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- <text id=89TT3081>
- <title>
- Nov. 20, 1989: Should Gays Have Marriage Rights?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 20, 1989 Freedom!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ETHICS, Page 101
- Should Gays Have Marriage Rights?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>On two coasts, the growing debate produces two different answers
- </p>
- <p>By Walter Isaacson
- </p>
- <p> Long-term homosexual lovers in New York State, thanks to
- regulations issued by Governor Mario Cuomo's housing
- commissioner last week, now have the same right as surviving
- spouses to take over rent-stabilized apartments upon the death
- of their partners. In San Francisco voters last Tuesday narrowly
- rejected -- after vocal opposition from the city's archbishop
- and other religious leaders -- a proposal entitling gay couples
- to register their relationships with the county clerk. In
- Washington and Los Angeles, task forces have been set up to
- investigate whether denying gay couples the benefits enjoyed by
- married people is a form of discrimination. It is all part of
- a growing national debate over whether gay couples should be
- allowed to declare themselves "domestic partners," or even
- become legally married, and thus be eligible for some of the
- rights accorded to married couples.
- </p>
- <p> The rewards of marriage in today's society are more than
- merely emotional. Among the tangible benefits available to
- husbands and wives are coverage under their spouses' health and
- pension plans, rights of inheritance and community property, the
- joys of joint tax returns, and claims to each other's
- rent-controlled apartments.
- </p>
- <p> Such policies have evolved as the expression of a basic
- social value: that the traditional family, with its economic
- interdependence, is the foundation of a strong society. But
- what about a gay couple? They might be similarly dependent on
- each other, economically and emotionally. Yet no state in the
- U.S. allows them to marry legally, and nowhere are they offered
- the same medical, pension, tax and legal advantages as married
- heterosexuals.
- </p>
- <p> Since as much as 40% of a worker's compensation comes in
- the form of fringe benefits, the issue is partly one of
- economic equity: Is it fair to provide more for a married
- employee than for a gay colleague who does the same work? There
- is also a larger moral issue. Health plans, pension programs and
- inheritance laws are designed to accommodate the traditional
- family. But nowadays, only 27% of U.S. households consist of two
- parents with children, down from 40% in 1970. Is the goal of
- encouraging traditional families therefore obsolete? Is it
- discriminatory? Or is it now more necessary than ever?
- </p>
- <p> Although the drive for domestic-partnership legislation
- partly reflects the changing priorities of the gay-rights
- movement, the new rights being proposed would be available to
- heterosexual couples as well. Of the nation's 91 million
- households, 2.6 million are inhabited by unmarried couples of
- the opposite sex. Only 1.6 million households involve unmarried
- couples of the same sex. These figures include a disparate array
- of personal arrangements: young male-female couples living
- together before getting married, elderly friends who decide to
- share a house, platonic roommates and romantic gay or straight
- lovers. Among those whose emotional and financial relationship
- would qualify them to be called domestic partners, only 40% or
- so are gay.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the most ardent support for partnership rights comes
- from gay groups. For them the issue is more pressing:
- heterosexual couples at least have the option to wed if they
- wish to be eligible for family benefits, but gays do not.
- (Denmark in October became the only industrial nation to allow
- registered gay partnerships.) In addition, the spread of AIDS
- has raised the importance for gays of medical coverage,
- bereavement-leave policies, pension rules, hospital visitation
- rights and laws giving family members the authority to make
- medical decisions and funeral arrangements. "We are not talking
- about symbols here," says Thomas Stoddard, executive director
- of the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, a well-organized
- gay-rights group. "These are bread-and-butter issues of basic
- importance to individuals."
- </p>
- <p> In an attempt to clarify the murky statistics, the Census
- Bureau is making a major change in family categories when its
- decennial count begins in April. For the first time, couples
- living together will have the option to designate themselves
- "unmarried partners." The bureau has not yet said whether it
- will get explicit about the precise sexual and emotional
- relationship that distinguishes "unmarried partners" from
- another category in the survey, "housemates-roommates." (Those
- who have to ask can perhaps be assumed to be merely roommates.)
- </p>
- <p> "We are hoping that we will get at the true
- unmarried-couple situation where there is intimacy between
- partners," says Arlene Saluter, who studies marriage and family
- composition for the Census Bureau, "but it will depend on how
- people view the question."
- </p>
- <p> This difficulty in defining who qualifies is one of the
- problems facing those who would grant new rights to domestic
- partners. It is important to have criteria that are strict
- enough to prevent just any casual lover, roommate or friendly
- acquaintance in need of health insurance from cashing in. But
- prying into private lives and requiring proofs of emotional
- commitment are hardly suitable activities for government.
- </p>
- <p> In order to qualify as "domestic partners" in New York
- City, which offers bereavement leave to municipal workers, a
- couple must officially register their relationship with the
- city's personnel department, have lived together for one year
- and attest that they have a "close and committed personal
- relationship involving shared responsibilities." Thomas F.
- Coleman, a law professor who directs California's Family
- Diversity Project, proposes that live-in couples "who have
- assumed mutual obligation of commitment and support for each
- other" be allowed to apply for a "certificate of domestic
- partnership" that would function like a marriage certificate.
- </p>
- <p> In addition to New York, five other cities provide
- bereavement leave for domestic partners: Los Angeles; Madison,
- Wis.; San Francisco; Seattle; and Takoma Park, Md. The only
- cities that currently offer health benefits to the domestic
- partners of employees are three in California: Berkeley, Santa
- Cruz and West Hollywood. State governments, which have the real
- authority to legislate family and marriage laws, have so far
- shied away from the issue. But across the country, major efforts
- are under way to change the laws:
- </p>
- <p> In Los Angeles a new task force on marital-status
- discrimination is investigating discrimination against domestic
- partners by insurance companies, health clubs, credit companies
- and airline frequent-flyer programs.
- </p>
- <p> In Seattle the city's human rights department ruled in June
- that the AAA automobile club of Washington had illegally
- discriminated on the basis of marital status by refusing to
- grant associate membership to a gay man's domestic partner. A
- city law that could require health plans to provide insurance
- benefits to domestic partners has been shelved while officials
- await clarification of an Internal Revenue Service ruling that
- suggests that these benefits might be considered taxable.
- </p>
- <p> In Washington a domestic-partnership benefits commission
- has been established by the city council to explore extending
- benefits to the partners of municipal employees.
- </p>
- <p> In New York City three gay teachers are suing the board of
- education for the right to include their companions in their
- group health plans, citing a state law prohibiting employment
- discrimination based on marital status.
- </p>
- <p> One large problem facing the domestic-partnership movement
- is a practical one: major U.S. insurance companies have thus
- far refused to offer group plans that include coverage for
- unmarried partners, partly because of the unspoken fear that the
- pool would include a higher proportion of gay males at risk for
- AIDS. In West Hollywood when the city decided to provide health
- coverage to its employees' domestic partners, no insurance
- company would underwrite the business. The city had to resort
- to self-insurance. So far that has resulted in a drop in costs,
- but it has not yet encouraged leading insurance companies to
- consider offering domestic-partnership plans.
- </p>
- <p> The other major objection is a moral one. Social
- conservatives object to policies they see as sanctifying
- homosexuality and further threatening the traditional family.
- John R. Quinn, the Archbishop of San Francisco, was in the
- forefront of the fight against the proposal on that city's
- ballot last week to provide certain domestic-partnership rights
- to municipal workers. He called the idea a "serious blow to our
- society's historic commitment to supporting marriage and family
- life."
- </p>
- <p> The domestic-partnership movement, says David Blankenhorn
- of the Institute for American Values, a Manhattan-based group
- that studies family issues, "just misses the whole point of why
- we confer privileges on family relationships." As Archbishop
- Quinn argues, "The permanent commitment of husband and wife in
- marriage is intrinsically tied to the procreation and raising
- of children." Despite the emergence of women in the workplace
- and changes in the traditional structure of family dependency,
- it is still necessary for most families to share rights and
- benefits in order to raise children and remain financially
- secure.
- </p>
- <p> Thomas Stoddard of Lambda counters that "history by itself
- cannot justify an unduly limited definition of family,
- particularly when people suffer as a result." Yet even within
- the gay-rights movement, there is some disagreement about the
- goal. Paula Ettelbrick, the legal director of Lambda, argues
- that the campaign for domestic partnership or gay marriage is
- misdirected because it tries to adopt traditional heterosexual
- institutions for gays rather than encouraging tolerance for
- divergent life-styles. "Marriage, as it exists today, is
- antithetical to my liberation as a lesbian and as a woman,
- because it mainstreams my life and voice," she says.
- </p>
- <p> The public seems to be tolerant of the notion that gay
- couples should be allowed more of the rights now accorded to
- married couples. In a TIME/CNN poll conducted by the firm of
- Yankelovich Clancy Shulman, 54% agreed that "homosexual couples
- should be permitted to receive medical and life-insurance
- benefits from their partner's insurance policies." Yet there is
- little support for gay marriages: 69% said such arrangements
- should not be made legal, and 75% felt that gay couples should
- not be allowed to adopt children.
- </p>
- <p> Despite this public resistance, legalizing some form of
- marriage for gay couples is probably the logical outcome of the
- drive for domestic-partnership rights. "Given the fact that we
- already allow legal gay relationships," writes Andrew Sullivan
- in the New Republic, "what possible social goal is advanced by
- framing the law to encourage those relationships to be
- unfaithful, undeveloped and insecure?" Marriage involves the
- obligation to support each other both in sickness and in health
- and to share financial benefits and burdens. It implies, at
- least in theory, a commitment to a long-term and monogamous
- relationship. The advent of the AIDS epidemic increases the
- stake that all of society has in promoting such relationships,
- for gays as well as straights.
- </p>
- <p> Domestic-partnership rights and legal gay marriages,
- therefore, can be justified to the extent that the couples
- involved profess a willingness to accept the mutual financial
- obligations, community-property rights and shared commitments
- to care for each other that are the basis of family life. With
- this broader goal in mind, it makes sense for society to allow
- -- indeed to encourage -- domestic partners both gay and
- straight to take on all the rights as well as the
- responsibilities of marriage.
- </p>
- <p>--Melissa Ludtke/Boston, Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles and
- Andrea Sachs/New York
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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