Recent Comments

OzoneRoad wrote:
States Lead The Way On Climate Legislation: “like the racists and bigots of…”
emily wrote:
Capitol Police Chief Michael Fallon Dies: “I WILL ALWAYS REMEMBER YOU…”
Bill Finch wrote:
'Unfunded' Mandates A Hot Button Issue: “Not trying to start an argueme…”
jon pelto wrote:
'Unfunded' Mandates A Hot Button Issue: “Would somone please list 10 (o…”

Categories

  • CT Elections 2006
    • Closure on 2006 Democratic Primary
    • Daily Kos Poll Finds Many in CT Would Change Vote
    • Edited: Waxing Nostalgic
  • CT Watchdog
    • OP-ED: Courant Expresses First Amendment Concerns
      In Defense of Watchdog Lawsuit
    • Towing Companies Seek Higher Fees
    • Hartford Promises To Reform Towing Policies,
      Will Make Restitution Payments To Vehicle Owners
  • Cartoons
    • Plugging The Budget Deficit
    • Rell Kills Bill
    • Treading Water Is Getting Tougher In Connecticut
  • Congress
    • Done. Out?
    • Lieberman Seeks 'Withdrawal' Wiggle Room
    • Call Dodd An Afghanistan 'Skeptic'
  • Corporate Watch
    • Banks Committee Begins With Little Fanfare
      AIG Executive Answers Few Questions
    • AIG Executive To Testify Thursday
    • Lawmakers Frustrated By AIG 'Compliance'
  • Courts
    • Panel Oks Firefighter Promotion List
    • Judge Orders Firefighter Promotions
    • Journal Inquirer Sues Hartford Courant For Plagiarism
  • Education
    • Twist At Rare Teacher Termination Hearing
    • Programs Scaled Back Without Budget In Place
    • A Year Later, Still Waiting For Education Ruling
  • Election 2008
    • With Obama, De'Vonna Solemnly Swears
    • Hairdresser Scores Ticket To History
    • Connecticut Dems Vent Against Lieberman
  • Election 2010
    • Done. Out?
    • Candidate Faces Uphill Battle
    • Foley Switches Campaigns
  • Environment
    • States Lead The Way On Climate Legislation
    • Blumenthal Says What Legislature Did Was Illegal
    • United Illuminating Move Blasted
  • General News
    • Capitol Police Chief Michael Fallon Dies
    • Toyland Is More Complicated Than Ever Before
    • '4 to 1' Saves East Rock Climber
  • Health Care
    • Celebrating World AIDS Day in Hartford
    • Docs Zoom In On Deadly Cancer
    • Prayers Delivered On Second Try
  • Iraq at Home
    • Student Groups to Attend Anti-War Rally
    • West Hartford Movie Night
    • Five Years of War
  • Labor
    • Unemployment Crisis Bankrupts Claims Fund
    • How Many Private Sector Jobs Were Created?
    • Dodd On Healthcare, Unemployment & McMahon
  • Legal
    • Journal Inquirer Sues Hartford Courant For Plagiarism
    • Budget Fallout Hits Legal Aid
    • Aid In Dying Or Assisted Suicide?
  • Local Politics
    • 'Unfunded' Mandates A Hot Button Issue
    • Feds To Probe Racial Profiling Claims
    • 12-Member Panel On Town Aid Meets Thursday
  • Media Matters
    • Redesign to launch this weekend
    • Huffington Calls Murdoch's Bluff
    • Journal Inquirer Sues Hartford Courant For Plagiarism
  • News Links
    • State Government Home Page
  • Opinion
    • Giving Thanks
    • Op-Ed: Connecticut Can Spend And Cut More Wisely
    • Op-Ed: Why Democrats Watch Fox News
  • State Capitol
    • Republicans Release Their Own Plan
    • 'Unfunded' Mandates A Hot Button Issue
    • 12-Member Panel On Town Aid Meets Thursday
  • Transportation
    • Service Plazas Get a Face Lift
    • Public Transit Advocates Rally For Funds
    • New Rail Cars Fail First Test, Officials Not Worried

Celebrating One Year Anniversary of Marriage Equality

by Christine Stuart | November 12, 2009 7:42 PM
Posted to General News

Christine Stuart photo

It wasn’t just one court, one legislature, or one governor that made marriage equality for same-sex couples possible.

It was a movement supporters said Thursday at a gathering to commemorate the one year anniversary of the day Connecticut began allowing same-sex marriage.

Carol Buckheit, executive director of Love Makes a Family, the advocacy group which advocated for marriage equality, said since Nov. 12, 2008 more than 1,700 same-sex couples have tied the knot. However, the number is probably larger since it only includes couples married before June 2009.

It was one year ago today that state Rep. Beth Bye and her wife Tracey Wilson paced the West Hartford Town Clerk’s office waiting for the judge in New Haven to certify the Supreme Court’s decision. State Sen. Jonathan Harris, D-West Hartford, married the couple at 9:41 a.m. and a copy of their marriage license hangs on the wall of his office.

One year later Bye and Wilson said they are more in love than ever.

Elizabeth Kerrigan and Joanne Mock, the two lead plaintiffs in the lawsuit, were married today at noon in their living room by Supreme Court Justice Richard Palmer, who authored the majority decision.

“Interpreting our state constitutional provisions in accordance with firmly established equal protection principles leads inevitably to the conclusion that gay persons are entitled to marry the otherwise qualified same-sex partner of their choice,” Palmer wrote. “To decide otherwise would require us to apply one set of constitutional principles to gay persons and another to all others.”

Ben Klein, the lawyer with Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders, a Boston-based group that litigated the Connecticut case, said the decision in Connecticut is a “manifesto of equality” that should be followed by every state in this country.

Christine Stuart photo

The co-chairmen of the legislature’s Judiciary Committee were also on hand for the celebration.

State Sen. Andrew McDonald, D-Stamford, thanked the eight couples who brought the lawsuit against the state and reflected on how it was not an easy issue for the legislature to deal with through the years. He said it was not an easy issue for some of his fellow colleagues and some struggled with it, while many were able to change their minds.

State Rep. Michael Lawlor, D-East Haven, said marriage equality was possible in Connecticut because there was a cultural shift toward acceptance. “I’m mindful that the rest of the country is not as fortunate as we are here in Connecticut,” Lawlor said.

The fact that Gov. M. Jodi Rell mentioned and got choked up about voluntarily signing the first in the country civil union bill when she announced she would not seek another term earlier this week really shows how far the state has come, Lawlor said. “What more do you need to know.”

Comments (2)

Posted by: Hope | November 19, 2009 9:28 AM

How many divorces between heterosexuals have been documented since the struggle over same sex marriages? Yet if you are using the Scripture to validate your reasons for condemning same sex marriages, why are divorces granted so easily when the Bible speaks very clearly about the criteria for divorcement. Marriage isn't and never was the respected institution that was outlined in the Bible, so why all the fuss? What is the lesson we should apply...Remove the log from your own eye, before you worry about the splinter ....

Posted by: Matt Taylor | November 19, 2009 2:57 PM

Hope are you saying that since the heterosexual divorce rate is high, then we should allow same sex marriage...is that b/c same sex couples will also get divorced? This argument makes no sense to me. The basis of your argument is that the institution of marriage lacks respect?? So why fight for marriage if you're gay, if it is not respected institution? Why not civil unions? Using poor behavior as a reason to promote more poor behavior never works. Get a better argument. Oh and btw, why are we defining ourselves by our sexual orientation anyway, what does that say about our society. Perhaps our society would be better off if we did not define ourselves by how and who we have sex with. Celebrate away...Hope springs eternal.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)