Members
of the Commission
J. Frank Vespa-Papaleo, Esq., Chairman
Steven Goldstein,
Esq., Vice Chairman
Stephen J. Hyland, Esq., Secretary
Barbara G. Allen, Esq.
Rev.
Charles Blustein Ortman
Robert Bresenhan, Jr.
Barbra Casbar Siperstein
Sheila
Kenny, Esq.
Joseph A. Komosinski
Erin O’Leary, Esq.
Elder Kevin E. Taylor
Melissa
H. Raksa, Deputy Attorney General (DAG)
www.NJCivilRights.org/curc
INTRODUCTION
On
December 21, 2006, in response to the holding of the Supreme Court of New
Jersey in Lewis
v. Harris, 188 N.J. 415 (2006), the Legislature enacted Public
Law 2006, Chapter 103,
establishing civil unions for same-sex couples effective
February 19, 2007. The intent of the
Civil Union Act (“the Act”) is to provide
all the benefits and responsibilities of marriage to
same-sex couples in civil
unions.1 The Act also established the New Jersey Civil Union Review
Commission
(“the Commission” or “CURC”), to evaluate the effectiveness of the law and
issue
semi-annual reports to the Legislature and Governor.2
The Commission is
an independent body consisting of both public members and governmental
ex-officio
members, consisting of six ex-officio members and seven public members,
appointed
as follows: five appointed by the Governor with the Advice and
Consent of the Senate, one
appointed by the Senate President, and one appointed
by the Speaker of the General Assembly.
The six ex-officio members consist of the
Attorney General, the Commissioners of the
Departments of Human Services,
Banking and Insurance, Children and Families, and Health and
Senior Services,
and the Director of the Division on Civil Rights.3
As of the date of the
issuance of this report, one public member nominee has not yet been
approved by
the Senate. Therefore, the members of the Commission are as follows:
Public
Members (7):
Appointed by Senate President: Rev. Charles Blustein Ortman
Appointed
by Assembly Speaker: Steven Goldstein, Esq.
Appointed by Governor: Robert
Bresenhan, Jr.
Stephen J. Hyland, Esq.
Barbra Casbar Siperstein
Elder Kevin E.
Taylor
Vacant4
Ex-Officio Members (6):
Director of the Division on Civil
Rights: J. Frank Vespa-Papaleo, Esq.
Designee of Attorney General: Melissa H.
Raksa, DAG
Designee of Department of Human Services: Barbara G. Allen, Esq.
Designee
of Department of Banking & Insurance: Sheila Kenny, Esq.
Designee of
Department of Health & Senior Services: Joseph A. Komosinski
Designee of
Department Children and Families: Erin O’Leary, Esq.
For purposes of
convenience and operational consistency, the Commission has been formally
placed
in, but not of, the Department of Law & Public Safety. As of the date of
this report, the
Legislature has not issued any appropriation for the costs of
operating the Commission, which
includes the costs of transcription services,
certified interpreters, advertising costs associated
with public notices, and
other operational and administrative costs. Since there has been no
legislative
appropriation for the operations of the Commission, it receives substantial
fiscal and
staff support from the Division on Civil Rights.5
According to the
Act, this Commission “shall report semi-annually its findings and
recommendations
to the Legislature and the Governor.” The Commission will continue to study
and
evaluate the Civil Union Act, and may issue legislative recommendations in any
of its semiannual
reports, in accordance with the Act. This First Interim
Report is unanimously endorsed
by the members of the Commission.6
According to
the Act7 it is the duty of the Commission to study all aspects of the Civil
Union
Act—which authorizes civil unions—including, but not limited to the
following:
(1) To evaluate the implementation, operation and effectiveness of
the Civil Union Act;
(2) To collect information about the Act's effectiveness
from members of the
public, State agencies and private and public sector
businesses and organizations;
(3) To determine whether additional protections
are needed;
(4) To collect information about the recognition and treatment of
civil unions by other
states and jurisdictions including the procedures for
dissolution;
(5) To evaluate the effect on same-sex couples, their children and
other family members
of being provided civil unions rather than marriage;
(6)
To evaluate the financial impact on the State of New Jersey of same-sex couples
being
provided civil unions rather than marriage; and
(7) To review the
"Domestic Partnership Act," and make recommendations as to whether
this
act should be repealed.
The Commission cannot yet issue a final report because
it continues to examine all seven areas
as required by the Act. For example, at
this time we have not evaluated the financial impact of
the Act on the State of
New Jersey, in comparison to marriage,8 nor have we reviewed the
4
Domestic
Partnership Act,9 as required by the Act. Other areas need further review as
well.
These will be studied and reported on in the coming months.
The
Commission held its organizational meeting in Trenton on June 18, 2007, and
subsequent
public business meetings on July 18, 2007, August 15, 2007, November
14, 2007, December 19,
2007 and January 16, 2008.
In order to maximize the
opportunity for public participation in the Commission’s evaluation
process,
the body held three nighttime public hearings, on September 26, 2007 in New
Brunswick,
Middlesex County; October 10, 2007 in Blackwood, Camden County; and October
24,
2007 in Nutley, Essex County. Together, the three hearings lasted nearly eight
hours and
featured testimony from ninety-six people, including couples affected
by the Act and expert
witnesses.
Notice of all public business meetings and
public hearings were advertised in newspapers
throughout the State, on the
Commission’s website located at www.NJCivilRights.org/curc, and
distributed
widely by community organizations, website hosts and others. Additionally, a
media
alert and press release was distributed on September 19, 2007 by the New
Jersey Office of
Attorney General announcing the public hearings. The
Commission website also serves as a
repository for Commission reports,
transcripts, agendas, commissioner biographies, contact
information and other
items.
At the public hearing on September 26, 2007, Lynn Fontaine Newsome,
President of the New
Jersey State Bar Association,10 testifying on behalf of
its nearly 17,000 members, concluded that
the New Jersey Civil Union Act is “a
failed experiment.” 11
We believe the civil union law created a burdensome and
flawed
statutory scheme that fails to afford same-sex couples the same
rights
and remedies provided to heterosexual married couples as
required … by the New
Jersey Supreme Court and its landmark
Lewis v. Harris decision.
From the Bar’s
perspective, civil unions are a failed experiment.
They have shown to
perpetuate unacceptable second-class legal
status. Members of the Bar
Association tell me more stories of the
countless additional hours of work that
must go into representing
gays, lesbians, bisexual clients and their
families.12
5
At the public hearing on October 24, 2007, Ed Barocas, Legal
Director of the American Civil
Liberties Union of New Jersey13 stated in
unequivocal terms that:
By creating a separate system of rights and by
injecting language
and titles not understood or easily incorporated into
existing real
life events and transactions, the civil union law has failed to
fulfill
its promise of equality.14
Additionally, the Commission heard testimony
that New Jersey's Civil Union Act is likely not to
provide equality with the
passage of time. An expert from Vermont, which in 2000 became the
first
jurisdiction in the United States to enact a civil union law, testified that
civil union couples
there still face problems with the law today. In fact, as a
result of the inequities, Vermont has
established a new commission to study
whether to amend its state law to now provide full
marriage equality to its
same-sex committed couples.
This Commission also heard testimony that the term
“marriage,” were it applied to the
relationships of same-sex couples, could
remedy the shortcomings of the Civil Union Act and
make a significant
difference in providing equality to same-sex couples in New Jersey, even with
the
challenges of federal law not recognizing same-sex relationships. An expert
from
Massachusetts, which in 2004 became the first U.S. state to allow same-sex
couples to marry,
testified that same-sex married couples there do not face
many of the problems that New Jersey
and Vermont civil union couples face
today, even in the context of federal law.
This Commission also recognizes that
the number of complaints filed to date by civil union
couples with the state
Division on Civil Rights — the agency responsible for investigating
noncompliance
with the Civil Union Act — cannot by itself be considered an
accurate barometer of
the Act’s effectiveness. Compared to the number of
couples who have filed complaints with the
Division on Civil Rights—six as
noted by the New Jersey Family Policy Council15—a
significantly higher number
of couples testified at the Commission’s public hearings about how
employers
refuse to recognize their civil unions. In addition, advocacy organizations
have
received, and newspaper investigations have reported, many more cases of
the Act’s
ineffectiveness than have been filed with the Division. So, while the
Division does investigate
all verified complaints of discrimination filed with
its offices, it is clear that many more
complaints have been filed with
third-party advocacy organizations.
Among those who participated in the hearings
were representatives of:
• New Jersey State Bar Association
• Garden State
Equality16 (GSE)
6
• New Jersey Family Policy Council (NJFPC)
• Lambda Legal17
•
American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (ACLU-NJ)
• National Black Justice
Coalition18 (NBJC)
• Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays19
(PFLAG)
• Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network20(GLSEN)
• Counsel and
plaintiff couples from Lewis v. Harris
• Attorneys who represent same-sex
couples
• Leaders of numerous faith communities
• Lawyers and community leaders
from Vermont21 and from Massachusetts22
• Same-sex couples, their children and
families
• Parents of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex youth
•
Public officials, among others
This report will not recite all the testimony
provided at public hearings or submitted in writing to
the Commission. Rather,
this report will highlight relevant testimony that will assist the
Commission
in answering its Legislative charge. For anyone interested in reviewing all the
public
testimony, note that a copy of all transcripts of the public hearings is
available at the
Commission’s website located at www.NJCivilRights.org/curc.
CONSISTENT
THEMES
1. FOR THE OVERWHELMING MAJORITY OF CIVIL UNION COUPLES WHO TESTIFIED,
THE
FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT RETIREMENT INCOME SECURITY ACT, COMMONLY KNOWN BY
ITS
ACRONYM ERISA, IS THE REASON EMPLOYERS HAVE GIVEN FOR NOT RECOGNIZING
THEIR
CIVIL UNIONS.
Under ERISA,23 “self-insured” companies – companies which create
their own insurance plans
but may hire outside agencies to administer them –
claim governance by federal law rather than
state law. In turn, because of the
federal Defense of Marriage Act,24 any federal statute or
regulation that
provides benefits to spouses, husbands, wives, or married couples applies only
to
marriages between one man and one woman, thus resulting in covered employers
continuing to
discriminate against same-sex couples.
Practically speaking,
companies covered by ERISA, which comprise an estimated 50 percent of
all
companies in New Jersey, have an option, rather than a requirement, to offer
equal benefits
under the state’s Civil Union Act. Many companies are not
exercising that option, even if State
law, as is the case in New Jersey,
provides that spouses and civil union partners are entitled to
identical
treatment.
7
Additionally, being in a civil union can have a broad negative
impact on couples whose civil
unions are not recognized by their employers.
A
registered nurse from Commercial Township told the Commission she received a
letter from
her employer, telling her that the hospital where she works would
not be providing health
insurance for her partner:
It falls under the federal
ERISA program, as someone else stated.
Our hospital is self-insured. Therefore,
there is a loophole and
they do not provide her with health insurance.
So I
wrote them a letter, a lengthy letter, reminding them of some
of the things
that I had provided for the hospital through the years
and asked them to
reconsider their decision. They never answered
my letter.
So when I made the
decision to come here tonight, I again called
my human resources director and I
said, ‘You know, I'm going to
go up and I'm going to testify in front of this
Commission.’ Well,
you can't imagine how fast my phone rang. I don't know where
this
is going to go, but I know that my partner and I have seriously
considered
dissolving our civil union, because it has put us in a
tremendously precarious
financial position. Because now in the
event that something happens with her
and she has no insurance
coverage, our entire estate is in jeopardy, rather
than just half.25
2. IN MASSACHUSETTS, A MARRIAGE EQUALITY LAW HAS PROMPTED
MANY EMPLOYERS
TO PROVIDE EQUAL BENEFITS TO SAME-SEX WIVES OR HUSBANDS.
Tom
Barbera, a Massachusetts labor leader who works for the Service Employees
International
Union and served as Vice President of the Massachusetts AFL-CIO,
testified:
From the immediate weeks after May 17, 2004, when marriage
equality
took effect in Massachusetts, right on through today,
ERISA has barely been an
issue in Massachusetts. In the first
weeks of marriage equality, only a very
few companies chose not
to provide retirement benefits under ERISA to same-sex
married
couples. And from the day our marriage equality law took effect
through
today, civil rights organizations in Massachusetts, as well
8
as our state
government, have received virtually no
complaints about companies not providing
health care benefits to
same-sex married couples.
It's not that ERISA-covered
employers in Massachusetts don't
understand that federal law allows them to
refrain from providing
benefits to same-sex married couples. It's that
employers also
understand that without the term ‘civil union’ or ‘domestic
partner’
to hide behind, if they don't give equal benefits to employees in
same-sex
marriages, these employers would have to come forth
with the real excuse for
discrimination. Employers would have to
acknowledge that they are
discriminating against their employees
because they are lesbian or gay. And
employers in Massachusetts
are loathe to do that, as they would be in New
Jersey were you
to enact a marriage equality law.
Therefore, the existence of
ERISA makes it all the more
important to change the nomenclature of civil
unions to marriage.
As we've seen time and again in Massachusetts, the word
‘marriage’
has great persuasive weight in getting companies to
offer benefits
notwithstanding ERISA.26
An Essex County electrician gave the Commission a
preview of the potential effect of a marriage
equality statute in New Jersey.
She testified that when she first sought benefits for her civil
union partner
from her union, the union declined, citing ERISA. But when she later revealed
she
and her partner had gotten married in Massachusetts, the union reversed
itself and granted
benefits.
The electrician told the Commission:
We can all
talk about how the civil union law is supposed to work
just like marriage. But
in my case and others, it doesn't work that
way in the real world. When you
tell your employer or union you
are married, there's something about that word
that makes them
recognize your relationship in a way they don't recognize it
when
you tell them you are civil union. And because of their respect for
the
word marriage, which is something they understand, they are
much less likely to
invoke the federal law loophole. That's what
happened with us.27
9
The
testimony suggests that numerous employers decline to provide insurance and
health
benefits to civil union partners not because of an objection to the
government recognition of
same-sex couples, but because of the term used by
statutes establishing government sanctioned,
same-sex relationships. In fact,
this Commission heard no testimony from civil union couples
indicating that
employers have refused to comply with the Civil Union Act because of personal
objections
to the law. Early indications suggest that recognition of marriage for same-sex
couples
in New Jersey could make a meaningful difference in the area of spousal
benefits.
3. THE TESTIMONY PRESENTED BY MANY CIVIL UNION COUPLES INDICATED THAT
THEIR
EMPLOYERS CONTINUE TO DISCRIMINATE AGAINST THEM, DESPITE THEIR
FAMILIARITY
WITH THE LAW.
Beth Robinson, Chair of Vermont Freedom to Marry and
a lawyer who works with same-sex
couples in her state, testified to significant
problems with the implementation of Vermont’s civil
union law, more than seven
years after its enactment.
I have seen first-hand, both in my law practice and
as an advocate,
that a civil union law, even when it’s been on the books for
seven
years, too often deprives same-sex couples and their families the
protections
that married heterosexual couples take for granted.
Based on the Vermont
experience, I can tell you that it’s just not
true that if enough time passes,
civil unions will achieve parity
with marriage. Time does not fully mend the
inequality inherent in
two separate institutions.
Even now, I field phone calls
from individuals whose employers
decline to provide spousal health insurance
coverage for their civil
union partners even though those same employers
provide spousal
health insurance coverage for heterosexual employees’ spouses.
As
you know, some self-insured employers cite the federal law
known as ERISA as a
basis for their not recognizing same-sex
relationships.
To this day, we still encounter
glitches arising from the creation of
a new legal status that forces employers
and others to try to fit a
square peg, civil union, into a round hole, systems
relating to
marriage. Just this summer, a same-sex couple joined in civil
union
who owned a Limited Liability Company (LLC) business
together had to appeal for
intervention by legislators to resolve a
10
misunderstanding with the tax
department regarding their
eligibility for a tax exemption provided to LLC
owners who are
married to one another.
Two weeks ago, I was on a call-in show,
and heard from a state
employee who had discovered that her employer—the
state—had
been withholding from her paycheck as if she were liable for a
state
tax on the health insurance benefit provided to her partner,
even though the
law clearly prohibits such taxation. When she
brought the matter to her
employer’s attention, she was told that
her department’s software would not
allow for the appropriate nonwithholding.
Who knows how many glitches like
this, in both the public and
private sphere, go undetected because people don’t
fully
understand their rights, or don’t realize what’s happening.
Judging from
our having had a civil unions law on the books for
seven years in Vermont, and
still having problems today, I can tell
you that civil unions will likely never
provide the equality that
marriage does. It would be incorrect for you, as
Commissioners,
or for the elected officials who appointed you, to assume that
if we
just give civil unions time, they will work just like marriage.28
4.
CIVIL UNION STATUS IS NOT CLEAR TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC, WHICH CREATES A
SECOND-CLASS
STATUS.
A common theme in the testimony gathered by the Commission was that
while marriage is
universally recognized by the public, civil union status must
be explained repeatedly to
employers, doctors, nurses, insurers, teachers,
soccer coaches, emergency room personnel and
the children of civil union
partners.
The testimony suggests that the need to explain the legal
significance of civil union status to
decision makers and individuals who
provide vital services is more than a mere inconvenience.
One witness showed
the Commissioners a “flash drive” that he and his partner keep on key
chains.
The flash drives contain living wills, advanced health care directives, and
powers of
attorney for the couple, as they fear being unable to adequately
explain their relationship to
emergency room personnel during a medical crisis.
The witness testified that mixed-gender,
married couples need not live with
this uncertainty because a mere declaration that someone is
11
the “wife,”
“husband,” or “spouse” of someone who is ill will provide immediate access and
decision-making
rights.
This testimony mirrored comments provided by many witnesses regarding
medical personnel,
school officials and government workers who denied access
and decision-making authority to
civil union partners, either initially or
completely, because of a lack of understanding of the
rights that flow from
civil unions. Many witnesses said they would not have encountered the
same
level of resistance, or no resistance at all, had they been able to identify
themselves as
married.
Witnesses called the two-tier system created by the
Civil Union Act “an invitation to
discriminate” and a “justification to
employers and others” to treat same-sex couples as “less
than” married couples.
Many witnesses testified that without the governmental endorsement of
differential
treatment, many employers with ERISA-covered plans would be less inclined to
deny
benefits to same-sex couples. In addition, several witnesses offered their view
that
relatives, medical caregivers, and individuals in positions of authority
take cues from the
government's decision to place same-sex couples outside of
the institution of marriage.
According to the testimony, the Civil Union Act
amounts to a tacit endorsement of
discriminatory treatment.
5. THE CIVIL UNION
ACT HAS A DELETERIOUS EFFECT ON LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL,
TRANSGENDER, AND
INTERSEX (LGBTI) YOUTH AND CHILDREN BEING RAISED BY
SAME-SEX COUPLES.
Several
clergy members and parents of LGBTI children testified that the statutory
designation of
same-sex couples as “other than” and, impliedly, “less than”
mixed-gender couples interferes
with the ability of LGBTI youth to accept their
sexuality.
According to the witnesses, gay and lesbian youth are harmed by the
reality that their
heterosexual siblings and age mates may expect to enter into
marriages, but that the government
has declared that LGBTI people cannot have
that expectation and must settle for a secondary
status as civil union couples.
A
Montclair resident, the parent of three sons, one of whom is gay, testified
that her gay son told
her when he was sixteen: “You know, all I really want is
to get married and have children.”
12
She continued:
‘Well,’ I said, ‘you have
several friends whose parents are gay, …
Montclair is a pretty good place to be
gay.’ And he looked up at
me. He kind of stared at me. He said, ‘But they're
not married.’
And suddenly I got it. In a flash I knew my son is acutely and
perpetually
aware that he is a second-class citizen and that he
cannot attain the status
that the rest of us treasure.29
A Bergen County couple, who have adopted five
young children, testified:
Our children have asked many questions. One of the
questions …
asked of us was, ‘If all men are created equal, why can't you and
Poppy
get married?’ I can't answer that question at this time. One
of the most recent
questions that came up by one of my children
was, ‘I don't understand how
someone on TV who has murdered
someone can get married, but you and Poppy
cannot.’30
An attorney and partner in a small law firm in Springfield testified
about a family discussion in
which his partner’s young nephew, to whom he is
godfather, asked his mom:
‘If you and daddy are married and Uncle Timmy and
Aunt Nancy
are married and Aunt Debby and Uncle Bruce are married, why
can't
Uncle Bob and Uncle Chris get married?’
Lucas' mother told him ‘Because it's
against the law.’ Lucas' reply
was, ‘Does that mean they're criminals, mommy?’31
6.
MANY WITNESSES TESTIFIED ABOUT THE UNEQUAL TREATMENT AND UNCERTAINTIES
THEY
FACE DURING A HEALTH CARE CRISIS, PARTICULARLY IN HOSPITAL SETTINGS.
A woman
from South Jersey testified about her experiences at two local hospitals:
I was
asked, ‘Are you married, single, widowed, divorced?’ I
said, ‘I'm partnered.’
Then I was asked, ‘Legally?’ Again, I was
shocked. I said, ‘Well, do you ask
the married folks that?’ ‘No, I
don't.’ ‘So why are you asking me?’
13
Another
incident was when I was going for a test, when I had to be
put under. I was
telling the nurse that my partner was in the
waiting room. If any decisions had
to be made while I was
unconscious, she was to make those decisions. Again I
was asked,
‘Is she your legal partner?’ ‘Yes, she is.’ ‘Do you have your
certificate
with you?’
I wasn't convinced she would go out and grab my partner should
something
have happened to me.32
An Episcopal clergy-member from northern New Jersey who
is in a civil union testified:
I've had to go through some medical testing and
hospitalizations
for surgery. In our own UMDNJ right in Newark, when I got
there,
they asked if I had a spouse. I said ‘yes’ and I told them.
They didn't know
where to list him, because there was nothing on
the form that said anything
about civil unions.
Just about two weeks ago I went to the new doctor I was
referred
to. There was no place on the form for civil unions. My
experience, in
general, most people in our communities look at this
as a second-class
marriage, sort of. I don't even know if we would
use the term ‘marriage,’ it is
below marriage. It is another form
and they know that is not the same.33
7.
INSTITUTIONAL INTERACTION WITH CIVIL UNION COUPLES HAS BEEN LESS THAN
OPTIMAL.
Several
witnesses spoke of the lack of a “married/civil unioned” or “civil unioned”
option on
government agency forms, leaving civil union couples in a quandary as
to which box to check,
“married” or “single.” These couples expressed anger at
having to consider checking off
“single.” In addition, some testimony suggested
that civil union partners have experienced some
difficulty in obtaining
government services which are required by law to be available to civil
union
partners.
Ed Barocas, Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union of
New Jersey, and an
attorney in the Lewis v. Harris case, testified that:
14
A
quick example, last week I went to a bank to open a line of
credit. In so
doing, I was asked whether I was single or married.
A married man would simply
say, ‘Well, I’m married.’ I asked the
employee what I should do if I was in a
civil union. The employee
responded that he didn’t think New Jersey allowed
civil unions.
So after explaining the law, I asked again what I was required to
put
down. He said that civil unions were simply not contemplated
in the bank’s
computer system and he didn’t know what the proper
answer would be or how he
could proceed.34
A woman who purchased real estate in Brick, New Jersey and
Florida stated the following:
I had to explain to my own insurance company and
send them a
copy of our civil union from Vermont to have my name or to even
speak
to them with regard to purchasing insurance for our home
here in New Jersey. I
didn’t have to do that in Florida.35
A man who entered into a civil union
testified:
And also when I went to the DMV to change my name, our names,
we
both want the same last name. And at first they wouldn’t do it.
They said
either I had to take his last name or we could both
hyphenate our names with
our married husband’s name at the end.
But we couldn’t both have the same name.
And
finally, the manager of the DMV we went and got him.
Coincidentally, the same
day as our civil union, he was at a civil
union. He said his friends are having
the same problem. He said,
‘Well, no one’s told me that I can’t do this. So I’ll
do it until they
tell me I can’t.’ Still I had—we were there like an hour
trying to
get it done.36
A state employee who lives in Mount Laurel testified
about being called to jury duty and having
a judge ignore the possibility that
some New Jersey residents are in civil unions. She told this
Commission:
So I'm
sitting there waiting for my turn to be called up and be
asked all the
questions that the judge was going through. I felt like
15
I was hit with a ton
of bricks, because the judge repeatedly asked
every person, ‘Are you single,
are you married?’ I'm thinking,
how do I answer that, because I am not. I'm not
single, I'm not
married. I'm in a court of law and here is a judge qualifying
candidates
for the jury, and what I am is not represented in any
way.37
8. TESTIMONY
INDICATES THAT THE CIVIL UNION ACT HAS A PARTICULARLY DISPARATE
IMPACT ON
PEOPLE OF COLOR.
Dr. Sylvia Rhue, Director of Religious Affairs for the
National Black Justice Coalition, testified:
Fourteen percent of lesbian, gay,
bisexual, transgender and intersex
Americans are African-American. Forty-five
percent of African-
American same-sex couples reported stable relationships of
five
years or longer on the United States census.
When employers fail to
recognize civil unions as equal to
marriage, the couples who get hurt the most
are poor couples who
are often African-American couples, who cannot afford
thousands
of dollars to hire fancy lawyers to draft documents like wills,
health
care proxies, and powers of attorney.
And when employers fail to recognize
civil unions as equal to
marriage and deny health care benefits to civil union
partners,
there's a profound effect on those families' health care. Who are
among
the families who can least afford cuts in their health care?
African-American
families. Approximately one in five African-
Americans is currently without
health insurance, some of whom
are in same-sex relationships.38
Rev. Anahi
Galante, an interfaith minister in Jersey City who works with many in the
Latino and
Latina community, testified:
Latinos now compromise 13.3 percent of
the New Jersey
population. Same-sex couple households in which both partners
are
Latino or Latina earn at least $25,000 less on average per year
than white
same-sex couple households. Given the income and
other disparities between
Latino and Latina same-sex couples and
16
much of the rest of the society,
Latino and Latina people in New
Jersey are among those being hurt most by our
State's continued
denial of marriage equality.39
9. THE REQUIREMENT THAT
SAME-SEX COUPLES DECLARE CIVIL UNION STATUS, A
SEPARATE CATEGORY RESERVED FOR
SAME-SEX COUPLES, EXPOSES MEMBERS OF THE
UNITED STATES MILITARY TO THE “DON’T
ASK, DON’T TELL” POLICY.
Leslie Farber, an attorney in Montclair who chairs the
GLBT40 Rights Section of the New Jersey
State Bar Association, spoke of one of
her clients, whose partner serves in the United States
military. With the
couple’s permission, she testified on their behalf, because they feared
testifying
in person:
The serviceman will be called to duty overseas in the near future.
My
client wants to protect his committed life-partner, so that his
partner leaves
stateside with as many protections and benefits as he
can. A New Jersey civil
union may be able to provide many of
those benefits and protections. But a
designation of ‘civil union’ is
a factual statement this serviceman is a gay
man and thus violates
the U.S. military’s policy of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.’41
10.
THE CLASSIFICATION OF CIVIL UNION MAY PLACE MARITAL STATUS IN QUESTION WHEN
ONE
OR BOTH OF THE PARTNERS IS TRANSGENDER.
Ms. Farber also testified on behalf of
couples where one of the partners has had gender
reassignment surgery:
[A]
client of my own, who wishes to remain anonymous for the
same reasons, was a
man who legally married a woman about 20
years ago and recently is transsexual.
This client went through
sexual reassignment surgery and is now legally a
woman.
However, the entire family remains together and is happy.
However, even
though the same two people remain married to
each other because of her gender
change this client is now married
to another woman; in other words, a legally
married same-sex
couple in New Jersey. However, this client is concerned that
she
now is at risk of having her once valid marriage downgraded to a
civil union.
Is this what the legislation intended? Isn’t it truly
17
cruel to leave this
family in legal limbo? And, of course, marriage
equality would solve this
problem instantly.42
A male-to-female transgender person from New Milford, New
Jersey who married a woman 27
years ago testified:
There is not one straight
couple in this state who has been harmed
because we are in a same-sex marriage.
Nobody has been hurt.
When someone has gender reassignment surgery, the State
of New Jersey considers that person
to be of a new gender. Thus, if that person
had been married before, he or she is now part of a
same-sex married couple.
But because New Jersey does not recognize same-sex married couples
as married,
are such couples still considered married under state law? The Commission will
continue
to study the effects of the Civil Union Act on transgender couples.
CONCLUSION
As
a result of public hearings and testimony provided to the New Jersey Civil
Union
Review Commission in 2007, the Commission unanimously issues the herein
first interim report,
which reveals:
1. For the overwhelming majority of civil
union couples who testified, the federal
Employment Retirement Income Security
Act, commonly known by its acronym
ERISA, is the reason employers have given
for not recognizing their civil unions.
2. In Massachusetts, a marriage
equality law has prompted many employers to
provide equal benefits to same-sex
wives or husbands.
3. The testimony presented by many civil union couples
indicated that their
employers continue to discriminate against them, despite
their familiarity with the
law.
4. Civil union status is not clear to the
general public, which creates a second-class
status.
5. The Civil Union Act has
a deleterious effect on lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender, and intersex youth
and children being raised by same-sex couples.
6. Many witnesses testified
about the unequal treatment and uncertainties they face
during a health care
crisis, particularly in hospital settings.
18
7. Institutional interaction with
civil union couples has been less than optimal.
8. Testimony indicates that the
Civil Union Act has a particularly disparate impact
on people of color.
9. The
requirement that same-sex couples declare civil union status, a separate
category
reserved for same-sex couples, exposes members of the United States
military to
the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy.
10. The classification of civil union may
place marital status in question when one of
the partners is transgender.
The
Commission further recognizes the need for additional evaluation and review, in
accordance
with the New Jersey Civil Union Act. As such, it will be scheduling public
meetings
in 2008 to obtain further information and data from interested parties,
including
members of the public, State agencies, businesses, and others, in
accordance with the
Commission’s statutory mission. The Commission will
continue to study, evaluate and
report its findings and recommendations until
the issuance of a final report within three
years of the creation of this
Commission, in accordance with the Act.
J. Frank Vespa-Papaleo, Esq., Chairman
Steven
Goldstein, Esq., Vice Chairman
Stephen J. Hyland, Esq., Secretary
Barbara G.
Allen, Esq.
Rev. Charles Blustein Ortman
Robert Bresenhan, Jr.
Barbra Casbar
Siperstein
Sheila Kenny, Esq.
Joseph A. Komosinski
Erin O’Leary, Esq.
Melissa
H. Raksa, DAG
Elder Kevin E. Taylor
19
ENDNOTES
1 N.J.S.A. 37:1-30, et seq.
2
N.J.S.A. 37:1-36.
3 N.J.S.A. 37:1-36b.
4 On February 5, 2007, Governor Jon S.
Corzine nominated a member of the public for membership to the
Commission. To
date, the position remains vacant.
5 The Commission acknowledges the assistance
of the following individuals from the Division on Civil Rights staff:
Estelle
Bronstein, Esq., Benn Meistrich, Esq., Ralph Menendez, Esther Nevarez, Nancy
Reinhardt, and former staff
member Bear Atwood, Esq.
6 The Commission also
wishes to acknowledge the invaluable work of its former member, the Honorable
Patrick
DeAlmeida, who resigned from the Commission upon his appointment to the
State Judiciary.
7 N.J.S.A. 37:1-36c.
8 N.J.S.A. 37:1-36c(6).
9 N.J.S.A.
37:1-36c(7).
10 The New Jersey State Bar Association’s mission is “[t]o serve,
protect, foster and promote the personal and
professional interests of its
members; [t]o serve as the voice of New Jersey attorneys to other
organizations,
governmental entities and the public with regard to the law,
legal profession and legal system; [t]o promote access to
the justice system,
fairness in its administration and encourage participation in voluntary pro
bono activities; [t]o
foster professionalism and pride in the profession and
the NJSBA; [t]o provide educational opportunities to New
Jersey attorneys to
enhance the quality of legal services and the practice of law.; and [t]o
provide education to the
New Jersey public to enhance awareness of the legal
profession and legal system.” See www.njsba.com.
11 Transcript 9/26/07, p. 7.
12
Transcript 9/26/07, p. 8-9.
13 The American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey
(ACLU-NJ) is the 15,000-member state chapter of a national
organization which
“is the leading organization dedicated to defending and extending civil
liberties for all people in
this country.” See www.aclu-nj.org.
14 Transcript
10/24/07, p. 8.
15 The New Jersey Family Policy Council is an organization
whose stated mission is “to intervene and respond to
the breakdown that the
traditional family, the cornerstone of a virtuous society, is experiencing.”
See
www.njfpc.org.
16 Garden State Equality, consisting of 22,000 members, is
New Jersey’s statewide organization advocating equality
for the lesbian, gay,
bisexual, transgender and intersex community. See www.GardenStateEquality.org.
17
Lambda Legal is a national organization “committed to achieving full
recognition of the civil rights of lesbians,
gay men, bisexuals, transgender
people and those with HIV through impact litigation, education and public
policy
work.” See www.lambdalegal.org.
20
18 The National Black Justice
Coalition is a “civil rights organization dedicated to empowering Black
same-genderloving,
lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered people. The
Coalition works with our communities and our allies
for social justice,
equality, and an end to racism and homophobia.” See www.nbjc.org.
19 Parents,
Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG), with over 200,000 members,
“promotes the health
and well-being of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
persons, their families and friends through: support, to cope
with an adverse
society; education, to enlighten an ill-informed public; and advocacy, to end
discrimination and to
secure equal civil rights.” See www.pflag.org.
20 The
Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network (GLSEN) “strives to assure that
each member of every school
community is valued and respected regardless of
sexual orientation or gender identity/expression.” See
www.glsen.org.
21 The
Vermont Civil Union Law went into effect July 1, 2000. See 18 V.S.A. § 42
(2000).
22 Massachusetts same sex marriages were recognized as of May 17, 2004
by the finding of the Supreme Judicial
Court of Massachusetts in Goodridge v.
Department of Public Health, 798 N.E. 2d 941 (Mass. 2003).
23 The Employee
Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. Chapter 18.
24The Defense of Marriage
Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1738C.
25 Transcript 10/10/07, p. 21-24.
26 Transcript 9/26/07,
p. 37-40.
27 Transcript 9/26/07, p. 43-45.
28 Transcript 9/26/07, p. 33-36.
29
Transcript 9/26/07, p. 59-60.
30 Transcript 9/26/07, p. 57.
31 Transcript
9/26/07, p. 76.
32 Transcript 10/10/07, p. 35.
33 Transcript 10/10/07, p.
11-14.
34 Transcript 10/24/07, p. 9.
35 Transcript 10/24/07, p. 50-51.
36
Transcript 9/26/07, p. 98-99.
37 Transcript 10/10/07, p. 64-67.
38 Transcript
9/26/07, p. 53-57.
39 Transcript 10/10/07, p. 49-53.
40 Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual
and Transgender.
41 Transcript 9/26/07, p. 19-22.
21
42 Transcript 9/26/07, p.
21-22.
For
more information, go to http://njwillsprobatelaw.com/first_interim_report_of_the_nj_civil_union_review_commission.html?id=435&a=
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