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Oregon Group Takes First Step to Repeal Marriage Ban


BASIC RIGHTS OREGON X390 (LOGO) | ADVOCATE.COM
Basic Rights Oregon, the state’s largest gay rights group, has launched a grassroots educational campaign as a primary step to repeal the state’s five-year-old constitutional amendment banning marriage rights for same-sex couples.

The group is sponsoring a community outreach effort that encourages broad public dialogue on marriage rights in communities, churches, and civic organizations. “This is a concerted, smart effort to get people to talk to their friends, their neighbors, and their coworkers," said Evan Wolfson, executive director of Freedom to Marry. "It’s a major public education effort that will play out over the coming months -- and years.” Wolfson was invited by Basic Rights Oregon to speak Monday at a kickoff event at Portland State University, followed by similar events in Bend and Eugene later in the week.

The Oregonian reports that BRO may support a 2012 repeal of Ballot Measure 36, one of 11 state constitutional amendments banning gay marriage that passed in 2004. Oregon's measure passed with 57% of voters in support.

In 2007 the Oregon state legislature established a domestic-partnership registry and passed antidiscrimination laws in employment, housing, and public facilities based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

The statewide campaign kicks off on the eve of multiple battles over the rights of same-sex couples across the country. In Maine, voters will decide whether to uphold a law passed by the state legislature and signed by Gov. John E. Baldacci in May that would legalize same-sex marriage (implementation of the law was delayed pending ballot results), while Washington state voters will be asked to accept or reject a recent expansion of the state’s domestic-partnership law that grants marriage-like rights to registered gay and lesbian couples. 
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Reader Comments
  • Name: Scott
    Date posted: 11/3/2009 11:58:28 AM
    Hometown: Portland

    Comment:

    Oregon has taken a beating when it comes to gay rights, when this was going to court last time to be repealed they dismissed it on a technicality. I have been an oregon resident most of my life with my partner of over 13 years, and we would love the opportunity to marry and have equal rights, as would may couples. I spend time speaking with people I know abouit the issue and I can rarely find anyone who will admit to me that they oppose same sex marriage, and when I do they seem to never have a reason why they oppose it, they just do. It is sad to me that America has lowered itself to pouring its time and energy fighting over who gets what right, it seems like we should all have the same advantages to be able to achieve our own success and happiness. Even if we dont 100% understand eachother, it is still the right thing to do. Somehow I feel like it is unconstitutional to even vote to remove other peoples rights in the first place, its like a legalized hate crime.

  • Name: Charles
    Date posted: 11/3/2009 11:43:54 AM
    Hometown: Camillus, NY

    Comment:

    Go Oregon!

  • Name: Lonnie
    Date posted: 11/3/2009 11:42:27 AM
    Hometown: Seattle

    Comment:

    Why wait until 2012? Sounds like the same old "wait wait wait, not now" strategy that lgbt people are rejecting. Build on the momentum of the National Equality March and the Portland march and demand equality NOW! We're not willing to wait another 20 years for lobbying/fundraising organizations like BRO to decide when lgbt can have equality.



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