Utah Court Rules Anti-Gay Amendment Doesn’t Bar Salt Lake City from Offering Domestic Partner Benefits (5/16/2006)
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SALT LAKE CITY – A Utah court has ruled that its anti-gay relationship
amendment, one of the most sweeping of its kind to pass in the 2004
elections, does not bar Salt Lake City from offering health insurance benefits
to the domestic partners of city employees. The American Civil Liberties
Union, which filed a friend-of-the-court brief on behalf of a lesbian employee
of the Salt Lake City Police Department the local branch of the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), cheered the
decision as an important victory for lesbian and gay couples in states with
similar anti-gay relationship amendments.
“The court understood correctly that laws banning gay people from marriage do
not in any way bar employers from choosing to provide domestic partner
benefits,” said Margaret Plane of the ACLU of Utah. “The court recognized
that employers have important reasons for wanting to provide health insurance
for the families of all their employees, and it’s within their rights to do
so.”
On September 21, 2005, Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson signed an
executive order extending health and other employment benefits to city
employees’ same-sex and heterosexual domestic partners. The governing body
of the agency that administers health insurance for state and local government
employees, the Utah State Retirement Board, then filed a petition in state court
asking whether Utah’s anti-gay relationship amendment prohibits the city from
offering health insurance benefits to domestic partners.
In rejecting this argument, the court ruled: “The court is aware of no
Utah law of general application to marriage that established health benefits as
a perquisite of marriage. Health insurance programs, however common, are
not required by law of either public or private employers, but are established
voluntarily (or as the result of bargaining) to meet market-driven or other
perceived needs. In their essence, employee health benefits are first and
foremost simply a perquisite of employment.”
While the city council later voted to extend the benefits to any adult who
has lived with the city employee for at least a year and who is financially
“interdependent” with the employee, the judge’s ruling does not turn on the fact
that people other than the partners of unmarried straight or gay employees could
be eligible for benefits.
The decision, which was issued on May 11, 2006, is welcome news for Salt Lake
City Police Department employee Dianna Goodliffe, who has a four-year-old
daughter with her partner Lisa. A little over a year ago their daughter
was diagnosed with diabetes, making health insurance critical for their
family. The decision will mean that Lisa will now have the option of
working part-time and staying home to care for their daughter.
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