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oxymoron

(4,053 posts)
Sat Dec 7, 2013, 01:38 AM Dec 2013

No golden years for LGBT seniors

According to studies, queer seniors are poorer than their straight counterparts. They’re half as likely to have health insurance, and two-thirds as likely to live alone. Not to mention facing discrimination in medical and social services, retirement homes, and nursing care facilities. So much for the “golden years.”
Here in San Francisco, LGBT seniors face another grave threat: evictions. Many of our elderly live in rent-controlled apartments that are targeted by real-estate speculators and investors out to make big bucks turning them into tenancies-in-common.

With median rents close to $3,000 a month and vacancy rates low, the odds are pretty good that an evicted senior won’t find an affordable place in the city. For a senior with AIDS, an eviction is especially threatening since our city offers the best treatment and services. Studies show that people with AIDS who lose their apartments tend to die sooner, especially if they become homeless.

The only LGBT organization that actually addresses the housing needs of queer seniors is Open House. Its 110 units at 55 Laguna will be the first affordable queer senior housing development in the city. I hope it’s not the last. As for seniors with AIDS, there’s only one AIDS organization in the vast list of groups and services -- the AIDS Housing Alliance -- that actually finds housing for its clients. It was started by Brian Basinger, a gay man with AIDS, after he was evicted and his apartment was sold as a TIC.

No one knows how many LGBT seniors have been, and are being, evicted. Ditto for how many seniors with AIDS end up on the streets. We also don’t have stats on how many transgender seniors are victims of real estate greed or live in absolute terror of losing their homes.

http://www.sfbg.com/politics/2013/03/27/no-golden-years-lgbt-seniors

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No golden years for LGBT seniors (Original Post) oxymoron Dec 2013 OP
In a way, no surprise. SheilaT Dec 2013 #1
Important post theHandpuppet Dec 2013 #2
 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
1. In a way, no surprise.
Sat Dec 7, 2013, 02:25 AM
Dec 2013

At least part of lifetime "wealth" is connected to being married, which the LGBT community has been denied until very, very recently. Something as simple as being able to inherit even a modest estate, or claiming social security of a deceased spouse can make a huge difference.

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