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D.C. City Council member David Catania’s bill to legalize same-sex marriage in Washington was tweaked slightly before a Council committee advanced it this week. (Photo by Jacquelyn Martin/AP)
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HOME > NEWS > LOCAL
By: Lou Chibbaro Jr. COMMENTS
A bill allowing same-sex marriages to be performed in D.C. cleared its
first major hurdle Tuesday when a City Council committee voted 4-1 to
approve it.
The vote by the Committee on Public Safety & Judiciary to pass the
bill at a markup hearing came immediately after it voted 4-1 to defeat
an amendment that would have allowed people, including private business
owners, to refuse to provide goods and services related to a same-sex
marriage.
The committee vote also came one day after Council member Phil
Mendelson (D-At Large), who chairs the committee, released a revised
version of the bill that received full support from nearly all other
Council members, including gay Council member David Catania (I-At
Large), the bill’s author.
One of Mendelson’s changes removed from the bill language that would
have ended city registration of new domestic partnerships after January
2011.
The other change broadened the bill’s exemption for churches and
religious organizations to allow them to refuse to rent facilities or
provide services for same-sex marriage ceremonies, even though such
facilities and services are available to the general public.
The original bill as drafted by Catania provided the same exemption to
churches and all religious institutions, but barred it from being used
by religious entities that provide goods and services to the general
public.
Nick McCoy, a spokesperson for a coalition of organizations and
activists supporting the same-sex marriage bill, said the groups had no
objections to the changes made by Mendelson.
The religious oriented exemption amendment introduced Tuesday by
Council member Yvette Alexander (D-Ward 7) would have put in place a
much broader exemption than the language Catania and Mendelson placed
in the bill.
Alexander noted that her amendment would allow any individual,
including owners of private businesses, to refuse to provide goods,
services or public accommodations for a purpose related to the
performance, celebration or promotion of same-sex marriages.
“The intent is to protect against liability for people who say
[same-sex marriage] is against their religious beliefs,” she said.
“There are really some individuals where everything is guided strongly
by their religious beliefs,” Alexander told the Blade after the
committee vote. “And I think this would just put an imposition on them.”
In speaking against the amendment, Council member Mary Cheh (D-Ward 3),
a George Washington University law professor, said the effect would be
to allow individuals as well as private businesses to refuse to rent a
hall, sell a wedding gown or provide catering services to anyone
planning a same-sex marriage.
Mendelson called the amendment “unacceptable,” saying it would go far
beyond the exemption already in the bill and result in allowing
private, non-religious businesses to engage in discrimination that
currently would violate the city’s Human Rights Act.
Rick Rosendall, vice president of the Gay & Lesbian Activist
Alliance, said Alexander’s amendment would “gut” the Human Rights Act
as it applies to same-sex couples seeking services related to marriage,
such as the rental of a hall for a wedding reception.
Alexander was the only member of the five-person committee to vote for
her amendment. She also was the only member of the panel to vote
against the bill.
Mendelson and fellow committee members Cheh, Jack Evans (D-Ward 1) and
Muriel Bowser (D-Ward 4) voted against the Alexander amendment and
supported the bill, known as the Religious Freedom & Civil Marriage
Equality Amendment Act of 2009.
Eleven of the Council’s 13 members have said they will vote for the
marriage bill when it reaches the full Council, and Mayor Adrian Fenty
has said he plans to sign the measure.
Alexander said Tuesday she plans to vote against the bill at the Dec. 1
Council session. Council member and former D.C. Mayor Marion Barry
(D-Ward 8) has expressed opposition to the bill on religious grounds,
but has not said how he plans to vote Dec. 1.
Mendelson made the revisions to the bill before Tuesday’s committee
markup hearing in his role as chair of the committee with jurisdiction
over the legislation.
He also released a 22-page proposed committee report on the bill, which
gave a ringing endorsement of the measure on grounds that lesbians and
gay men should be given the same right to marry as all other city
residents.
In action separate from the bill vote, the committee voted 4-1 to approve the report, with Alexander voting against.
The revised version of the bill approved Tuesday by the Committee on
Public Safety & Judiciary leaves intact all of the major provisions
written by Catania, including the key provision allowing same-sex
marriages to be performed in D.C.
During the committee’s two days of public hearings on the bill, held
Oct. 26 and Nov. 2, Catania said he was open to removing language he
placed in the bill that called for ending the city’s registration of
new domestic partnerships after January 2011. Catania noted that he put
the provision in the bill because most states that have legalized
same-sex marriage have ended existing domestic partnership or civil
unions programs on grounds that ...
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