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Rep. Jim Moeller, serving the 49th District Serving Western Vancouver, as well as Hazel Dell and the surrounding communitites of southwestern Clark County. |
April 16, 2009
OLYMPIA – “The right and fair thing – not just for registered and
potentially registered domestic partners, but for all six million Washington
people.”
That’s what one of its supporters proclaimed of a
civil-rights bill that captured approval, 62 -35, in the state House of
Representatives yesterday (Wednesday, April 15, 2009).
State Rep. Jim
Moeller said the measure directs state law to assure that registered
domestic partners have the same rights and responsibilities as married
spouses.
“Domestic-partnership benefits for same-sex couples are
fair-minded, commonsense principles,” said Moeller, D-Vancouver.
“What we’re talking about here is a very significant and important step in
our state’s civil-rights evolution,” Moeller said. “This legislation simply
establishes equality in the law – no more, no less.”
As House Deputy Speaker
Pro Tempore, Moeller presided over the discussion surrounding Senate Bill
5688 in the full House of Representatives.
“We as a state have fairly
recently taken the long overdue step of outlawing discrimination that is
based on a person’s sexual orientation,” noted Moeller. “Today, the House
approved rational, reasonable principles to affirm domestic-partnership
rights and benefits for same-sex couples.”
“Nothing is more personal
and more intimate than the decision two human beings make to commit
themselves to one another,” he added. “Gay and lesbian American citizens
over the past few years have in fact used brief windows of opportunity to
pledge their lives in union to one another.
“Gay marriage is legal
throughout Canada and in many European countries. And as gay and lesbian
people are marrying across this country and around this world, traditional
marriages have not been destroyed.
“Meteors have not annihilated us,”
Moeller pointed out. “The world has not stopped revolving. The real threats
to marriage remain as they have always been: lack of commitment,
communication, and trust. Imagine that!”
Moeller also said that
providing more security for domestic partners “is even more important in
these turbulent economic times. It seems to me that this legislation is as
much about protecting the lives of families as it is about respecting the
rights of couples.”
The Domestic Partnership Registry was created in
2007 in legislation for which Moeller also helped lead support. The registry
is open to same-gender and senior-citizen couples. The registry is
maintained in the state secretary of state’s office, and couples may
register as domestic partners if the adult partners are the same gender. A
couple can also register for inclusion on the registry if the partners are
different genders and one of them is at least 62 years old.