If there’s one resounding takeaway from the domino-like legalization of marriage equality over the last year, it’s this: gay couples count.
Their relationships count, their constitutional rights count, their suffering counts, their children count. Now, that message has once again been affirmed in the most literal way imaginable.
For the first time in history, married same-sex couples will be counted as families by the U.S. Census Bureau.
According to the Washington Post, which first reported the change this week, the 2013 American Community Survey results — due in September — will include an estimated 180,000 same-sex married couples with statistics on the nation’s 56 million families.
Over the last decade, data on same-sex couples had been segregated from the broader research on families, and the Census had categorized same-sex spouses as unmarried partners. While the shift isn’t expected to have a significant impact on statistics, it does reflect a growing acceptance of full civil rights for gay and lesbian Americans, and lends greater legitimacy to their unions.









