- cross-posted to:
- seattle
- cross-posted to:
- seattle
cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/63078842
Crow Harmony never felt at ease living in Florida as a transgender guy. The state has some of the most restrictive anti-LGBTQ+ laws in the country, and Harmony said he struggled to find employers willing to hire trans people. Last fall, after Harmony’s boyfriend transitioned, the couple lost their housing.
They were just 21 and 20 with no money or job prospects, so Harmony reached out to a Seattle nonprofit for help getting out of Florida. The nonprofit, a trans-led organization called Traction, welcomed the couple with a place to sleep and money for moving. But unbeknownst to Harmony, Traction was struggling, too.
Since the 2024 election, Traction has helped 1,500 trans people flee red states — more than 20 times the 70 people it aided in the 18 months before the election. And it’s just one of several Seattle nonprofits whose leaders say they don’t have the resources to help the number of trans people who’ve left their homes for the safety of the Pacific Northwest.
Though trans people make up just 1 percent of the population in Washington state, the nonprofits that help them say their budgets are drained and their staffs are stretched so thin that last month the Seattle LGBTQ Commission asked Mayor Katie Wilson (D) to declare a civil state of emergency. Such a declaration would free up general fund dollars to bolster the nonprofits’ finances as they help transplants find housing and jobs.
“The conditions,” the commission wrote in a June 2 letter to Wilson and the City Council, “are an urgent policy concern and a life-and-death matter for internal displaced persons fleeing to Seattle for safety.”

… Kitsap county isn’t part of the olympic peninsula.
Yes, it’s its own. But it still is on this side of the sound, and much of the same things apply to it, and it is a cheaper option than Seattle.
My friends aren’t all in Kitsap, no. Many of the friends I have live in Sequim and Port Townsend. They’re both queer friendly areas with prominent queer communities.
Alright. And while your anecdotal evidence is as valid as my own, I will put out that house prices in Sequim average ~$500k, and PT is around ~$650k (for reference, seattle is ~$850k. Median rent in Kitsap county is ~$1750/mo for a 1br)
Yes, being in one of the trendy neo-suburbs of seattle is likely to be more queer friendly - but it’s still not exactly affordable to live there. If the goal is “a jobless trans person can afford to live there on savings while they get established” in western wa, you start looking at towns deeper on the peninsula or western WA in general - places like Elma, Aberdeen, Moclips. I’ll freely admit that I didn’t consider places like Port Townsend in my initial cautioning - because it’s not a place someone can easily afford to move to, especially from one of the states queer people generally are fleeing from.
(edit: clarity)
It doesn’t resolve the issue, for sure. But my original point still stands that it’s cheaper over here.