Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood"

The Bobster

Senior News Editor since 2004
Gayborhood Gets Official Designation, Recognition From City

http://www.nbc10.com/news/12420943/detail.html

Gayborhood Gets Official Designation, Recognition From City

POSTED: 4:57 pm EDT April 18, 2007
UPDATED: 5:05 pm EDT April 18, 2007

PHILADELPHIA -- The section of the city known as the Gayborhood now has rainbow flags delineating the streets.

Rainbow flags are a symbol of gay pride, and the city is hoping to attract part of the $54 billion gay travel tourism market.

“If we're welcoming gays and lesbians, then we need to show them where the gayborhood is,”��”�� said Tami Sortman of the Philadelphia gay tourism caucus.

The Gayborhood stretches from Chestnut Street to Pine Street between South 11th Street and Broad Street. The neighborhood includes a bridal salon, the 12th Street Gym, and several churches, shops and restaurants.

But some people who live and work in the gayborhood said the designation is inaccurate.

Kathleen Vaughan, who lives in the neighborhood, is opposed to the name.

“It’s a mixed group of people,”��”�� Vaughan said. “The Parker Hotel used to be a place for mentally ill.”��”��

Despite the opposition, Philadelphia joins San Francisco, Chicago, Montreal and Toronto, which all have gay-friendly districts.
 
New Center City Housing Development For Older Queer Couples

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...ty-housing-development-for-older-gay-couples/

New Center City Housing Development For Older Gay Couples
April 15, 2012 11:55 AM
By Hadas Kuznits

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) – Developers plan to break ground on a new affordable housing project for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender senior citizens.

Project spokesperson Mark Segal says the housing project will be built on 13th Street between Locust and Spruce.

“We want this project to be something that Philadelphians can take pride in. :rolleyes: That’s very important to us. We want the city to take pride in it, we want Washington Square West to take pride in it and we want the LGBT community to take pride in it.”

Segal says this project fulfills a need that has gone unfulfilled for a long time now.

“And in our own community for the most part, LGBT seniors are literally invisible. This project has put them on the map and made them think about the issues that face gay seniors.”

He says more information about the future 56-unit building will be made available when the project is officially announced on Monday.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kaye3uc7D9g&feature=relmfu
 
Re: New Center City Housing Development For Older Queer Couples

Mark Segal....I can smell the humus from here.
 
Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood"

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...r-elderly-gays-gets-approval-in-philadelphia/

Developers plan to break ground next month on a $20 million affordable housing project for elderly gays now that it has received the necessary state, federal and local approvals and funding has been secured, officials said Thursday.

The project, planned for a section of Philadelphia’s downtown affectionately :confused: known as :barf1: the Gayborhood, had long been stalled before receiving tax credits earlier this year from the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency.

The Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld :Anti-Z: Fund, which is spearheading the project, said in a statement that the project has received all federal, state, and local agency approvals and building permits, and plans to break ground in late October. Wells Fargo Bank :Anti-Z: also has signed on as an investor, tax credits have been allocated and all funding for the project has been secured, the group said.
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

Of course it would be some filthy jew organization behind such a disgusting move. How about a retirement home for aging white nationalists who hate niggers?? I guess that is not gonna happen but for fags that have spent their worthless lives packing the fudge of some other fag......they must be taken care of on the dime of the people!!! Incredible!!
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

LOL, you sure have a way with words, Gman.:D
The project, planned for a section of Philadelphia’s downtown affectionately known as the Gayborhood, had long been stalled before receiving tax credits earlier this year from the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency.
[the fags themselves should have raised money for it, but they love big government and expecting everyone to pay for geriatric perverts to have a place to shack up]

Anti-discrimination laws prohibit gay-only housing, but projects can be made friendly toward gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgendered people through marketing and location [wink, wink and just ignore those anti discrimination laws]. The nation’s first gay-friendly affordable senior housing facility opened in Los Angeles in 2007.
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...r-elderly-gays-gets-approval-in-philadelphia/
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

Thanks Tricknologist! I do usually feel better after blowing off some steam here on Newnation! Those dirty fags really annoy me though!
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...oject-intended-for-members-of-lgbt-community/

Ground Broken For Housing Project Intended For Members Of LGBT Community
November 9, 2012 2:38 PM
By Paul Kurtz, Anne-Marie Green

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — Ground has been broken in the heart of Philadelphia’s Gayborhood for a housing project that will serve the needs of the LGBT community. :mad:

It’s described as the first urban project of its kind — six floors of low income housing for elderly lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgenders. :mad:

It’s being built with a mixture of local, state and federal funds. :mad: And that was reflected by the number of politicians on hand for Friday’s ceremony.

Mayor Michael Nutter was joined by his predecessors, John Street and Ed Rendell.

“Once completed, this project will provide 56 units of affordable housing to people 62 years and older. The facility will be energy efficient, generating more than five percent of the total energy that it uses from within the building,” Nutter explained.

The building will be named after the late City Councilman John Anderson, who was instrumental in the passage of a civil rights bill for those in the sexual minority.

The doors are expected to open at the end of next year.
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

Bobster's location is right on the money-Filthydelphia.

Maybe they are trying to out-San Francisco San Francisco.
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

Bobster's location is right on the money-Filthydelphia.

Maybe they are trying to out-San Francisco San Francisco.

It used to be gaytown USA from what friends told me. I think Philthadelphia will out fag Fagtown. It's chock full of jews, jiggaboos and faggots.

:barf9:
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

Yes, a ton of Obongo voters. They're even screwing up the burbs by moving there.
 
Re: New Center City Housing Development For Older Queer Couples

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...continues-on-lgbt-affordable-housing-project/

Construction Continues On LGBT Affordable Housing Project
June 6, 2013 4:27 AM
By Cherri Gregg

lgbthousing2_gregg.jpg


PHILADELPHIA (CBS) - One of the nation’s first LGBT-friendly senior housing projects reached a major construction milestone Wednesday.

Applause, hugs and smiles were plentiful as crews hoisted the construction panel signed by LGBT community leaders and politicians atop the six-story John C. Anderson Apartments building at 13th and Irving Streets.

“People who have need for this kind of housing, which doesn’t exist almost anywhere else in the country, will finally have a place,” says Mark Segal, president of dmhFund and Philadelphia Gay News. He says the $19 million, 56-unit affordable housing project is on track to be complete by December.

“I know too many LGBT pioneers who don’t have the money and who are almost homeless,” he says. “This is place for them to love with dignity in their own community.”

Segal says folks can begin applying late Summer or early fall at the William Way Center, with the first residents to move in early 2014.

AIDS activist Donald Carter :gay: says he plans to apply.

“I live in a third floor walk up now- and there will be an elevator here,” he says. “If that is the only reason to apply, I’ll be applying.”

Plans for the Anderson Apartments include a 5,000 square foot enclosed courtyard and nearly 2,000 square free of ground floor retail space.
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/LGBT-Housing-Seniors-Retirement-Gay-Lesbian-223016821.html

LGBT Seniors Camp Out for One-of-a-Kind Housing in Philadelphia
More than 100 seniors lined up outside the city's LGBT center to find a new, affordable home
By Vince Lattanzio | Monday, Sep 9, 2013 | Updated 8:54 PM EDT

Anderson+Apartments+Construction.jpg

The John C. Anderson Apartments, currently under construction in the Gayborhood, will be the region's first LGBT-friendly affordable senior housing complex.


In a light jacket and baseball cap, Ellis Sacks :fag: sat patiently outside the William Way Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center in Philadelphia early Monday, hoping to find a new place to call home.

“I pay a lot now for my condo, and I’m ready to downsize,” he said.

The 73-year-old wasn't alone.

A line of more than 100 like-minded seniors stretched down the 1300 block of Spruce Street in the morning hours, waiting to fill out an application to move into a first-of-its kind living community.

The John C. Anderson Apartments, just off of 12th and Spruce Streets in the heart of the Gayborhood, stands to become the region’s first haven for aging LGBT seniors. Currently under construction, the community features 56 one-bedroom units for those 62 years and over who make $33,000 or less a year.

Sacks, who lives solely on Social Security, says he will save more than $1,200 a month should he win a spot in Anderson. But more than the money, he says the move will also help him foster relationships – old and new – within the community.

“It’ll enhance the sense of community,” Sacks said. “A place to hang out that’s not a bar, that’s not sexually charged. It’ll just be a place for friends to be.”

A sentiment that was echoed many times by others standing in line.

“It would be nice to be moving back into the city to be moving into that community of people,” said a 63-year-old man who’s getting ready to retire and asked that his name not be used.

“We would hang out and think, ‘What’s it going to be like when we’re old?’” said lifetime activist jew Susan Silverman. A New York City resident, she plans to move south should she get a spot in the complex. “This [the LGBT housing] is one of the things we fantasized about.”

It’s estimated that there are at least 1.75 million LGBT seniors living in the United States, according to the U.S. Administration on Aging — a number that’s expected only to grow. However, affordable housing remains a key issue for that segment of the community.

“We owe the pioneers of our community a place to live in dignity within their community. They earned it, they deserve it and that’s what we’re doing,” said jew Mark Segal of The Jew Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld Fund, the organization that’s spearheading the project.

The National Resource Center on LGBT Aging says several studies have found LGBT seniors face housing discrimination. A 2009 study in Michigan found 30 percent of same-sex couples were treated differently when buying or renting a home, while 33 percent said they would hide their orientation if they moved into a retirement home.

“We’ve had women who haven’t been allowed to bring their partners into the building after 23 years of being together. We have people who live in buildings where the staff pray around them, trying to pray the gay out of them,” Segal said. “We have people who aren’t out to their families and for the first time want to live in their community.”

Financial insecurity and a lack of cheap housing inventory is also more prevalent among the 65 and over LGBT community, according to the National Resource Center on LGBT Aging.

“People who came out in 1969… you would have been one-tenth of one percent of America who was out. And those people who were out, in those days, who are now in their 60s and 70s, well, they didn’t get 401ks. If you were out in those days, you couldn’t get a good job, and this building will serve people like that,” Segal says.

The Anderson Apartments will also allow the city’s LGBT organizations to hold events on site in the complex’s community room and offer health services tailored for gay, lesbian and transgendered individuals.

“It’s just terrific that after so many years we can take the housing needs of our seniors seriously and provide them the most beautiful apartments that you can get,” said William Way LGBT Community Center Executive Director Chris Bartlett.

While the Anderson Apartments are tailored for the LGBT community, you don’t have to identify as a member of the community to live there.

Jerry Bradford, a 67-year-old retiree who stood last in Monday morning’s line, said while he’s not a member of the LGBT community, the apartment building’s location and price are too good to pass up.

“I’m looking for better housing at a better rate, and I just wanted to apply,” he said. “Plus, it’s near my mother’s place.”

Applicants will be notified in 60 to 90 days as to whether they're chosen, and move-in will begin in January.
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...nd-relationship-with-anti-gay-city-in-russia/

Mayor Nutter Rejects Councilman’s Plea To End Relationship With Anti-Gay City In Russia
September 11, 2013 6:16 AM
By Mike Dunn

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) - Mayor Michael Nutter is rejecting a city councilman’s request that Philadelphia end its “sister city” relationship with a Russian city which has enacted an anti-gay law.

At issue is the Russian city of Nizhny Novgorod, which has been a sister city of Philadelphia for more than 20 years, and which has passed the controversial ban on so-called “homosexual propaganda.”

City Councilman Jim Kenney :fag: has now sent the mayor a letter, asking Nutter to severe all ties with Nizhny Novgorod.

“We should not have a significant, or any relationship with a city or a nation that decides that they’re going to discriminate against people because of who they are,” Kenney said.

But the mayor’s spokesman, Mark McDonald, says Nutter wants the sister city relationship to continue – so that Philadelphians can send the Russian city a message.

“We think that maintaining ties with Nizhny Novgorod gives us the opportunity to show them what diversity and western values are all about. For that reason, we’re not going to cut off communications,” McDonald said. “We’re going to urge people to use social media to deride the policies in that country and city, and show what a great city Philadelphia is.”

With his initial request to the mayor rejected, Kenney says he may draft a formal resolution calling for a severance of ties so his colleagues on city council can weigh in as well.

“Would we have a sister city relationship with a city that discriminates against people because of their race? Or because of their gender? I don’t think that we should be putting our stamp of approval on cities that make these kind of rules,” Kenney said.
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...roject-set-to-open-next-month-in-center-city/

Senior LGBT Housing Project Set To Open Next Month in Center City
December 26, 2013 2:02 PM

lgbthousing2_gregg.jpg

(The John C. Anderson Apartments, under construction in June 2013. Credit: Cherri Gregg)

By Cherri Gregg

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — An apartment building in center city Philadelphia will be the nation’s second housing community geared specifically toward the needs of LGBT senior citizens.

Residents are expected to begin moving into the $19-million building at 13th and Spruce Streets in just a couple of weeks.

One future resident, 65-year-old Elizabeth Coffey Williams, spent her younger days on the front lines of the battle for lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender rights. A transgendered woman herself, she lived comfortably while working as an actor, helping at nonprofits, and raising a son. :confused:

But the breakup of a 38-year relationship left her reeling.

“For the last year,” she says, “I have been effectively sheltered but homeless.”

On January 11th she will be moving into the John C. Anderson Apartments, which will house LGBT seniors earning between $8,000 and $33,000 a year.

Williams says it means safety, and a community with common ground.

Mark Segal, who runs the DMH Fund, which is behind the project, says that 13 percent of the senior LGBT community worries about being homeless.

“The whole concept is to give them a place where they can live with dignity and with the services they need,” he tells KYW Newsradio.

Segal says the six-story building is certified for move-in and there are only six units left, with a waiting list for lower-income units.

“We are finishing up leases, which are already 90 percent full,” he said today.

A ceremonial (rainbow) ribbon-cutting is scheduled for the end of January.
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/GLBT-Retirement-Housing-Lakes-238426221.html

Gay Seniors Find Place to Feel Like Home
By Patrick Condon | Thursday, Jan 2, 2014 | Updated 6:30 AM EST

Lucretia Kirby was on her own for the first time in years after her partner's death. She felt stranded in a church-affiliated assisted living facility, where she said bigotry and even physical threats were ignored by building managers.

Russ Lovaasen :fag: was infected with HIV in 1982. Decades of medication and its side effects left him prematurely aged at 62, and unable to afford a place of his own.

Harvey Hertz :fag:, a gay man who came out decades ago, was terrified that moving into a retirement community would force him back into the closet. He'd seen it happen.

Since September, Hertz, Kirby and Lovaasen have joined others as the charter residents at Spirit on Lake, a 46-unit affordable housing complex marketed to older members of the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community. Only the second building of its kind in the United States -- more are under construction or planned in Chicago, Philadelphia and San Francisco :mad: -- Spirit on Lake's backers say it fills a growing need for a generation of openly gay people now reaching their twilight years.

“GLBT seniors have significant issues. They're growing old in many cases in isolation, in fear,” said Barbara Satin, a 79-year-old transgender :rolleyes: activist described by building residents as “the matriarch of Spirit on Lake.”

Services and Advocacy for GLBT Elders, a New York-based group, estimates there are 1.5 million openly gay elderly people in the U.S. -- a number expected to double by 2030. Many of them, Satin said, “don't experience the freedom that GLBT people now experience.” Less likely :confused: to have children or grandchildren, they came of age in a time when gay people were often rejected by their families.

Satin spent her first 60 years living as a man. She came out as transgender not long after retiring from a corporate career, and later became involved with a small United Church of Christ congregation started by like-minded activists. Their “queer church,” as she called it, worshipped in an old warehouse on Lake Street, a major thoroughfare in south Minneapolis. They named the church Spirit of the Lakes.

About a decade ago, as that stretch of Lake Street attracted urban redevelopers, church members decided to merge with a larger UCC congregation. At the same time, Satin and a few others had formed a group to bring attention to issues facing gay seniors.

“We decided, let's do something with our property that would aid GLBT seniors, and that's where this housing project came from,” said Satin, whose portrait now hangs in the building's lobby.

With help from PRG, an affordable housing advocacy group, Satin and collaborators cobbled together funds from nonprofits and local governments. They found a main-floor occupant in Quatrefoil, a small GLBT-oriented library that for years had been housed in a St. Paul basement.

To qualify as an affordable housing complex under federal law, Spirit on Lake cannot require tenants to be either gay :mad: or elderly. Single applicants qualify by earning $28,500 a year or less. Rent is $720 for a one-bedroom apartment and $870 for a two-bedroom unit.

Every unit at Spirit on Lake is occupied, and building manager Kathleen Tully said about three-quarters of the residents are gay seniors. Rainbow flags hang from some of the building's balconies. A stairwell along one corner of the building even has rainbow-colored windows.

“What you can do is direct your marketing, you can do outreach within your target population,” PRG executive director Kathy Wetzel-Mastel said.

Lovaasen said he battled depression after the ravages of his disease forced him out of the workforce nearly two decades ago. He'd been living in subsidized housing :mad: for people with HIV, run by an organization that struck a partnership with Spirit on Lake to fill several units. Lovaasen was thrilled to land one of them.

“You get used to being just tolerated,” Lovaasen said. “It's nice to be the majority for once.” :mad:

Kirby and her late partner met as nuns :eek: in the same convent. Now 58, alone for three years and dealing with a disability, Kirby said she finally feels secure again. The rest of the building is mostly comprised of Somali residents :p, a reflection of the neighborhood Sprit on Lake is in. Kirby's worries about cultural conflicts with her neighbors have not been borne out.

“We were decorating for the holidays and a young Somali girl, a high school student, came down to help us decorate,” Kirby said. “They're starting to reach out and that's how you break down barriers.”

Spirit on Lake's only forbear is Triangle Square, which opened in West Hollywood, Calif., in 2007. Projects in Chicago and Philadelphia are slated to open in 2014.

Hertz is a spry 72-year-old, and was wearing a Dame Edna T-shirt the December day he was interviewed. In 1983, he opened A Brother's Touch, for years the only GLBT bookstore in Minneapolis. He shut it down in 2003.

As old age loomed, Hertz said he feared suffering the same experience as a longtime friend.

“He went into a retirement home and went right back into the closet. And he made it known he didn't want anybody to come visit him and say they were gay,” Hertz said. “Everybody around here, we don't have to do that anymore. It's like being able to breathe.”
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Gay-Seniors-LGBT-Affordable-Housing-240070111.html

Gay Seniors Settle Into Affordable Housing
By Kathy Matheson | Tuesday, Jan 14, 2014 | Updated 6:31 AM EST

Jerry Zeft :fag: was so excited to move into his new apartment that he slept on an air mattress for nearly a week while he waited for his bed and other belongings to catch up with him. No matter that he's 70 years old.

Zeft had landed a coveted spot in a new affordable housing complex for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender seniors in the heart of downtown Philadelphia. Only two other U.S. cities have similar developments.

"I wanted to get into a community that I'm more comfortable in," Zeft said shortly after picking up the keys to his unit.

This month's opening of the John C. Anderson Apartments vindicates years of work by supporters who felt gay elders have been marginalized by youth culture, even within LGBT circles.

Experts say gay seniors are less likely than their straight peers to have the financial and family resources to age in homes of their own. :rolleyes: Many fear discrimination at traditional elder housing facilities, leading them back into the closet after years of being open.

Philadelphia joins Los Angeles and Minneapolis in offering designated gay-friendly, affordable senior housing, collectively offering about 200 units.

Yet advocates say that's nowhere near enough: Research indicates the number of gay seniors in the U.S. is expected to double to 3 million by 2030.

"It's quite amazing that we have done so little for seniors to have a place that they can afford and that offers them respect and safety," said Barbara Satin, an LGBT activist who worked on the 46-unit Minneapolis project.

Although anti-discrimination laws prohibit gay-only housing, buildings can be made LGBT-friendly through marketing and location. The $19.5 million Anderson project, named for a city councilman who fought for gay rights, sits in the affectionately nicknamed Gayborhood. When the leasing office opened last fall, hopeful tenants sat in a block-long line to drop off applications.

Those seniors belong to the generation that trailblazed gay rights, said Mark Segal :fag:, chairman of the Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld Fund, which spearheaded the development. Yet their activism and openness often cost them both family ties and the opportunity for traditional jobs with retirement benefits, he said.

"Why should people, who were the pioneers of the community, not live with dignity? It's outrageous," Segal said. "We have to take care of our own -- nobody else is."

At the 56-unit Philadelphia building, monthly rents range from $192 to $786 based on income, which can't exceed $33,000 per year. There is a waiting list for lower-tier units, though about a dozen remain at the upper end. Nearly all the residents identify as LGBT.

Two more complexes are under construction in Chicago and San Francisco. The Hirschfeld fund is interested in building units in New York, Segal said.

The housing problem may ease for future generations as legalized gay marriage allows same-sex spouses to inherit a partner's property and benefits, said Catherine Thurston, senior program director at New York-based Services and Advocacy for GLBT Elders, or SAGE. However, she said many current seniors aren't married and don't own their homes.

Thurston also noted that it's important to offer seniors more than just a place to live -- they need activities and social services "to connect them to their community."

The Anderson apartments has partnered with the nearby William Way LGBT Community Center to provide residents with counseling, programs and events. That's another reason Jerry Zeft decided to move in.

"I don't like staying home. I enjoy getting out," Zeft said. "And this is the perfect place to get out in this area."
 
Re: Filthy Philadelphia approves affordable housing project for elderly sodomites in "the Gayborhood

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...g-opens-in-center-city-philadelphia/#comments

Low-Income LGBT Senior Housing Opens In Center City Philadelphia
February 24, 2014 5:12 PM
By Kim Glovas and Pat Ciarrocchi

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — The first housing development designed specifically for low-income seniors in the LGBT community had its “official” opening today in center city Philadelphia.

The John C. Anderson Apartments, at 249 South 13th Street, was temporarily swathed in rainbow-colored banners for today’s ribbon-cutting, but LGBT seniors have actually been living here since January.

Among them is carpet muncher Denise Samen.

“Oh, it’s like heaven,” she said today of the housing project.

What makes this place so different from every other place she has lived?

“Well, it’s seniors, they’re friendly, it’s a community, you feel safe,” Samen said.

LGBT jew queer civil rights pioneer Mark Segal spearheaded the $19.5 million development.

A parade of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia political power recognized the significance to this senior community.

“Being an LGBT friendly community, the largest development of its kind in the United States of America clearly shows Philadelphia as leading the way on human rights and LGBT rights issues :mad:,” Mayor Michael Nutter said.

Bill Lowden, who used to live in Northern Liberties because he couldn’t afford to live in what’s commonly called “the gayborhood,” now lives in the heart of Philadelphia’s gay community and he loves it.

“The place is so beautiful and the building is welcoming, which is very nice,” he said today, “and I can’t wait for spring to arrive, when the courtyard is in bloom.”

The rental apartments are one bedroom with over-sized windows equipped for seniors living safely.

For Susan Atlas and Mary Groce the John C. Anderson Apartments will be home someday.

“I was out in the city in 1975 and it was scary to be a lesbian back then. People were not accepted anywhere. It was really a sad situation, which is finally changing in a wonderful way :mad:,” Groce said.

Segal believes it should be a national model.

“If we don’t take care of our LGBT seniors, we’re not taking care of our community and that’s what real community is about :confused:,” Segal said.
 
Back
Top