Ruling leaves gay couples in ‘legal limbo’
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Andrew Edwards
Members of Laguna Beach’s gay community were let down, though not
shocked, by the California Supreme Court’s decision to invalidate
about 4,000 same-sex marriage licenses issued in San Francisco.
However, the court’s decision is not viewed as a resolution to the
debate over same-sex unions.
“I was disappointed, but unfortunately, not surprised,” said
Lagunan Jorge Rodriguez, who on March 4 married his partner Ed Olen
in San Francisco.
Rodriguez expects the ruling will not be an end to the issue, and
future battles over same-sex marriage will be fought in California.
“I didn’t like it, but I didn’t think of it as a total defeat,” he
said.
The court ruled on Aug. 12 that San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsome
overstepped his authority in February when he ordered San Francisco
county officials to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.
State law only provides for heterosexual marriage in California.
“Clearly the mayor went overboard on this,” Log Cabin Republicans
co-founder Frank Ricchiazzi said. Though he believes the court
correctly interpreted state law, he thinks laws limiting marriage to
heterosexuals is unconstitutional.
“I say, ‘Government, out of the house,’” Ricchiazzi said.
The court left the door open as to whether those laws are
constitutional, leaving the possibility that future lawsuits will
subject prohibitions on same-sex marriage to judicial review.
“I think those lawsuits are already in the works,” said Lagunan
Sandra Hartness. “I think they’re bubbling in the system.”
Hartness is affiliated with the Human Rights Campaign Fund, a gay
and lesbian lobbying group. She and other advocates of
same-sexmarriage argue that limiting marriage rights, and the legal
benefits attached to marriage, deprive same-sex couples of what is
afforded to heterosexual spouses.
One example, Hartness said, is that married people are allowed to
will property to each other without having to pay estate tax.
Currently, same-sex couples do not have that ability, even where
civil unions are recognized.
“Federal tax code is based around the word, ‘marriage,’” Hartness
said.
Opponents of same-sex marriage argue the concept represents an
attack on traditional families and gender roles. Lagunan Dan Huston
said he does not mind if same-sex couples choose to live with each
other and hold their own wedding ceremonies to commemorate their
relationship, but state law should stay the same.
“Let them have their [darn] weddings,” Huston said. “They don’t
have to be legal.”
“We have our tradition of man and wife and most religions have the
same thing,” he added.
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