These kids are
lucky—their parents are loving, concerned, educated. And there’s something else
as well: these parents have known a lot of gay people, and if any of these kids
is gay, the parent will barely blink an eye.
Now then—time for some
facts:
One in every four LGBT
kids who comes out to his or her parents ends up on the streets, either because
she or he was kicked out, or because the child decided to leave.
The average age for kids
to come out, nowadays, is fourteen. In the seventies, most people came out much
later, when they were in college and relatively more stable.
Lastly, here
is a paragraph from the Human Rights Campaign:
Youth homelessness in the United States is a national crisis
in urban, suburban, and rural communities affecting nearly 2.8 million youth
between the ages of 12 and 24. Furthermore, consistent research finds that gay
and transgender youth are over-represented among homeless youth, comprising
anywhere between 20 and 39 percent of the total homeless youth population even
though they make up less than 10 percent of the overall youth population.
OK—my toy computer
doesn’t have the calculator that my Mac does, but my feeble math skills suggest
that we may have one million gay and lesbian kids on the streets. And while
marriage equality and anti-bullying efforts are important—isn’t doing something
for these kids important, too?
What are the problems?
Well, the first is what to do with kids who are on the streets—are there beds
in the shelters for them?
Answer—no. According to
the clip below, called “A Day in our Shoes,” there are 3,800 homeless youth in
New York alone, and 1,500 of them are LGBT. And how many beds are there for
them? Two hundred.
Shelter is just one
issue. A kid on the street is at major risk for drug and alcohol abuse, sexually
transmitted diseases, prostitution, and being the victim of violent crime. That
kid you see sleeping after “school” on the subway? That’s the only
safe—relatively—place for him to sleep. He’ll be up at five minute intervals
all night, checking to make sure he’s all right.
It may be there are
treatment programs which will help a kid achieve the daunting task of being an
adult: paying bills on time, going to the dentist, convincing the bank to let
you open a checking account even though your only ID is a high school
identification card. But even those programs “age kids out,” as one of the
directors in the clip “Kicked Out” put it. So at age 21 you’re supposed to be
on your own—but what happens when you fall at the disco and need to go to the
hospital? Ask any parent—it doesn’t stop at age 21.
Which is why Caitlin Ryan’s work at
the Family Acceptance Project
is so exciting. She starts with a simple premise—virtually no parent wants his
or her kid on the street. No matter how terrible the parent is, or how badly
drunk or addicted he or she is—no parent wants that for their kid. So the trick
is to find a way to get parents to accept their gay kids.
It makes intuitive
sense—families do change. Mine did, and Raf’s as well. And as you can see in
the second clip below—even very macho, Hispanic families can change. And as the
clip on the Family Acceptance Project website shows—the Mormons can change as
well. Perhaps especially so, since the family is of huge importance in the
Mormon church.
Ryan has reached out to John Kerry, who in 2011
introduced the Reconnecting
Youth to Prevent Homelessness Act. Here’s
what the Human Rights Commission has to say about it:
The Reconnecting Youth to Prevent Homelessness Act requires
that the Secretary of Health and Human Services establish a demonstration
project to develop programs that are focused on improving family relationships
and reducing homelessness for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender youth.
These programs must include research-based behavioral interventions designed to
decrease rejecting behaviors and increase supportive behaviors in families with
LGBT youth and research-based assessment tools to help identify LGBT youth at
risk for family conflict or ejection from their homes. Additionally, the
Secretary must provide educational tools and resources to help families
identify behaviors that put LGBT youth at risk as well as provide multimedia
educational tools and resources that are focused on helping a diverse range of
families understand how their behavior affects LGBT youth.
And now a confession—I
know that this legislation was not approved in 2011, and I think it has been reintroduced,
though as of June of this year it hadn’t been. But after Googling frantically
for 15 minutes, I can’t find who reintroduced it or when.
Normally, this would
upset me, but nowadays I have more perspective. Not being able to chase down a
reference is annoying. Being fifteen, gay, and on the streets?
That’s major!