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No Benefits For Gay Partners In Michigan


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No Benefits for Gay Partners in Mich.

By AP/DAVID EGGERT

(LANSING, Mich.) — Local governments and state universities in Michigan can't offer health insurance to the partners of gay workers, the state Supreme Court ruled Wednesday.

The court ruled 5-2 that Michigan's 2004 ban against gay marriage also blocks domestic-partner policies affecting gay employees at the University of Michigan and other public-sector employers.

The decision affirms a February 2007 appeals court ruling.

Up to 20 public universities, community colleges, school districts and local governments in Michigan have benefit policies covering at least 375 gay couples. After the appeals court ruled, universities and local governments rewrote their policies to try to comply with the gay marriage ban — so the effect of Wednesday's decision is unclear.

The new policies no longer specifically acknowledge domestic partnerships but make sure "other qualified adults," including gay partners, are eligible for medical and dental care. The adults have to live together for a certain amount of time, be unmarried, share finances and be unrelated.

The voter-approved law, which passed 59 percent to 41 percent, says the union between a man and woman is the only agreement recognized as a marriage "or similar union for any purpose."

Justice Stephen Markman, writing for the majority, said that while marriages and domestic partnerships aren't identical, they are similar.

Dissenting Justices Michael Cavanagh and Marilyn Kelly said the constitutional amendment prohibits nothing more than same-sex marriages or similar unions. They argued that circumstances surrounding the election suggest Michigan voters didn't intend to take away people's benefits.

Republican Attorney General Mike Cox in 2005 interpreted the measure to make unconstitutional existing domestic partner policies at the city of Kalamazoo and elsewhere.

Twenty-one gay couples sued, saying the amendment was about marriage and preserving the status quo — not taking away benefits from gays. Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm has sided with the couples.

The couples represented, by the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, argued that the ballot committee that sponsored Proposal 2 "consistently and repeatedly" assured voters that the initiative was only about protecting marriage.

Markman noted, however, that both supporters and opponents of the amendment said ahead of time that benefits would be prohibited by the amendment.

"The role of this Court is not to determine who said what about the amendment before it was ratified, or to speculate about how these statements may have influenced voters," he wrote. "Instead, our responsibility is, as it has always been in matters of constitutional interpretation, to determine the meaning of the amendment's actual language."

Kelly countered that gay partners allowed to get health insurance aren't granted other rights, responsibilities or benefits of marriage — equal rights to property, for instance.

"It is an odd notion to find that a union that shares only one of the hundreds of benefits that a marriage provides is a union similar to marriage," she wrote.

Posted

There has been a sort of revisionist reading of the gay marriage ban, to make it sound like it was "just the marriage" part of it that they meant to ban with that vote. But it was meant to discourage the whole deal, including benefits and such dispite some rhetoric used at the time to sway some of the more moderate types.

Not saying i LIKE it, but its consistent with the 2004 ban. Would be disingenuous and inconsistent with the if they ruled otherwise i think.

Posted

There has been a sort of revisionist reading of the gay marriage ban, to make it sound like it was "just the marriage" part of it that they meant to ban with that vote. But it was meant to discourage the whole deal, including benefits and such dispite some rhetoric used at the time to sway some of the more moderate types.

Not saying i LIKE it, but its consistent with the 2004 ban. Would be disingenuous and inconsistent with the if they ruled otherwise i think.

True, but still sucks. I can't remember who said it but I love quote (not verbatim) about why shouldn't we let gays be as miserable as straight people? When it comes to marriage. :rofl:

Posted

Something like "Gay people have the right to be just as miserable as everybody else!" - Chris Rock, On Gay Marriage.

I have that DVD somewhere and have watched it several times, just cant remember the exact quote.

Posted

I remember that vote. And I also remember that yeah, the whole schtick was 'this isn't about taking away health benefits'. But, I understand the court's position - they can only work with what is actually written as law.

Posted

Not that I like the outcome of this particular case... but I do love when the Courts actually do thie jobs.

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