Category Archives: Uncategorized

Gay Straight Alliances to Receive Courting Equality

Greater Boston PFLAG (Parents, Friends, and Families of Lesbians and Gays), at their annual meeting on Sept. 24th at 7 pm, will donate Courting Equality: A Documentary History of America’s First legal Same-Sex Marriages to all Gay Straight Alliances (GSAs) in Massachusetts public schools and offer it to all public high school libraries. Lexington High School GSA will be present to receive the first copy.

PFLAG’s annual meeting will be at the Congregational Church of Needham, 1154 Great Plain Ave., Needham, MA 02492.

Greater Boston PFLAG worked tirelessly to assure marriage equality in MA. The organization believes that sharing the history of this important civil rights victory with high school students will encourage diversity and tolerance. Courting Equality shows how all people can fight for their rights in a democratic society.

The Lexington High School GSA was asked to accept the first book, because Lexington schools have been challenged over their commitment to diverse education. Article 8 Alliance and MassResistance, led by Brian Camenker, have taken the town to court for including books that recognize love between two people of the same gender in its curriculum.

Gay Lesbian Advocates and defenders (GLAD) will be filing a Friend of the Court brief in the First Circuit Court of Appeals on behalf of Greater Boston PFLAG in support of Lexington town officials who have stood firmly in support of diversity and safe welcoming schools for children of all families.

Chip McLaughlin and Keith Maynard of Cambridge, who are pictured on the cover of Courting Equality, contributed funds to Greater Boston PFLAG to make the donation to each GSA and high school library possible.

The PFLAG annual meeting is open to the public. For more information and the agenda go to the PFLAG site.

Ersatz Gay Marriage: “Confusing Twilight Zone”

 The majority of Democratic presidential candidates and even some folks who consider themselves fair-minded pretend that supporting civil unions–the separate but equal remedy for gay family relationships– gives us our civil rights. Across the country, however, LGBT experience in domestic partnerships, reciprocal beneficiary relationships, and yes, civil unions, has demonstrated  that it just isn’t so.

CA is stepping into the foreground, again, to argue in court that only marriage is equal. Ersatz gay marriage just does not cut it.

Courts, politicos, opinion leaders, and those committed to true equality should stop ignoring the success of gay marriage in MA for the past three years.

MA is the only state in which committed LGBT couples have clear rights and responsibilities because they are married. Everyone knows what marriage is. Only attorneys state by state really know what the distinctions are between a civil union in NJ or CT or VT and soon in NH. Or a domestic partnership is in CA. Or what a reciprocal beneficiary protection is in Hawaii.

When the ACLU, Equality California, the National Center for Lesbian Rights, and Lambda Legal filed briefs last week in a coordinated case in CA seeking marriage rights for gay people, the challenge for full equality had its basis in the inequalities of domestic partnerships and it could have an anchor in reality on the East Coast of the country. MA has proved that marriage equality works.

The Advocate of Aug. 23 reported that Lambda Legal senior counsel Jennifer Pizer said in a statement that anything less than marriage is a “confusing twilight zone” for gay and lesbian couples. “We know this because we answer the distress calls every day—calls that began with the first statewide domestic partner bill in 1999 and haven’t slowed as the law broadened over the years. To the contrary, the distress calls have increased as more couples register, hoping to shield their families, and encounter inconsistent, incomplete protections. We’ve welcomed the supreme court’s invitation to explain how far domestic partnerships fall short of full marriage.”

Poll in NJ Shows Huge support for Gay Marriage

Is it a surprise to anyone that the NJ  poll conducted between Aug. 8-10 shows twice as much support for gay marriage as there is opposition? 63% favor same-sex marriage.  And just to quell the timid hearts of legislators, 72% of those polled (that’s 9% more than are in favor of marriages over civil unions) also said that taking a position in favor of gay marriage would not jeopardize the election of any legislators in the next election. So why would any legislators hold back? More 

Seeking Gay Marriage Equality in Vermont

Beth Robinson c0-counsel in the landmark Baker case that essentially won equality in the Vermont courts in 1999 but lost it to a new invention called “civil unions” in the Vermont legislature in 2000 continues to push for full marriage equality. In the August 12th issue of the Rutland Herald, she sensibly defends the Vermont legislature’s creation of a “primarily citizen panel” that will take up the real inequities of the rights afforded to same-sex couples with civil unions contrasted with full rights afforded to heterosexual couples with marriage. 

While some Vermonters who do not support marriage equality are saying that this panel, that will report back in 2008, is divisive because other priorites for families are more pressing, Robinson argues pointedly that all families of Vermonters need to be considered. “For many of us, what’s divisive is laws that put families formed by same-sex couples in a separate category from families formed by heterosexual couples. The commission process won’t create division; it will repond to fissures that exist in our laws to help heal the division.”

Vermont House Speaker Gaye Symington and Senate President Pro Tem Peter Shumlin should be applauded for creating a panel to consider, as Robinson says, “whether there’s a good reason to keep separate legal structures for same-sex couples and heterosexual couples in Vermont.”

Robinson, Susan Murray, and Mary Bonauto were visionary in forging the Vermont case that led to our nation’s first shred of same-sex relationship equality, civil unions in 2000. Bonauto’s 2003 marriage equality victory in the Massachusetts courts set a new standard of equality for same-sex couples. Robinson points out that 2007 is a different era from 2000. For one, Massachusetts over the past 3 years has demonstrated that full marriage equality for all citizens does not breed any social discord.

Robinson led the way for same-sex couples in Vermont in the courts and as the chairwoman of Vermont Freedom to Marry she is sensibly leading the way in democratic discourse among citizens. The pace of progress is measured and Robinson and others have their eyes on the prize of full marriage equality. She knows it works in Massachusetts. Her visionary colleague Bonauto has shown the way in the state just south of Vermont.

But What About in Sickness?

The story below from Indiana illustrates one of the disastrous dilemmas that committed same-sex couples face in not being able to have a legal relationship with each other. In Massachusetts, some of the most convincing arguments put forth by our legislators as they debated whether to support our Supreme Judicial Court’s decision allowing same-sex marriage were those focused around times of a medical crisis. Legislators and those of us advocating for same-sex marriage realized that medical crises for loved ones are often the most stressful moments of our lives.

After same-sex couples began marrying in Massachusetts on May 17, 2004, more reassuring stories about emergency rooms gave us insights into the power of marriage.In Courting Equality, Dawn Paul and George Smart share reassuring stories about being able to be with their spouses immediately upon announcing that they were married.

Patrick Atkins and Brett Conrad were not so lucky as 365Gay.com recounts:

 Indianapolis, Indiana. For a quarter century Patrick Atkins and Brett Conrad shared their lives including a home and bank accounts but when Atkins fell near fatally ill Conrad discovered he had no rights in determining the care or who would deliver it to his ailing partner.

In 2005 Atkins collapsed while on a business trip to Atlanta. He had a ruptured aneurysm and later suffered a stroke while hospitalized.

When Conrad arrived in Atlanta Atkins’ family directed the hospital to refuse him access to the ailing 47-year old, the Indianapolis Star reports. He was allowed by sympathetic hospital staff to sneak in after hours and after Atkins parents had left.

When Atkins was moved to a nursing home Conrad again was forced to sneak in to see the man with whom he had spend more than half his life. 

Later that year Conrad filed for guardianship of Atkins. But the now severely disabled man’s parents quickly moved their son to their home and have refused to allow Conrad access to him. More

Book Recounts Marriage Fight in Massachusetts

    Cynthia Laird of the Bay Area Reporter makes the connection between our struggle in Massachusetts for marriage equality and the continuing struggle in California. She sees Courting Equality as a way for gay marriage advocates to share strategies that worked and to take heart that full equality is not just a hope. Laird is particularly impressed with the photographic work of Marilyn Humphries. Read on . . . 

Bay Area Reporter
Published 07/12/2007
by Cynthia Laird
With the marriage equality battle heating up in California, same-sex couples and others might want to check out Courting Equality , a coffee-table book that recounts the battle for gay marriage in Massachusetts.

Released in May to coincide with the three-year anniversary of legal marriage in Massachusetts, Courting Equality (Beacon Press, $34.95) contains more than 100 photos by photographer Marilyn Humphries, with a detailed history by co-authors and spouses Patricia A. Gozemba and Karen Kahn.

In a telephone interview last week, Gozemba, 66, said that she and Kahn, 51, were familiar with Humphries’s photography work well before embarking on the collaboration. But it was a former San Francisco Chronicle reporter, Evelyn White, who suggested that they do a book, she said.

“The photos were at the heart of the whole thing,” Gozemba said. “Marilyn’s been in Boston for the last 27 years, documenting our community.” More

Luther Would Support Gay Marriage

Yesterday I responded to a great article that Mary Zeiss Stange wrote in USA Today. Stange asserted that Martin Luther would have supported gay marriage. In Massachusetts, the Religious Coalition for the Freedom to Marry would probably agree. Look next Monday, July 16th in USA Today for the responses to Stange’s article. Hope this letter is one of them:

Letter to the Editor:

Mary Zeiss Stange’s (“When it comes to gays, ‘What would Luther do?'” 7.9.07) assertion that Luther would support gay marriage is in agreement with over 1,000 clergy representing 23 faith traditions in Massachusetts. On May 17, 2007, the third anniversary of same-sex marriage in our state, an Episcopal clergywoman was the 1,000th signer of the Religious Coalition for the Freedom to Marry declaration of support for same-sex marriage.

Courting Equality photographer and authors honored

The City of Cambridge honored Pat Gozemba, Karen Kahn, and Marilyn Humphries with a special proclamation at their May 7, 2007, meeting. The proclamation notes that Courting Equality includes a photo of the first couple married in Cambridge, Tanya McCloskey and Marcia Kadish, and City Clerk Margaret Drury. The Council congratulated the authors on a “terrific” book.

Marilyn Humphries received a Black Butterfly Award at this year’s Sistah Summit, an annual event held during Pride week where lesbians of color celebrate those who have supported their community. She was honored for her efforts to ensure that images of the LGBT people seen in the press and elsewhere are inclusive of all our communities. Humphries, in recieving the award, told the audience,  that there is no honor more meaningful to her than one that comes from the black LGBT community. “To be called family,” she said, “that is one of the greatest honors I’ve ever had.” For full coverage of the event, see Bay Windows story by Laura Kiritsy.

Pat & Karen Video Interview with North Shore Sunday

Pat & Karen on CN8 TV – New England Newsmakers