N.J. Governor Signs
Civil Unions Bill
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Dith Pran/The New York Times
Gov. Jon S. Corzine signing the legislation today |
By AP from the
NYTimes on the Web, December 21, 2006
TRENTON, N.J. -- New Jersey's
governor signed legislation Thursday giving gay couples all the rights and
responsibilities of marriage allowed under state law -- but not the title.
When the law goes into effect Feb. 19, New Jersey will become the third state
offering civil unions to gay couples and the fifth allowing gay couples some
version of marriage.
Connecticut and Vermont also offer civil unions for gay couples, while
Massachusetts allows gay couples to marry, and California has domestic
partnerships that bring full marriage rights under state law.
''We must recognize that many gay and lesbian couples in New Jersey are in
committed relationships and deserve the same benefits and rights as every other
family in this state,'' Gov. Jon S. Corzine said in signing the legislation.
The Legislature passed the civil unions bill on Dec. 14 in response to a state
Supreme Court order that gay couples be granted the same rights as married
couples. The court in October gave lawmakers six months to act but left it
to them to decide whether to call the unions ''marriage'' or something else.
Gay couples welcomed the new law, but argue not calling it ''marriage'' creates
a different, inferior institution. Even some same-sex couples who attended
the bill signing remained lukewarm about the law.
''It's a step forward, but it's not true equality,'' said Veronica Hoff, 52, of
Mount Laurel, as she stood with her partner.
The civil unions law grants gay couples adoption, inheritance, hospital
visitation and medical decision-making rights and the right not to testify
against a partner in state court.
They won't, however, be entitled to the same benefits as married couples in the
eyes of the federal government because of 1996 law that defines marriage as
between a man and a woman. Gay partners won't be able to collect deceased
partners' Social Security benefits, for example, said family lawyer Felice T.
Londa, who represents many same-sex couples.
Social conservative groups and some lawmakers opposed the measure, saying it
brings gay relationships too close to marriage, but it easily passed the
Legislature.
''It's same-sex marriage without the title,'' said John Tomicki, president of
the New Jersey Coalition to Preserve and Protect Marriage. ''It uproots
the cardinal values of our culture.''
He said opponents would push for a constitutional amendment that would ban
same-sex unions in New Jersey, no matter what they're called.
''Let the voters decide that marriage is defined as a union of one man and one
woman,'' Tomicki said.
Democrats who control the Legislature have said they have no plans to consider
such a proposal.
Associated Press Writer Chris Newmarker contributed to this
report.
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