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Vermont Senate Overwhelmingly Passes Same-Sex Marriage Bill

The Vermont Senate voted 26 to 4 yesterday in favor of a bill that would allow same-sex marriage in the state. The bill’s passage follows unanimous approval of the bill by the state Senate Judiciary Committee last week. Vermont currently allows civil unions, but the current bill would expand benefits offered to same-sex couples.

The bill will now move to the state House. If the legislation passes in the House, marriage equality supporters are concerned Republican Governor Jim Douglas would veto the measure and they may not have enough votes in the House to override a veto. A spokeswoman for the Governor told the New York Times that “Governor Douglas believes that this legislation is a distraction from the important work the legislature should be doing to get our economy back on track.”

Former state Representative Republican Tom Shelburne, who chaired the House Judiciary Committee when the state legalized civil unions in 2000, testified during hearings on the bill that “The question before this committee is if Act 91 is fulfilling its promise. Allowing same-sex couples to marry would grant them access to less tangible benefits. This would include the use of words such as marriage, wedding, marry, celebration and divorce…words that have historical, social and cultural significance,” according to United Press International.

Vermont became the first state to give civil recognition to gay and lesbian couples with the passage of legislation that established civil unions in the state in 2000. At the time, this law granted same-sex partners the most comprehensive system of domestic partner benefits in the nation, qualifying them for the some 300 rights and benefits available to married couples in the state.

Sources:

Feminist Daily Newswire 4/26/2000, 3/17/09, 3/23/09; United Press International 3/17/09; New York Times 3/21/09; USA Today 3/23/09

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