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The Vermont Senate debates a bill on same-sex marriage in Montpelier, Vt., Monday, March 23, 2009. The bill, passed by a margin of 26-4, would add Vermont to the list of states that allow gay and lesbian couples to get married.  The Associated Press: Toby Talbot
national
Vermont moves closer to allowing same-sex couples to wed
Senate panel approves marriage bill
Published Thursday, 26-Mar-2009 in issue 1109
MONTPELIER, Vt. – A state Senate committee unanimously approved a same-sex marriage bill on Friday, moving Vermont one step closer to allowing same-sex couples to legally wed.
“It provides ... gay and lesbian couples the same rights that I have as a married heterosexual,” said Sen. John Campbell, vice chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee and chief sponsor of the bill.
The measure would replace Vermont’s first-in-the-nation civil unions law with one that allows marriage of same-sex partners beginning Sept. 1.
The committee’s vote ended an intense week highlighted by a public hearing Wednesday night in which more than 500 people swarmed the Statehouse to speak for and against allowing same-sex marriages.
If approved, Vermont would join Massachusetts and Connecticut as the only U.S. states that allow gays and lesbians to marry.
Civil unions, which confer some rights similar to marriage, would still be recognized but no longer granted after Sept. 1.
Campbell said marriage is an improvement over civil unions both substantively and as a matter of wording.
On the first score, he said, marriage is more widely legally recognized than civil unions. If a couple from Vermont got into an accident in Kansas, a spouse likely would have a stronger claim to hospital visitation rights if married than if in a civil union, he said.
Semantically, Campbell argued that if there were no difference, opponents of same-sex marriage would not be so vehement that the term marriage should apply only to heterosexual unions. “Children should be able to say to their friends that their parents are married, and not have to explain what a civil union is,” he added.
Both Houses, under Democratic control, are expected to pass the measure. The Senate is taking the lead and is expected to debate the bill next week.
Gov. Jim Douglas, a Republican, has said he opposes the bill but has declined to say whether he will veto it if it reaches his desk.
“I’ve made my position quite clear that I believe marriage is and ought to remain the union of a man and a woman, that our civil unions law affords equality of opportunities and rights under state law and that that should suffice,” the governor said on the eve of the Senate committee vote.
The bill would exempt members of the clergy from performing same-sex marriages if their faiths forbid such unions, and would bar lawsuits prompted by such refusals.
The exemption would not extend to justices of the peace and other public officials who perform civil marriages but who might object to officiating at same-sex unions. Those people are agents of the government and are barred by law from discriminating based on sexual orientation, Campbell said.
Vermont in 2000 became the first state in the country to pass a civil unions law, which grants many of the rights and responsibilities of marriage to same-sex couples. But same-sex marriage advocates have argued since then that the law does not go far enough. California, New Jersey and New Hampshire also permit civil unions.
Friday’s committee vote followed the panel’s rejection of an amendment proposed by Sen. Kevin Mullin, R-Rutland, that would have put the same-sex marriage question to a statewide referendum next March. After the amendment was defeated, Mullin joined his colleagues in voting 5-0 for the bill.
The committee’s action drew praise from a leader of the Vermont Freedom to Marry Task Force, one of the leading organizations supporting same-sex marriage in the state, and condemnation from a leader of the anti-same-sex-marriage Marriage Advisory Council.
“The committee was attentive throughout the week. They heard a wide range of witnesses on a wide range of issues, and I think, ultimately, they did the right thing,” said Beth Robinson, a Middlebury lawyer and chair of the Freedom to Marry Task Force.
Stephen Cable, president of the group Vermont Renewal, an organization that opposes same-sex marriage, said the civil unions law and the possible passage of same-sex marriage bill shows the state “no longer seeks to promote that each child have a mother and a father. And I think that’s shameful and very sad.”
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