Posted on 04/23/2003 7:29:20 AM PDT by Incorrigible
Tuesday, April 22, 2003
BY KATHY BARRETT CARTER
Star-Ledger Staff
[Trenton, NJ] -- After 32 years together, Chris Lodewyks and Craig Hutchinson want to get married. And they want their marriage to be legal.
The Pompton Lakes couple are among a growing and increasingly vocal group that want New Jersey to become the first state in the nation to recognize same-sex marriages for lesbians and gay men.
"This is the next chapter in our lives," said Hutchinson, 52. "We want to show that gay relationships are not frivolous but grounded in love and commitment."
New Jersey has become a key battleground in the fight over recognition of gay marriages, with battles being waged simultaneously in the courts and the Legislature. Gay-rights advocates are heartened because the governor generally supports domestic partnerships, and the court system has recognized gay foster parents, adoptions and visitation rights.
Opponents of gay marriage are just as eager for battle, figuring that if they can win in New Jersey, they can beat the issue down in less-moderate states.
Brian Fahling, a lawyer for the Law and Policy Center of the American Family Association in Tupelo, Miss., which has opposed state and federal efforts to recognize same-sex marriages, was rejected in an attempt to intervene in a New Jersey court case.
He puts New Jersey at or near the top of the list of states where the courts are likely to recognize gay marriage.
"Regrettably, New Jersey is a good forum where they have the best opportunity for success," Fahling said.
Since the 1970s, there have been a series of unsuccessful attempts across the country to gain recognition of gay marriages. Same-sex marriage is not yet legal in any state, but in April 2000, Vermont approved landmark legislation recognizing "civil unions" between gays -- a status just short of marriage.
The state's top court in Hawaii issued a ruling in 1993 compelling the state to give marriage licenses to gay couples, but the next year voters promptly amended the state constitution to override it.
Allowing gay marriages would be disastrous, Fahling said.
"For one, it is the total legitimization of a lifestyle that is dangerous and inimical to culture at large," Fahling said.
He said it is remarkable he finds himself arguing that marriage is a union between a man and woman.
"That's like saying water is wet. Marriage by definition is a man and woman," said Fahling. "Men and women marry, not men and men or women and women."
John Tomicki, executive director of the League of American Families, said redefining marriage would undo 2,000 years of recorded history. To do that, he says the debate should take place in the Legislature, not the courtroom.
Some lawmakers like Sen. Gerald Cardinale (R-Bergen) share that point of view. He has introduced legislation banning same-sex marriage.
Still, gay-rights advocates have not been discouraged. In a passionate and aggressive fight, they are eagerly awaiting a decision from state Superior Court Judge Linda Feinberg in Mercer County. On May 23, she is scheduled to hear a motion to dismiss the same-sex marriage lawsuit filed on behalf of seven couples who were turned down when they sought marriage licenses. Lawyers for the couples are arguing that barring same-sex couples from marrying violates the equal protection clause of the state constitution.
Whichever way Feinberg rules, her decision is certain to be appealed, which sends the issue on its way toward definition in the higher courts.
On the legislative front, Assemblywoman Loretta Weinberg (D-Bergen) and Assemblyman Joseph Roberts (D-Camden) are preparing an 80-page bill that would revise 500 individual New Jersey statutes to recognize domestic partners, Roberts said.
Under the bill, any two people who live together, related or unrelated, including siblings or a parent and child could file an affidavit indicating they are domestic partners.
Expected to be introduced early next month, among other things, the bill will allow gay couples to visit each other in hospital intensive care units, require both private companies and the state to include gay partners as beneficiaries on health plans and allow gay partners to make critical health care decisions for their partners.
"This bill has four prime sponsors. I'm proud to be one," said Roberts, speaking earlier this month before more than 500 supporters of the legislation at a packed town meeting in the basement of the First Presbyterian Church in Haddonfield, Camden County. "We're making progress, but it is not going to be easy."
Sen. John Adler (D-Camden), who is still undecided about whether he will support the bill, said it is unlikely the measure will pass any time soon.
"The reality is, it is not going to happen this year. We don't have the majority of votes," Adler said at the same town meeting. "It's up to you to make this happen," he urged the crowd. "You have to come to Trenton. You have to reward your friends and punish your enemies. You have to tell us why this is right. You have to agitate and aggravate and spend money to be a force."
Senate Co-President John Bennett (R-Monmouth) does not support the bill.
McGreevey opposes same-sex marriage but has told gay-rights advocates that he would sign a bill recognizing benefits for domestic partners if it reaches his desk.
Steven Goldstein, who is leading the campaign in New Jersey on behalf of Lambda Legal, a nonprofit legal advocacy group for gays, organized the Haddonfield meeting.
He said the normally sleepy, scattered, apolitical gay community in New Jersey has been galvanized and energized over this issue.
"What's happening in New Jersey is nothing short of a demographic revolution. In the six years since I've worked in New Jersey politics, the population and power of the lesbian and gay community has literary boomed off the charts," said Goldstein.
Since January, Lambda Legal has also sponsored town meetings in Morristown, Newark, Trenton, Jersey City, Teaneck and Maplewood, attracting more than 2,000 people -- over double the original estimates, according to Goldstein.
The gay community in New Jersey is politically potent because it is not solidly Democratic as it is in many states, he said. There is a sizable number of independents and a fairly high percentage of Republicans, according to Goldstein, who has worked for both U.S. Sens. Frank Lautenberg and Jon Corzine of New Jersey.
For many of the couples, the politics is illusory.
Mark Lewis, who along with his partner of 12 years, Dennis Winslow, are two of the plaintiffs in the case. As Episcopal ministers, they perform marriages for other couples but are themselves denied that legal document, he said at the town meeting.
Two other plaintiffs, Karen Nicholson-McFadden, and her partner, Marcye Nicholson-McFadden, tearfully described the thicket of paperwork they must navigate to make sure their young children have medical coverage. Each woman has conceived a child through artificial insemination, but their children do hot have all the same legal rights of a family. For example, the woman who is not biologically related to the child cannot claim the child on health insurance until after going through an adoption.
A nurse and mother of five, Marilyn Maneely, 53, and her partner for the last 12 years, Diane Marini, are also part of the lawsuit.
Marini said her 86-year-old mother has witnessed women get the right to vote in 1920, the desegregation of schools in 1954 and the passage of Title 9, which gave women greater opportunities in sports, in 1972.
"I am hoping during her lifetime, she'll see marriage for gay couples," said Marini. "When New Jersey passes, this we'll all have large weddings," Marini said.
Kathy Barrett Carter covers the New Jersey Supreme Court and legal issues. She can be reached at kcarter@starledger.com or (609) 989-0254.
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You are confusing the issue of "minors" in particular with "family members" in general. Minors are not permitted to sign binding contracts regardless of whether they are financial or marital in nature.
One what grounds do you say that blood relatives shouldn't be allowed sexual relations, but should be allowed financial relations?
There is no health-related issue or genetic issue involved when someone signs a financial contract. But you may not want to go there -- all arguments for gay marriages come crashing down once the issue of public health is introduced.
I'm offering it as a midway point. I think heterosexuals and homosexuals should have access to the same legal contracts. The same legal contract should have the same legal terminology. I figure calling it a "civil union" would be an alternative term that everyone could accept.
Call that type of contract a "marriage," call it a "civil union," call it a "marriage/civil union," call it a "pastrami on rye, hold the tomato." Point is, have the legal terminology be the same for heterosexual and homosexual contracts.
I'm not sure you want to go there either. The genetic consequences of incest have generally been a myth. It's only when you get generation after generation of inbreeding that you start getting the Haspburg jaw and the like.
And even if you want to rely on the genetic reasons, that would still potentially allow marriages between, say a father and an adult, adopted daughter.
all arguments for gay marriages come crashing down once the issue of public health is introduced.
Unless gay marriage would curb promiscuity.
What if the homosexual couple promises to get the child his or her own bed? 8>)
More seriously, I'd take it on a case-by-case basis, just with heterosexual and single parent adoption.
Well if you can't call it sex, then I guess it not promiscuous sex, either. 8>)
In any case, gay men who visit bathhouses are going to be no more stopped by a piece of paper than would a heterosexual man who visits prostitutes. But then, gay marriage generally isn't aimed at the bathhouse crowd.
Which is exactly why such a marriage is permitted by law as far as I know.
Unless gay marriage would curb promiscuity.
Like heterosexual marriage has curbed heterosexual promiscuity? /sarcasm off/
Now that's the kind of argument the gay community really wants to hear -- gay people have so little control over themselves that a legal contract is needed to keep them under control.
Please, "libertarian." After all, I also support homeschoolers and private schools, gun ownership, privatizing social "security," and U.S. action in Iraq. And I oppose taxes and the welfare system.
In any case, I don't I don't think gay adoption or marriage would destroy morality. Certainly, it wouldn't do as much as the spate of broken homes that no-fault divorce brings about. And I figure it's no more liberal than consigning a child to be brought up by the state.
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