>From: Sandra Spiegel <[log in to unmask]> >Subject: Hooray!!! > >>Date: 25 Apr 2000 14:38:54 EDT >>From: [log in to unmask] (Susan E. Cox) >>Subject: v >>To: [log in to unmask] (Susan E. Cox) >>Content-Disposition: inline >> >>Vermont Gay Union Bill Is Approved >> >> By ROSS SNEYD, Associated Press Writer >> >> MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) - Vermont lawmakers gave final approval Tuesday to a >bill that would make the state the >> first in the nation to give gay and lesbian couples the benefits of marriage. >> >> Gov. Howard Dean has promised to sign the bill and may do so by the end of >the week. The first civil unions >> ceremonies could take place after July 1. >> >> The final House vote on accepting Senate amendments was 79-68. >> >> ``The granting of the equal protections of >the law by providing the legal >> protections, benefits and responsibilities >that flow from marriage will not >> diminish your humanity, your dignity, your >freedom or independence,'' >> House Judiciary Committee Chairman Thomas >Little said. >> >> ``The continued denial of these legal >protections, benefits and >> responsibilities to a small but vulnerable >class of Vermont's citizens >> diminishes their humanity, dignity, freedom and independence,'' he said. >> >> Opponents made one last attempt to derail the bill before the final vote. >A Republican representative proposed >> delaying the vote until Nov. 30, after the fall elections, but the move >was defeated 84-63. >> >> The bill would create civil unions as a legal framework parallel to marriage. >> >> Same-sex couples would be able to go to their town clerk to obtain a civil >union license, just as opposite-sex couples >> obtain marriage licenses. >> >> The civil unions then would be certified by a justice of the peace, judge >or member of the clergy, just as marriages. >> >> Breakups between civil-union partners would be handled like divorces, >through Family Court, although they would >> be called dissolutions. >> >> Civil-union partners would gain all of the benefits that the state confers >through marriage, such as making medical >> decisions on behalf of partners or inheritance. >> >> The state action, however, has no effect on federal programs, such as >Social Security. >> >> The biggest Senate change the House had to accept was moving up the date >when the first civil unions could be >> formed, to July 1 instead of two months later under the original House >measure. Other Senate amendments dealt >> largely with language and did not change the substance of the bill. >> >> After the Hawaii Supreme Court raised the possibility of same-sex >marriages in 1993 - a prospect the state's voters >> later rejected - 30 states and the federal government passed laws denying >recognition to same-sex marriages. >> > > >