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The story of Michigan's first openly gay mayor takes place in the small town of Ferndale.

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A Gay Mayor Rises in Michigan

By Deb Price, Creators Syndicate. Posted November 19, 2007.


The story of Michigan's first openly gay mayor takes place in the small town of Ferndale.

If you've ever felt like busting loose and painting your hometown gay-friendly lavender, you might want to grab some art lessons from Craig Covey, the first openly gay mayor elected in Michigan.

Covey's inspiring story -- and that of Ferndale, population 22,000 -- literally starts with a paintbrush.

That would be the one in his hand in 1989, when for $56,000 he bought a house that -- like the Detroit inner-ring suburb where it's located -- needed "a little TLC."

"I selected Ferndale because it had a little kernel of a gay community," recalls Covey, then age 32. "You put on a fresh coat of paint. You trim the bushes. You put in gardens."

Covey talked up the town's potential to gay friends, who started moving there with their own buckets of paint and hedge clippers.

And six years after arriving, Covey decided to take the next big step toward really belonging to a community -- being part of local politics -- and ran for city council. Out of five candidates for two slots, he came in dead last.

A friend took him aside and said: "If you wish to be a councilman, here's what you've got to do: The people want to see you and talk to you. You've got to go to church events and join the Elks and get on boards and commissions."

And that's just what Covey did to demonstrate his commitment to making Ferndale a better place for everyone: He joined the Elks, the town's recreation commission and a youth assistance board. He and other members of a gay residents group donated a globe to the library.

"This stuff probably sounds hokey to someone in a big city. We weren't protesting outside city hall. We were joining the Beautification Commission, which picks the prettiest house on the block.

"We planted flowers at the Ferndale Historical Society. We started a pub crawl, and within a few years had 400 people joining us. We integrated with the straight community," he explains, adding that, as the town gentrified, the surge in the property values delighted homeowners.

When Covey ran again for city council in 1999, he won. Four years later, he was re-elected. And on Nov. 6, he was among at least 32 victorious gay candidates nationwide.

The United States now has 20 gay mayors, including in Providence, R.I.; Maywood, N.J.; Key Biscayne, Fla.; Palm Springs, Calif.; and my home town of Takoma Park, Md., according to the Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund, which helps elect gay candidates.

Covey's years in Ferndale are a gay how-to manual on transforming a town into a place where you really feel at home. He laughs with pride that as mayor he makes a whopping $8,000 a year and has a huge say in such things as sidewalk crack repairs and garbage pickup.

Last year his town, sometimes called "Fabulous Ferndale" and now about 15 percent gay, passed a gay rights ordinance 65 percent to 35 percent on the third try.

The lessons of Ferndale can be applied anywhere, Covey says: "Instead of separating (into a gay ghetto) or demanding our rights, we are achieving what we wanted, neighbor by neighbor."

Ferndale and its new mayor -- what a fabulous example. Where's my paintbrush?

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Deb Price of The Detroit News writes the first nationally syndicated column on gay issues.

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Leaving the Ghetto
Posted by: El Hombre Malo on Nov 20, 2007 1:56 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These kind of examples are the road to a place where gender and sexual orientation are neither the handicap nor the pilar of the election campaign of a valid politician.

The ghetto mentality of many activist initiatives is not only a cause of their failure but also the reason behind many serious, valid gay people not entering politics, because they feel they shoudl get elected and judged for their merits, not because that's a kick in the collective groin of homophobia.

In my home city, Madrid (Spain) we have a "traditional" ghetto activist, flashy and loud in the city council. He is charismatic but I havent heard anything from him that doesnt have to do with gay rights, ever since he got elected, so I came to feel he doesnt represent anyone but the gay. On the other hand, the losing candidate in the last election for Mayor was an economics university professor with a curriculum as goverment advisor, who incidentally was also gay.

Conservatives atacked him for beign gay, most of them not openly of course, but some in a blatant, obnoxious way. But the gay activism field attacked him for not beign gay enough! After losing he mentioned these and not the conservative attacks as the reason he would never run for any elective position again.

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Ferndale is NOT a small town
Posted by: MLO on Nov 20, 2007 10:29 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ferndale is a suburb of Detroit along one of the busiest surface roads in running North South from the Northern Suburbs through Detroit through to the Southern Suburbs - Woodward Ave.

Royal Oak and Ferndale are the KNOWN LBGT enclaves in suburban Detroit and always have been. It is where the artists in the area tend to congregate. The Magic Bag is a major venue for off-beat cultural events.

I've lived in a small town - and calling Ferndale a small town is like calling an elephant a small land animal.

Regards!

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» RE: Ferndale is NOT a small town Posted by: Mina060302