Stories
Covering The DC Metro Area
District Registers Domestic Partners
Congress Blocked Law for 10 Years
By Alia Ibrahim
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 9, 2002; Page B01
The District
government launched a domestic partnership registration program
yesterday, ending a 10-year wait for some couples who had hoped
the city's 1992 law would help protect their rights.
Several couples
showed up yesterday at the D.C. Department of Health's Vital Records
Division to register as domestic partners, as city officials celebrated
the end of their decade-long battle to implement the Health Care
Benefits Expansion Act of 1992.
The law, which
became effective June 11, 1992, had been repeatedly blocked by
Congress until last fall, when many lawmakers, shaken by the terrorist
attacks, briefly abandoned partisan fights over social issues.
Thom Metzger,
32, and Vince Micone, 35, were the first couple to receive their
certificates yesterday. Micone said they were satisfied to see
that "after 10 years of waiting, this is finally happening."
Metzger said
that when the law was passed in 1992, he and Micone applied for
a certificate. Over the years, their application was lost, like
those of many others who applied a decade ago, and they had to
reapply.
Like Metzger
and Micone, the other couples at the ceremony launching the program
wanted to document their relationships. None of those present
was a District government worker seeking insurance benefits. The
law makes unmarried people registered as domestic partners of
D.C. government employees hired after 1987 eligible to purchase
health care insurance coverage.
Mentally competent,
unmarried people 18 and older who share a permanent residence
are eligible to register as domestic partners. No one is allowed
to have more than one domestic partner at a time.
The law gives
domestic partners the right to visit one another at the hospital,
to have final say over funeral procedures and to take annual or
unpaid leave to care for or to attend the funeral of the domestic
partner.
The extension
of those rights is comforting for Deacon Maccubbin, 59, and Jim
Bennett, 46, who have been together for 24 years.
Maccubbin
said that though he and Bennett have not experienced a situation
in which either of them was not allowed to visit the other in
the hospital, they know of people who have. Until now, he said,
hospitals have had no obligation to allow visitors who were not
officially kin to patients.
"This
certificate will allow us to make final decisions instead of being
kicked out of a hospital," Maccubbin said.
Barbara Tyner,
59, and Candace Shuttis, 50, who have been together for 9 1/2
years, considered the launch of the program a very important step.
"For
us, this is a way to get recognition and legality for our relationship,"
Tyner said.
Del. Eleanor
Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) called the launching of the program "a
human rights victory" and a "victory for the uninsured,"
providing better access to health insurance when 40 million people
in the United States lack it.
But above
all, Norton said, it was a victory "for the 10-year determined
fight that the gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered community
spread to many congressional districts that finally changed the
Congress to recognize the equal human rights of the gay community."
Norton, speaking
at a news conference to kick off the registration program, also
said she will introduce a bill in Congress to make benefits received
by domestic partners of law enforcement officers killed in the
line of duty tax-free, as they would be for the spouse and children
of such officers.
Mayor Anthony
A. Williams (D) said yesterday was "a big day" for the
District, which is following eight states, 132 municipalities,
168 Fortune 500 companies, 4,010 private employers, nonprofits
and unions and 167 colleges and universities in providing domestic
partner benefits.
The Vital
Records Division in the D.C. Department of Health, which issues
death and birth certificates, will be in charge of running the
domestic partner registration program.
Both parties
seeking to be registered as partners must go in person to the
division, provide documentation that they satisfy the requirements
for registration, submit an application and pay a $45 fee. Officials
said the couples should receive their certificates within 10 days.
Urbane Bass
III, chief of the Vital Records Division, said four couples, three
of them gay, had applied for certificates within the first few
hours yesterday. He said he expects the number to reach a "couple
of thousand" in the next two months.
© 2002
The Washington Post Company
Printed without
permission from the Washington Post website. Read the story at
the Washington
Post website
Where
To Register for the new Domestic Partner Program
Vital Records Division
D.C. Department of Health
825 North Capitol Street, NW
202-442-9303
Cost: $45.00 |

The
Many Faces of Domestic Partnership
Sunday, July 7, 2002;
Page B06
After 10 years of
opposition from Congress, the District's domestic partnership
law takes effect tomorrow. Although the law recognizes gay and
lesbian couples, it also makes a larger statement about whose
families matter.
"Domestic partner"
does not have a fixed meaning. Under D.C. law, eligibility extends
to any two unmarried adults who have a familial relationship "characterized
by mutual caring and the sharing of a mutual residence."
By contrast, Montgomery County and many other places limit coverage
to gay and lesbian couples who look like their married counterparts
but not to others whose families should be equally valued: sisters
raising an orphaned niece; a mother and daughter raising the daughter's
child; an adult caring for a parent, grandparent or godparent;
lifelong friends; a heterosexual couple remaining unmarried to
protest the long history of marriage as a patriarchal institution.
These relationships
all foster human flourishing. Many of these relationships fulfill
society's most critical role -- facilitating the care of those
who cannot care for themselves, most notably children and the
elderly. If one adult in the household has employment-based family
health benefits, she should be able to name the other as a domestic
partner.
Under a new federal
law, when an unmarried firefighter, police or public service officer
with no minor children dies in the line of duty, the government
will make a one-time $250,000 payment to anyone the officer has
named on a life insurance policy. That allows an individual to
define his or her own primary relationship. The closer a domestic
partner policy comes to that example, the better.
NANCY D. POLIKOFF
Washington
© 2002
The Washington Post Company
Printed without
permission from the Washington Post website. Read the story at
the Washington
Post website
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