Queens Pride Parade returns after 2-year pandemic hiatus

Loading Video…

This browser does not support the Video element.

Thousands celebrate return of Queens Pride Parade

Thousands of revelers hit the streets in Jackson Heights on Sunday to celebrate the return of the Queens Pride Parade.

Pride Month is in full swing in New York City, as thousands of people gathered for the 30th annual Queens Pride Parade.

Organizers say the parade, which made its triumphant return this year after a two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, is one of the most diverse and inclusive parades across New York City.

Mayor Eric Adams kicked off the festivities, as the Lesbian and Gay Big Apple Corps Marching Band and revelers made their way along 37th Avenue in Jackson Heights to show their pride. 

"I'm so proud to be here," said Daniel Dromm, the parade's founder and a former New York City Councilmember. "How much change has happened over those last 30 years is just fantastic… we're out, loud and proud in the borough of Queens."

Loading Video…

This browser does not support the Video element.

Longtime LGBTQ couples talk making love last

To mark the start of Pride Month, Fox 5 NY is celebrating love by speaking with three LGBTQ couples—each of which has been together more than a quarter of a century—to find out what it takes to make love last.

The parade is the second oldest and second-largest of its kind in New York City and was inaugurated in 1993 after Julio Rivera, a gay Puerto Rican bartender, was murdered in Jackson Heights by three men. 

Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell also marched in this year's parade along with members of the NYPD's Gay Officers Action League. Uniformed NYPD officers were banned from the New York City Pride parade in 2021 due to ongoing tensions between law enforcement and some parts of the LGBTQ community.