Reports & Research
Hispanic and Latino same-sex couple households in Florida: A report from the 2000 Census
Report Type:
Report
Date:
March 02, 2005
There are more than 9,000 Hispanic and Latino same-sex couple households in Florida. These families are disproportionately affected by anti-LGBT laws and policies.
- The inability to marry prevents individuals from sponsoring a non-citizen same-sex partner for immigration purposes, which disproportionately threatens the stability of Latino same-sex couple families, many with children.
- Latino women in same-sex couples report military service at a disproportionately high rate despite the risk of losing their income and benefits due to the ban on lesbian, gay and bisexual people serving openly.
- Same-sex couple households in which both partners are Hispanic earn over $25,000 less on average per year than white non-Hispanic same-sex couple households.
Hispanic and Latino same-sex families have much to gain from the legal protections of marriage and nondiscrimination protections — and much to lose when states prohibit same-sex marriage and other forms of partner recognition.