of
gay married couples who moved to Massachusetts said
"marriage equality or the state's (gay) rights
climate" was a factor. One in five declared that was
the only reason they relocated, Gates reports.
The prospect of living in a state offering
same-sex marriage was a big plus for Adler and
Warren.
Adler had been a biology professor at Virginia
Tech, where she couldn't even put Warren on her
health plan.
The couple worried about trying to bring up a
child in the state. When Adler accepted her
Massachusetts job offer, she wrote to Virginia state
legislators: "I am very sad and sorry to be leaving
Virginia Tech. ... However, the laws of Virginia
make it difficult for me to have a long-term future
here."
The message for states wanting the best and
brightest workers is clear. As talented gay couples
plan their futures, they'll increasingly settle in
gay marriage-friendly states.