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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, August 3, 2009

Green and gay combine in Seattle


By Jerry Large
Seattle Times

Gerod Rody didn't mess around with noble sentiments.

When I asked him why he started a green group pitched at the gay community, he said, "I kind of wanted to date and have the parts of my life come together."

But the Seattle resident is serious about both gender identity and environmental sustainability. His organization, Out for Sustainability, combines gay with green.

Rody is regularly drawing people out to social and educational events, sponsored by his and other pro-green organizations.

On Earth Day, Out put on two Earth Gay events, doing habitat restoration on Beacon Hill and building a garden in South Park so some kids going through drug recovery have fresh vegetables.

Rody is a designer and business consultant with a bachelor's degree in European studies from the University of Washington. He just this June finished his master's degree in sustainable business at the Bainbridge Graduate Institute. He's planned weddings and helped design buildings, including helping his mother develop an organic restaurant in Puyallup, Wash.

He said his parents helped steer him toward social involvement. His father is a chiropractor and his mother has always been committed to natural living.

"So I kind of grew this early-on sense that you are supposed to be responsible for your own self and your community as well."

His faith plays a role, too. Rody was brought up as an evangelical Christian. He's a Presbyterian now, but he's always believed that "one of the reasons I was brought into the world is to effect positive change."

There weren't many other gay people at the Bainbridge institute, he said, so he felt "my values, centered on sustainability and my sexuality, were really disconnected."

He looked for organizations that bridge the gap but couldn't find one. So he enlisted fellow student Julian O'Reilley, and she helped him put together an organization (the Web site is http://www.outsustainability.com) with help from their network of friends in green groups and the gay community.

The sustainability movement is more than a subculture now, he said, and LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) people are moving toward the mainstream. It felt like the right time to do some matchmaking.

There is a lot of diversity in the LGBT community. Rody's demographic, gay men, like most of us, has a mixed reputation when it comes to sustainable living.

Remember "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy"? That image doesn't hold true for everyone, but it's common enough, and a flair for consumption is not green. But living in small spaces in urban areas is.

Even Rody isn't entirely green:

"Most of my clothes, I buy used, but I like shoes."

His idea isn't to push for perfection, but "to affirm people in what they already do" and provide opportunities for them to learn about other things they can do.

"I've been surprised by how many people say they aren't being sustainable, but they take the bus to work, or they compost."

So far, the project hasn't jump-started his dating life, but Rody said, "It has expanded my social network and added depth to it."

That's nice, but there's something noble here, too: getting more people to embrace sustainable lifestyles.