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Hawaii Civil Unions Bill OK’d, Sent to Governor


HAWAII STATE HOUSE X390 (FAIR USE) | ADVOCATE.COM

A bill that would allow same-sex civil unions in Hawaii passed the state house Thursday and moved to Gov. Linda Lingle, who has not said whether she will sign or veto the bill.

According to the Associated Press, the Hawaii house voted 31-20 in favor of the measure, which passed the senate in January. The revival of the bill on the last day of the year’s legislative session was unexpected, and resulted from a motion by Democratic house majority leader Blake Oshiro after other business was completed. The house vote fell three votes short of the two-thirds majority needed to override Governor Lingle.

“The measure would grant gay and lesbian couples the same rights and benefits that the state provides to married couples,” reports the AP. Governor Lingle, a Republican, said her office would “carefully review the bill,” which also allows civil unions for straight couples.

The civil unions debate last year drew some of the biggest protests ever in Hawaii, a high-profile battleground since the 1993 state supreme court decision that almost legalized same-sex marriage. In 1998, Hawaii voters approved a constitutional amendment giving the legislature the power to ban same-sex marriage.

Evan Wolfson, executive director of Freedom to Marry, served as co-counsel in the historic Baehr v. Miike Hawaii case credited with sparking the marriage equality movement. He issued a statement Friday morning that applauded the civil unions bill as a "major step forward" but one that falls short of the right to marry.

"In the 1990s, Hawaii began the national conversation about ending gay couples’ exclusion from marriage, and was the first to create a legal status to provide some state-level recognition and protections for same-sex couples," said Wolfson. "The legislature’s passage of a civil union bill marks a major step forward in Hawaii’s journey toward fairness and equality, but falls short of the full security and equal protection that come only with the freedom to marry. In the years since the groundbreaking Hawaii marriage case, the experience of other states such as Vermont, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and New Jersey — as well as several countries — has been that civil unions are no substitute for marriage. I urge Governor Lingle to swiftly sign House Bill 444 into law, and to Hawaii continuing its journey and finishing the job by ending the denial of marriage."

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Hawaii Resident for EQUAL Rights
    Date posted: 4/30/2010 6:50:10 PM
    Hometown: Honolulu, HI

    Comment:

    Nobody knows for sure how Gov. Linda Lingle will do with this bill, but there was a statement today by the Lt Gov. Duke Aiona where he says that the House should not have passed this bill and that the people of Hawai'i should've had the chance to vote on it. Since when should the majorities should make the rules for the minorities? This facilitates oppression. Hawai'i seems to be openminded and accepting of so many different cultures and beliefs, but it has a dark side that is not seen so easily. It's not as warm, fuzzy, and accepting as some think (or I used to think). During one of the hearings for HB 444 that I went to, those who opposed it wore red shirts and brought their Bibles in hand and we're ANGRY that the "homosexual agenda" was at it again. WTF

  • Name: corvo
    Date posted: 4/30/2010 2:17:11 PM
    Hometown: venezia

    Comment:

    The Rethug governor will veto and the bill will fail. Hawaii is too full of Mormons, Catholics, and fundie wackos for this to become law.

  • Name: Paschal
    Date posted: 4/30/2010 12:54:43 PM
    Hometown: Sligo, Ireland

    Comment:

    I should have wriitten that civil partnerships in California grant nearly all of the rights of marriage under state law.

  • Name: Paschal
    Date posted: 4/30/2010 12:53:30 PM
    Hometown: Sligo, Ireland

    Comment:

    The civil partnerships in California grant most of the rights of marriage under state law. When it upheld prop 8, the Californian Supreme Court ruled that the result only concerned the usage of the term ''marriage'' and gay couples still had to be given the same legal rights under California law as married couples. This bill in Hawai'i is a great step in the right direction and should be welcomed if it's signed into law. But marriage equality is what is needed but civil unions are good and we can get support from more people for civil unions than we can for marriage equality. Everyone in Hawai'i make sure to contact your governor and convince her that signing this bill is the right thing to do in the interest of fairness and protection for gay Hawai'in couples and their families.

  • Name: Greg
    Date posted: 4/30/2010 12:03:55 PM
    Hometown: Providence RI

    Comment:

    Jay's comment makes sense to me. Even if you're adamantly pro-marriage you can't deny that the civil union stepping-stone approach has WORKED & resulted in marriage in those states. You can't just sit around hoping for the courts & lawyers to do everything (Boies & Olson? yeah right) and they can rule the wrong way. I never understand why some want to reject "99% of the loaf" so to speak (ok maybe 98%) - civil unions are a hell of a lot easier to pass and there's no downside, they're always a win-win. ...Problem here is, how likely is Gov. Lingle (a Republican) to sign this, does anybody know?

  • Name: Jay
    Date posted: 4/30/2010 11:11:26 AM
    Hometown: Santa Monica

    Comment:

    The civil unions proposed by Hawaii will offer all the legal rights of marriage, like the domestic partnerships or civil unions offered by California, Nevada, Washington, New Jersey, and Oregon. Historically, such robust civil unions have been a necessary preliminary position before same-sex marriage is permitted, as in Vermont, New Hampshire, and Connecticut. So while this step is not marriage equality, it is an important one nevertheless. I hope the governor will sign the bill.

  • Name: Mark
    Date posted: 4/30/2010 10:58:30 AM
    Hometown: Wappingers Falls

    Comment:

    Civil unions are separate and unequal and offer only some of the civil rights of civil marriage. NJ is currently the only state with civil unions and it is currently being challenged in the NJ supreme court. Adding a second state will add momentum to the right's quest to label us as second class citizens. Only civil marriage offers all the civil rights of civil marriage. The US Constitution guarantees equal civil rights for all. Civil unions violate the US Constitution.



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