Ocean
County expected to extend benefits
to
domestic partner
By AP
from newsday.com from the Web, January 21, 2006
TOMS RIVER, N.J.
-- In a reversal in the face of months of protests by gay-rights
advocates, Ocean County freeholders are poised to extend death
benefits to the partner of a veteran detective dying of lung
cancer, according to published reports.
Freeholder James F. Lacey told the Ocean County Observer for
Saturday newspapers that the freeholders now plan to extend
pension benefits to the domestic partner of Lt. Laurel Hester, a
23-year veteran of the Ocean County Prosecutor's Office.
The benefit is also to be extended to other members of the
Police and Fire Retirement System in a vote expected at a
freeholder's meeting this Wednesday.
"I think we're doing the right thing now," Lacey told the
newspaper. "I feel comfortable."
The decision was made after a teleconference Friday among
Republican leaders in the county, including state Sens. Andrew
Ciesla and Leonard T. Connors.
"They wanted to discuss this," Connors told the paper.
"The freeholders want to give this lady's companion the benefits
that others get."
New Jersey's nearly two-year-old Domestic Partners Act gives
counties and cities the power to extend pension and health care
benefits to the gay partners of employees if they choose.
Forty-nine-year-old Hester, of Point Pleasant, has said without
her $13,000 death benefit her partner of six years, Stacie
Andree, will be forced to sell the house they now share after
Hester's death, expected within six months.
The apparent reversal came two days after advocacy group Garden
State Equality presented videotaped statement of Hester at last
Wednesday's freeholder meeting. In the video Hester,
hairless and struggling to breath with the aid of a respirator,
asked freeholders to "make a change for good, a change for
righteousness."
"This is one of the happiest days of my life," Hester said in a
statement Saturday. "I feel like David conquering
Goliath."
Phone messages left by The Associated Press Saturday at the
homes of Lacey and three other county freeholders were not
immediately returned.
|