In New Jersey, a Blue-Ribbon State Government Commission Tells Governor Corzine and the Legislature: It’s Time to Enact Marriage Equality

Posted on December 14, 2008 
Filed Under Uncategorized


To Read the Complete Report Online, visit http://www.nj.gov/oag/dcr/ curc.html

Making its final recommendation, the New Jersey Review Commission says the law ‘invites and encourages’ harm to same- and their children

The commission cites ‘’ the law will never provide with the

The 13 Commissioners include not only leaders, but also a right-to-life , plus two , plus six representing an Administration that had opposed in the courts

To watch video of same- testifying before the Commission, visit www.CivilUnionsDontWork.com

TRENTON, N.J. — A commission today unanimously recommended to and the that they enact a law to allow same- to marry “expeditiously because any delay in will harm all the of New Jersey.”

The recommendation is part of the 79-page final report just released by the New Jersey Review Commission, a 13- created by the law enacted in December 2006. The 13 Commissioners include not only leaders, but also a right-to-life , plus two , plus six representing an Administration that had opposed in the courts. Their report, passed on a 13 to 0 with no abstentions, is based on from more than 150 witnesses over 26 hours spanning 18 in 2007 and 2008.

The law “invites and encourages of same- and their children,” concludes the final report, titled The Economic, Legal, Medical and of New Jersey’s Act. “In a number of cases, the negative effect of the Act on the physical and mental of same- and their children is striking, largely because a number of employers and hospitals do not recognize the rights and benefits of for .”

“The Commission is compelled to issue its final report now because of the that civil will not be recognized by the general public as the equivalent of in New Jersey with the . Nearly a decade later, in report the same obstacles to that New Jersey today,” the report states, citing the recent study of a panel in .

Besides assessing the law’s impact on same- , today’s final report describes how the absence of a statute deprives New Jersey’s entire economy of considerable revenue. “Spending on weddings and tourism could boost the New Jersey economy by approximately $248 million over three years,” the report states. One expert testifying before the Commission estimates the figure could be $500 million or more.

But the heart of today’s report is its delineation of the harm that New Jersey’s law has pro-actively inflicted upon same- .

“I’m a pro-life and past Director of Gloucester County Right-to-Life,” said Commission member AnnLynne Benson on the release of today’s report, “so I know the diversity of this Commission. Our report demonstrates in exquisite detail why amending New Jersey’s law to extend to same- is a necessity. The New Jersey ruled that ‘denying rights and benefits to committed same- violates the equal protection guarantee and can no longer be tolerated under our .’ Implementation of that ruling by the invention of a parallel status failed to deliver . It was like planting a toothpick and hoping a tree would grow.”

According to the final report, the law’s harm to same- includes:

– The inability of a number of same- partners to visit one another in
the hospital, and to make medical decisions for one another, because
hospitals don’t accept civil as equal to . The
Commission’s final report begins with the story of Naomi and Gina, a
couple in Montclair, New Jersey who had a humiliating and
life-threatening experience at a hospital. Gina was admitted to the
emergency room with cardiac arrhythmia, unable to give consent for
treatment. When Naomi arrived and said she was Gina’s partner, the
doctor interrogated Naomi about the nature of the and
initially kept Naomi away from Gina and refused to let her give
consent for Gina. The report has other stories like this.

– “Significant psychological damage” to the children raised same-
because their families are given the stigmatizing label of
; and to youth who view themselves as inferior because
they cannot marry. “Their heartbreaking ,” the report
states, “brings to life their struggle in a way that no numbers –
whether complaints filed with government agencies or advocacy
organizations — can encapsulate on their own.” As Dr. Marshall
Forstein, a Harvard Medical School professor, testified:
“Second-class citizenship, now institutionalized in some states in the
form of civil , contributes to increased rates of anxiety,
depression and substance use disorders in marginalized populations.”

– The denial of by employers to same- partners,
especially harmful during the current . Today’s final
report underscores what the Commission’s interim report of February
2008 found, that the federal Employment Retirement Security
Act (ERISA) preempts the New Jersey law for approximately
50 percent of all employers in the state. For that 50 percent,
providing and benefits for same- under the
law is an option rather than a requirement.

The Commission’s final report refutes the notion — as the interim
report did — that a change in state law from civil to
would have minimal impact because Federal law does
not recognize same- relationships. The final report provides
ample evidence to the contrary, based on the dramatically lower
invocation of ERISA by companies in Massachusetts, which has a
law. “The term ‘,’ the report concludes,
“would make a significant difference in providing even with
no change in federal law.”

– Compounded harm to women, African-Americans and Latino-Americans, all
of whom because of their gender, race or
ethnicity, and who now suffer double when denied equal
rights and benefits under the law. The state Public
Advocate told the Commission about “the particular difficulty for
lower-income same- who encounter because
they have fewer resources with which to seek legal counsel and
redress, and who have difficulty meeting expenses if faced with
reduced healthcare benefits.”

– Harm to the marriages of where one partner is .
The final report reaffirms the finding in the Commission’s interim
report that the classification of places marital status in
question for these , who had gotten married legally when they
were opposite- . * Tags = gay men gay news lesbian news transgender bisexual

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