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Domestic partnerships: a moocher's dream come true
Denver YourHub ^ | 10/17/2006 | Kevin J Jones

Posted on 10/19/2006 10:57:38 AM PDT by Dumb_Ox

There is a same-sex domestic partnership referendum on the Colorado ballot this year called Referendum I. It extends the legal benefits and responsibilities of marriage to registered same-sex domestic partners. Its supporters disingenously insist that domestic partnerships are in no way the same as marriage. The considerable moral concerns about legitimizing homosexual acts are excluded from the opposing arguments in the Colorado voters' Blue Book entry on the referendum. Observing the rampant amorality of our government and the collapse of substantive public ethical discussion, this exclusion is hardly surprising.

Yet the Blue Book also neglects fiscal argument nearly as important. It relates especially to the pension provisions of Colorado's Public Employees' Retirement Association (PERA).

PERA pensions are quite generous. According to the association's Web site at www.copera.org, $2,108,791,000 in payouts were made to 71,401 recipients in 2005. This averages out to about $29,500 per recipient.

The Fiscal Impact Statement for Referendum I (found at www.state.co.us/gov_dir/leg_dir/lcsstaff/Bluebook/06ReferendumIfiscalnote.pdf) declares: "Because Referendum I provides that persons in a domestic partnership have the same benefits as spouses, a surviving partner would be eligible for a PERA survivor benefit and enrollment in the PERACare health benefits program. Thus, the referendum would minimally impact PERA benefit liabilities in the Pension Fund and the Health Care Trust Fund."

The impact is minimal only because of the massive size of the pension fund. Should domestic partnerships be instituted, this impact won't seem so small. That's because this system is ripe for mooching.

Let's examine PERA in detail. PERA members include employees from both state and municipal governments: teachers, highway patrolmen, university employees and even judges. All members make a contribution of 8 percent of their annual salary to their retirement fund, which compounds at a tax-deferred annual 5 percent interest. Their contribution receives some matching funding from state and county governments. Their years of service are factored into their retirement benefits, with more years of service rightly linked to higher benefits.

There are three payment options for PERA members.

Option one provides the pensioner with a significant lifetime monthly benefit; upon his or her death the remaining pension balance will be matched by PERA and transferred to his or her cobeneficiary in a lump-sum payment.

Under option two, following a pensioner's death his or her cobeneficiary will receive a lifetime monthly benefit equal to one-half the monthly benefit the pensioner was receiving at the time of his or her death.

Under option three, following a pensioner's death, his or her cobeneficiary will receive a lifetime monthly benefit equal to the monthly benefit the pensioner was receiving at the time of his or her death. IRS rules currently prohibit non-spouses more than10 years the beneficiary's junior from receiving option three benefits, but it is unclear whether domestic partnerships will evade such prohibitions. Regardless, there are always the first two options.

How might domestic partnership impact PERA? The legislation explicitly forbids domestic partnerships contracted between immediate family members: "an individual shall not enter into a domestic partnership with an uncle or aunt or with a niece or nephew, whether the relationship is by the half or the whole blood." However, this does not forbid other familial contracts. The retired public servant who alerted me to this looming problem noted that, should his beloved wife proceed him in death, he could contract a partnership with his 18-year-old grand-nephew (or some other favored youngster). With some three decades of service, upon his death his grand-nephew could receive this substantial lifetime monthly pension of a veteran worker, freeloading off of state employees and taxpayers for the duration of his long and healthy life.

The only social penalty this pensioner's domestic partner in theft would face is an inability legally to marry while in a domestic partnership. (Remember, these partnerships aren't limited only to practicing homosexuals.) Considering late marrying ages and contemporary habits of cohabitation, it is unclear whether this is a significant disincentive for a young man who must simply wait a few years until his partner, so generous with other people's money, finally expires.

I note here that I have neglected to examine here how such a couple could exploit health care plans under Referendum I provisions. Surely further explorations in this area will provide worries for the civic-minded, and delights for the opportunistic.

Referendum I's proponents claim domestic partnerships are not about marriage, but about basic legal rights. Yet precisely because they insist that their proposed domestic arrangement isn't really marriage, their system has little protection against cynical abuses such as that described here. Most people acknowledge a dislike for mercenary marriages. Yet why should domestic partnerships, lacking the respected name of matrimony, command the good behavior of their participants?

Names mean things. They have significance. Literally, they signify. Those advocating domestic partnerships equivocate between marriage and a state identical in material and legal benefits, but certainly equivalent neither in content nor in purpose. Such equivocations make for bad law. Should Referendum I pass, this wordplay will make for even worse finances.


TOPICS: Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections; US: Colorado
KEYWORDS: colorado; domesticpartnerships; homosexualagenda; loopholes
All typos and bad arguments mine. I might not have time to address criticism, but I thought this is a very significant point of abuse. I can imagine a serial partnership person running around and cajoling one elderly retiree after another to name himself a co-beneficiary of state pensions.

All the while he could say to himself: "It's not marriage, right?"

1 posted on 10/19/2006 10:57:40 AM PDT by Dumb_Ox
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To: Dumb_Ox

What a mess!


2 posted on 10/19/2006 11:04:36 AM PDT by tessalu
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To: Dumb_Ox

Let's see, a mother may be unable to put her adult daughter on her health care plan even if they live under the same roof. But she can form a domestic partnership with a stranger, and that person will be covered.

Another side effect of this law, rarely mentioned, is that our court system will be burdened with the property disputes of partners who decide to end their relationship. Check out Judge Judy and similar shows for examples of living together couples who expect the court to sort out who paid for the TV, and who paid for Play Station. At least now, the courts can give this kind of case short shrift if they wish.


3 posted on 10/19/2006 11:12:52 AM PDT by joylyn
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To: Dumb_Ox

This had occured to me. People in their 20s have been living together with friends as roommates for years. It totally makes sense to imagine one saying, I'll get you health benefits from my job if you pick up a greater share of the rent.


4 posted on 10/19/2006 11:18:44 AM PDT by ElkGroveDan (The California Republican Party needs Arnold the way a drowning man needs an anvil.)
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To: ElkGroveDan

Im a lot older than my 20's, but have a woman friend who has a job with great benefits and we have discussed this. It would be well worth my while to pay more than half the rent in order to have her benefits. The only disadvantage is that people would assume we are lesbians and we are not. However, as more and more people do it, this assumption will no longer be made.


5 posted on 10/19/2006 11:32:07 AM PDT by joylyn
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To: Dumb_Ox
The only social penalty this pensioner's domestic partner in theft would face is an inability legally to marry* while in a domestic partnership.

Oh don't worry about THAT!! It would be so unconstitutional to deny someone their civil rights that way. The black robes will find nothing in the Constitution that prohibits polygamy, especially when there's no other official marriage on record, and it might even be necessary. You know, like reverse discrimination---as Justice O'Connor said, it's just until the country gets the hang of this thing.

*Thank you for not splitting the infinitive, Mr. Jones. :)

6 posted on 10/19/2006 1:28:07 PM PDT by Graymatter
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To: Dumb_Ox

How common do you think this will be, though? Currently, it's all possible with marriage, as long as the people are of the opposite sex. Any elderly lady in Colorado could marry her young adult grand-nephew and pass on the benefits that way. Does it happen much? Heck, in Colorado cousins can marry. I just don't think that many people are going to want to do what it takes to take advantage of such a situation.


7 posted on 10/19/2006 2:28:38 PM PDT by Kahonek
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To: Kahonek
How common do you think this will be, though?

Not super-common, but more common than in marriage, I think. Domestic Partnerships will be too new an institution to have much stigma attached to its abuse.

8 posted on 10/19/2006 11:48:52 PM PDT by Dumb_Ox (http://kevinjjones.blogspot.com)
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To: Dumb_Ox

does this have any chance of passing?

This seems like something designed for the mentally limited.


9 posted on 10/20/2006 2:21:03 AM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: longtermmemmory

The last poll I could find was done in September, but it claimed there was majority support. There are tons of referenda on the ballot this year, so attention is split.


10 posted on 10/20/2006 3:14:33 PM PDT by Dumb_Ox (http://kevinjjones.blogspot.com)
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