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Joy Silver, president and CEO of Rainbow Vision, stands at the entrance of the community in Santa Fe, N.M. Rainbow Vision is one of about a dozen specialized senior developments that welcome gay and lesbian seniors reaching retirement age.
national
Aging gay population fuels retirement community market
A dozen senior developments are either up and running or in the works around the U.S.
Published Thursday, 22-Jun-2006 in issue 965
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – Like other gay men in their golden years, Jack Norris and Seymour Sirota had heard the horror stories.
An elderly lesbian couple is housed on separate floors of a nursing home and kept from seeing each other. A gay retired college professor feels compelled to keep his sexual orientation a secret after his roommate at an assisted living facility asks to be transferred.
“I thought, ‘We are not going to be in that situation,’” the 67-year-old Norris says crisply. “This is not going to happen to us in our final days.”
That’s how the two New Yorkers, partners for 14 years, landed at Rainbow Vision, a just-completed senior community in Santa Fe, N.M. From the private dining room named after Truman Capote to the cabaret where ’60s teen icon Lesley “It’s My Party” Gore appeared recently, everything about the 146-unit retirement village was designed with the comfort of graying gays and lesbians in mind.
As the generation of gay men and lesbians who came out in the 1960s and ’70s reaches retirement age, about a dozen specialized senior developments across the country are either up and running or in the works.
In such senior-heavy locales as California, Arizona and Florida, as well as less traditionally gay-friendly places like North Carolina and Texas, builders have found a market in a segment of the GLBT population that worries getting old will mean going back in the closet.
Besides personal safety, specialists in GLBT aging issues offer other reasons why the so-called Stonewall Generation, named for the 1969 New York riots that marked the beginning of the modern GLBT movement, needs and craves places of its own to retire.
Among them are the years of stigma and isolation many gays and lesbians who are over 50 experienced, which may have left them estranged from their families, financially insecure and childless.
“There is a real sense of disenfranchisement and also a sense of independence, of ‘I don’t want to be dependent on family, I want to be dependent on community,’” said Judy Dlugacz, founder of the San Francisco-based lesbian travel company Olivia Cruises and Resorts.
Olivia is currently scouting land in the Palm Springs area for what Dlugacz hopes will be the first of several high-end resort communities geared toward mature lesbians who are looking either for a vacation home or a place to retire.
Joy Silver, developer of Rainbow Vision, also plans to expand to Palm Springs, a desert community already popular with GLBT tourists.
“Just as we have set the trends in music and fashion, [gays and lesbians] will be setting trends for the redefinition of family and community,” Silver said.
Steven David, a postdoctoral psychology fellow at the University of California, Los Angeles who counsels and researches older gay men, said the concept of gay and lesbian senior housing gets mixed reviews from his clients.
Meanwhile, some in his field oppose the idea of separate communities for GLBT seniors, which also have taken off in Canada and parts of Europe, as voluntary self-segregation. “There has been an argument of, ‘Should we be creating these places in the first place or forcing society to accept us?’” he said.
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