J0J2. WWW JUSTOUT COM APRIL 17 2009 NEWS 'We help property owners' Pooring Over It A New Report Examines Poverty in the GLBT Community By Bob Roehr 503.922.0600 Fill vacancies. Save time. Save money. PROVIDING SOCIAL WORK AND NURSING MEDICAL CASE MANAGEMENT TO PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV/AIDS SINCE 1995 PARTNERSHIP Serving 1200 individuals a year in the Portland 4 county area. Working to keep you insured, in medical care and in contact with the services you need! PROJECT SERVICIOS DISPONIBLES EN ESP ANOL For intake scheduling, information and referral, call our intake team at 503-517-3590 OREGON HEALTH &SCIENCE www.ohsu.edu/partnership UNIVERSITY Let us do the work for you. Home & Loan Confidence L isa C hemarin Oregon Realty, Broker* Office 503-297-2523 Direct 503-407-3571 www.oregonrealry.com/LisaChcmarin ‘Also Licensed in Washington J ennifer S antoro Platinum Mortgage Group, Inc. Senior Mortgage Broker Office 503.620.0715 Direct 503.890.5965 www.oregonloan.net Qregon P latinum mortgage G roup , inc . Available when you are! Investments That Matter Tuesday, April 28,2009,7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. The overall rate of poverty in the U.S. was 12.5 percent in 2007, but lesbian cou­ ples and the children of same-sex partners are more likely to live in poverty than are their heterosexual counterparts, according to ^he first report ever to look at the sub­ ject in depth. The report’s lead coauthors, Randy Al- belda and M.V. Lee Badgett, told members of the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgen­ dered congressional caucus during a March 20 briefing that there were “many reasons to think that LGB people are at least as likely-and perhaps more likely-to experi­ ence poverty.” Badgett said “the myth of gay affluence” was what motivated her to get involved in the field. Gay magazine surveys have found that their readers are affluent, a finding typical of all magazine subscribers. Anti-gay groups have spun this into an as­ sertion that all gays are rich and powerful and therefore do not need legal protection from discrimination. Her earlier research debunked this myth, “but that research aimed at the middle of the income distribution.” She said an out lesbian friend working at a women’s homeless shelter had noted that 20-25 percent of her clients were gay or bisexual. “This is a part of the community we don’t hear much about. They are invisible in many ways.’’The main group of poor gay, lesbian, bi and trans people studied had been homeless children—either runaways or youth kicked out by their families, she said. “We know that gay families have less access to the institutional supports that come with marriage, and often we see that they don’t get as much family support as their heterosexual siblings and colleagues get...and same-sex couples are twice as likely to be uninsured as people who are married.” Badgett lamented the fact that the 2000 U.S. Census did not ask questions about sexual orientation. Her analysis was based upon data from the census on same-sex unmarried couples living together, the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth, and the 2003/5 California Health Inter­ view Survey. "Wc know that goy families have less access to the institutional supports that come with marriage...and same-sex couples are twice as likely to be uninsured as people who are married." - M.V. LEE BADGETT Albelda reminded the audience that their analysis only covered couples: “In­ dividuals are much more likely to be poor than people in two adult households.” There seemed to be a synergistic effect between other risk factors for poverty and being gay or lesbian. “Not surprisingly, lesbian couples have, statistically, significantly higher poverty rates than married heterosexual couples, and gay men have lower rates,” she said. About 20 percent of same^sex couples had children living in the household, a lower figure than their heterosexual coun­ terparts. “What was striking was the very high level of poverty among the kids in gay and lesbian couples,” Albelda said. Surpris- FREE PORN Geoff Ashton, Senior Vice President with Calvert Group, will be speaking on socially responsible investing. You are invited to attend an informal discussion and question and answer session. To RSVP, call (503) 595-0070 today. 1Kristen Salt, CFP*, ChFC* Financial Advisor 600 NW Naito Pkwy Unit D Portland, OR 97209 (503) 595-0070 kristen.a.salt@ampf.com The Personal Advisors of Ameriprise Financial www.ameripriseadvisors.com/kristen.a.salt This is an educational seminar. There is no cost or obligation. Financial planning services and investments available through Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc., Member FINRA and SIPC © 2009 Ameriprise Financial, Inc. All rights reserved. Internet & Cable! starting at $595 RAINBOW VISTA Gay Active Senior Community (503) 667-5575 • (888) 4704)130 www.rainbowvista.com