Opinions
D.C. doesn’t shine for everyone
Unaffordable housing costs now major motivator for moving


D.C. has become a shimmering new town that doesn’t shine for everyone.
Luminous bejeweled Christmas trees dotting Washington’s public spaces are a fitting metaphor for the city this holiday season. D.C. has never before been so shiny as the glimmering ornaments or so sparkling as the brightest lights.
Masked by the tinsel and obscured by the twinkle, however, is a metropolis of both enormous disparities and an excruciatingly high cost of living. Behind the glitter and gloss the trunk of the tree is more brittle than apparent and Santa’s not-such-a-secret is burdened boughs beneath all the glitz.
Early in its four-decade modern history, D.C. joined a small handful of other locales as a primary destination for gays and lesbians in search of an identity and seeking a place to connect with others. Drawn from nearly everywhere, with the Midwest and the South strongly represented, the District proved a welcoming home for such new arrivals.
A much different place than today, noteworthy for its dysfunctional government and disorganized civic infrastructure, transplants joined those already here or native to the metropolitan area. The city’s evolutionary development sparked by the advent of self-government mirrored the ground-level creation of community for a diverse gay assemblage.
Housing was plentiful and affordable, the cost of living reasonable with jobs readily available. A relatively easy-going economic environment allowed for the exploration of avocations, occupations and creative pursuits alongside a quest for camaraderie and enjoyment. Anything, and everything, seemed possible, embraced by a demographic with an acclimation toward pursuits as small business owners, entrepreneurs, independent professionals and those engaged in creative enterprises and artistic ventures.
Washington was a decidedly less polished place, grittier and rough-edged, but with copious cultural assets, plentiful public amenities – and decidedly more cutting-edge. Less crowded, competitive and complicated, the District was ideal for adventurous locals and transplants alike looking to discover passions, begin careers or build businesses, coalesce in central neighborhoods, establish identities and forge connections both personal and collective.
The past decade of rapidly accelerated growth and development has brought great change to the city and surrounding region. Per capita income in D.C. is the highest in the country when compared to states. Six of the area’s counties are among the 10 wealthiest and the Greater Washington area has the highest median household income of the 25 largest metropolitan areas.
While incomes have soared for some the price of local living has skyrocketed for all. Housing costs have shot up astronomically, now the highest in the country, and are unaffordable for individuals or households unable to keep pace. Measured against all 50 states, nowhere is the relative value of a dollar lower.
It now takes a sleigh full of money to survive, let alone thrive, in D.C. and neighboring environs. For those with high-paying jobs earning incomes well above the rest of America, it’s a wonderful life.
For some, including among the 10 percent of LGBT District residents, the city has begun to lose its luster in the rat race of making ends meet. For others, the financial requirements have simply grown too great.
Nationally, millennials aged 25-to-34 along with the middle class have undertaken a nascent exodus to cities where housing costs are lower and the levies of living less extreme. Expensive places like Washington offer increasingly limited opportunities for those choosing alternative endeavors or who are of more modest means. In recent years and at a quickening pace, inland lower-cost heartland cities offering employment opportunities have grown 2.5 percent more than those in high-cost coastal regions.
Now dispersed throughout D.C. often by economics yet benefiting from full integration in a city bestowed with the achievement of full equality, lesbian and gay residents are among the house-poor who struggle with elevated costs. Some have moved to less expensive parts of town, while others have decamped for the outer rings of suburban, or even exurban, areas. Others have simply bid farewell.
D.C. has become a shimmering new town that doesn’t shine for everyone.
Mark Lee is a long-time entrepreneur and community business advocate. Follow on Twitter: @MarkLeeDC. Reach him at [email protected].
Commentary
A historic first: Pride celebrations in Fairfax City
Mayor Catherine Read spearheaded event

Both joy and controversy marked the City of Fairfax’s first LGBTQ+ Pride celebration.
The event, coordinated by representatives from the city and George Mason University with the help of local Drag and Variety Show The Palace, took place the evening of June 3 at Old Town Hall.
“The night of [Mayor] Catherine Read’s historic win, she sponsored our drag show at Earp’s Ordinary so her team could celebrate,” writes Alan Xtra, producer of The Palace. “She is a fierce ally and that very night she promised the community that there would be a Pride celebration in Fairfax City. The mayor made good on her promise and the event was an absolute success.”
The All-Ages Pride Dance Party drew backlash from some community members due to the presence of Drag Performers at the event. Stacy Langdon of grassroots conservative group Mama Grizzly, photo-ready in her red “Make America Great Again” hat, coordinated a group of protestors bearing signs: “Drag is prostitution,” “Trans is a no-no,” and “June is Groomer Awareness Month” among others.
Fairfax City Police were present outside the event.
“When we heard there was a hate group coming, I naturally had some safety concerns,” writes Xtra. “We were blessed to interface with the local fire and police departments to ensure a necessary presence for our protection, and we were able to coordinate with the city for private security and a bag check as well.”
As the sun began to set over the Beer in The ‘Burbs festival outside, Old Town Hall filled with a colorful crowd, many dressed up in rainbow attire and dramatic makeup. DJ Slamz laid down a soundtrack of dance classics, punctuated by drag performances from local artists. Drag King Maqks Gross performed Queen’s “Don’t Stop Me Now,” and drag queen Sirene Noir Sidora Jackson showcased “Part of Your World” from The Little Mermaid.
The Drag Show’s Host, Masvusi, performed Kylie Minogue’s “Magic.”
“Drag is about world building,” she writes. “It’s about having those small moments of liberation, peace, and joy that we don’t get out of the world we live in now.”
Local band Shelley Star and The Galaxy performed a set complete with dancers.
Star, a songwriter and dance teacher, writes “I am lucky enough to be a performer with a band that contains several cherished LGBTQIA+ members, and the joy and community we felt in the room was palpable and overwhelming. I was specifically moved by the amount of young people who got to broaden their horizons and maybe experience something new about the world they live in for the first time. “Part Of Your World” … moved me to tears. It was so wholesome; just a perfect choice for the spirit of the event … It was beautiful to witness and be a part of.”
In addition to the entertainment, the city organized crafts, face painting, and booths for local organizations upstairs. Pizza was served.
“Despite the protestors, the city has assured us that this was just the first of what will become a community tradition of Pride celebrations every June,” writes Xtra. “I look forward to seeing how the event will grow in the coming years.”
Opinions
D.C. still has an HIV epidemic
Legalizing sex work a good next step in fighting the disease

New CDC data from February 2023 shows that the percentage of D.C. residents with HIV has gone down. Some outlets have marked this as a success and a positive statistic to herald.
The data specifically shows that 1.8% of D.C. residents are living with HIV, compared to 2.8% before. While a downturn in cases is good, D.C. still is living with an HIV epidemic that needs to be curbed even more.
We should not be celebrating a disease rate of 1.8%. In the nation’s capital — a metropolitan city that is supposed to provide quality healthcare coming from the biggest economy in the world — two out of every 100 residents we cross on these streets should not be diagnosed with a serious and lifelong illness.
Of course, recent measures nationwide and in D.C. to prevent HIV harbor lots of potential and should be celebrated. For one, PrEP has been made free, the daily pill that would safeguard against infection even if sexual contact with a positive patient was made.
The medical community has long studied what constitutes an “epidemic” in a given country. But most of that scientific literature studies epidemics that grow and reside in developing countries, where infrastructure and healthcare are of so poor quality that disease cases skyrocket beyond any manageable proportion. Take the Ebola virus, which likely originated from an unregulated animal market in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Ebola went on to ravage the DRC, Sudan, Congo, Gabon, and Uganda. Doctors are quick to call Ebola an epidemic (and for good reason), but are slow to call other diseases epidemics as well.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) defines an epidemic as “an unexpected increase in the number of disease cases in a specific geographical area.” Unfortunately, according to this definition, HIV in D.C. doesn’t constitute an epidemic. While cases have gone down, though, the virus’s prevalence in the capital city should still shock everyone.
D.C. must continue to treat our HIV rate as a crisis belonging to epidemic proportions. There are a few measures the city can take to prevent spread. A couple come to mind: First, the city could finally legalize sex work. There are too many vulnerable sex workers in parts of town who sell their bodies without safe contraception, and who might take in used needles as well to inject drugs. Second, the city can amp up efforts to advertise PrEP, the antiviral drug that prevents HIV infection. There are plenty of successful PR campaigns around the city, and more posters advertising PrEP, be they on public buses or the Metro, would do some good.
Treating HIV as an epidemic in our capital city is necessary to reduce its harm as much as possible.
Isaac Amend (he/him/his) is a trans man and young professional in the D.C. area. He was featured on National Geographic’s ‘Gender Revolution’ in 2017 as a student at Yale University. Amend is also on the board of the LGBT Democrats of Virginia. Find him on Instagram @isaacamend.
Blade Blog
Cruising into Pride
Celebrity holds firm as a proud corporate supporter of LGBTQ community

As you know if you have read my columns and blog posts, I love cruising. The kind where you are on a river or the ocean. Today in both the United States and around the world the LGBTQ community is facing difficult times. Attacks are coming fast and furious. There are few places where members of our community can feel totally safe these days.
One of those places is on a cruise ship that values the community. That is what I have found whenever I travel on a Celebrity ship. Today, they are going even further in letting the world know about their respect for the community. They happily advertise Pride at Sea. Of course, they are doing it to attract LGBTQ passengers and their dollars, but that’s great in this day and age, when a company is willing to step up proudly, wants our business, and will do everything they can to make us feel both wanted and safe. That is what Celebrity Cruise Lines is doing.
I want Pride to be celebrated not just in June, but every month. But I am excited about the June celebrations whether hosted in D.C. by Capital Pride, or on the high seas. While many of us will be at the D.C. Wharf, on June 10 to help the Washington Blade celebrate Pride on the Pier with spectacular fireworks, those who miss that and are on a Celebrity ship will be part of a Pride celebration as well. Their ships will all celebrate the month in various ways including flying a LGBTQ Pride flag.
Celebrity has invited my friend, entertainer extraordinaire, Andrew Derbyshire, to lead the celebration on the Edge on June 13, in Ibiza. He recently quoted Celebrity, “In honor of Pride month and our continuing commitment toward fostering positive and authentic partnerships within the LGBTQIA+ community, Celebrity Cruises is raising the Pride flag to celebrate acceptance, unity, and support for the community. Each June, Celebrity Cruises hosts our annual Pride Party at Sea. Every ship takes part in the celebration that brings our crew and guests together to honor and celebrate Pride.” Andrew added, “I am happy to announce I will be flying to Ibiza on the 13th of June for a few nights, to host Pride on the Celebrity Edge, with my friend and captain, Captain Tasos, and the amazing team on board.” Andrew, like many of the entertainers I have seen and met on Celebrity ships, is encouraged to be who he is, ‘out’ and proud.
The Edge will kick off Celebrity’s fifth annual Pride Party at Sea during its June 10, 2023, sailing. “The party will take place in tandem across the award-winning Celebrity fleet, with each ship ‘handing off the party baton’ to the next, to keep the festivities running across hemispheres and time zones. A variety of multi-generational LGBTQ+ focused programming will take place throughout the month of June. Together, officers, staff and crew around the world will participate in Celebrity’s signature Pride programming.”
You should know one of the things straight couples could always do on a Celebrity cruise is have the captain marry them. Now, since same-sex marriage became legal in Malta, where most Celebrity ships are registered, their captains can legally marry same-sex couples. After this happened the first legal same-sex marriage at sea, on a major cruise line, occurred on board Celebrity Equinox in January 2018 when the captain married Francisco Vargas and Benjamin Gray.
Celebrity is a Florida-based company, and along with Disney, they are standing up for the LGBTQ community. They have been a Presenting Sponsor of Miami Beach Gay Pride for four years in a row. They continue to advertise their collaborations with gay cruise companies like VACAYA, which has charted the Celebrity Apex for a cruise of the Caribbean in 2024. The ship will be sailing with a lot of happy LGBTQ cruisers on Feb 17-24, 2024 for seven nights from Fort Lauderdale to Puerto Rico, St. Croix, and Antigua. For anyone who hasn’t been on the Apex, it is an amazing ship. While not during an official Pride month I will show my Pride along with many other LGBTQ travelers on Celebrity Beyond this October out of Rome, and on Celebrity Ascent in October 2024 out of Barcelona. The Ascent hasn’t even set sail yet.
Let’s hope other companies will follow Celebrity’s lead and value the LGBTQ community. We are entitled to live our lives safely and to the fullest, as who we were born to be.
Peter Rosenstein is a longtime LGBTQ rights and Democratic Party activist. He writes regularly for the Blade.
-
District of Columbia2 days ago
D.C. Pride officials monitoring Canadian wildfire smoke conditions
-
Florida4 days ago
Federal judge halts enforcement of Fla. trans healthcare ban
-
National4 days ago
Same-sex marriage support remains strong at 71 percent high
-
Opinions2 days ago
DeSantis is public enemy No. 1 of the LGBTQ community
-
The White House2 days ago
White House debuts new actions to protect the LGBTQ community
-
a&e features2 days ago
Drag legend Ella Fitzgerald returns to the stage for Capital Pride festival
-
Photos5 days ago
Washington Spirit host largest halftime drag performance in NWSL history
-
Louisiana4 days ago
La. lawmakers send anti-LGBTQ bills to governor