
In a reversal in
the face of months of protests by gay rights activists,
Ocean County, N.J., freeholders are poised to extend
death benefits to the partner of a veteran detective
dying of lung cancer, according to published reports.
Freeholder James F. Lacey told the Ocean
County Observer for Saturday newspapers that
the freeholders now plan to extend pension benefits to
the domestic partner of Lt. Laurel Hester, a 23-year
veteran of the Ocean County prosecutor's office.
The benefit is also to be extended to other
members of the Police and Fire Retirement System in a
vote expected at a freeholder's meeting this
Wednesday. "I think we're doing the right thing now," Lacey
told the Observer. "I feel comfortable."
The decision was made after a teleconference
Friday among Republican leaders in the county,
including state senators Andrew Ciesla and Leonard T.
Connors. "They wanted to discuss this," Connors told the
Observer. "The freeholders want to give this
lady's companion the benefits that others get."
New Jersey's nearly two-year-old Domestic
Partners Act gives counties and cities the power to
extend pension and health care benefits to the gay
partners of employees if they choose to do so.
Forty-nine-year-old Hester, of Point Pleasant,
has said that without her $13,000 death benefit, her
partner of six years, Stacie Andree, will be forced to
sell the house they now share after Hester's death, expected
within six months. The apparent reversal came two days after
advocacy group Garden State Equality presented a
videotaped statement by Hester at last Wednesday's
freeholder meeting. In the video Hester, hairless and
struggling to breathe with the aid of a respirator, asked
freeholders to "make a change for good, a change for righteousness."
"This is one of the happiest days of my life,"
Hester said in a statement Saturday. "I feel like
David conquering Goliath."
Phone messages left by the Associated Press
Saturday at the homes of Lacey and three other county
freeholders were not immediately returned. (AP)
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