Hate Crimes Bill Passes House of Representatives; Includes Gender Identity

April 29, 2009 by ·  

ncte banner Hate Crimes Bill Passes House of Representatives; Includes Gender Identity

mara sm Hate Crimes Bill Passes House of Representatives; Includes Gender Identity

Mara Keisling, Executive Director of NCTE

“April 29, 2009

Today the United States House of Representatives voted 249 to 175 in favor of the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act (H. R. 1913), moving one step closer to the passage of the first federal law to include gender identity and transgender people in a positive way. This bill would add sexual orientation, gender identity, gender and disability to the categories included in existing federal hate crimes law and would allow local governments who are unable or unwilling to address hate crimes to receive assistance from the federal government.

“This is a great day for America,” commented Mara Keisling, Executive Director of the National Center for Transgender Equality, “as we make a clear statement that all lives are valuable and that no one deserves to be targeted for violence just because they are transgender. It is vital that we make it absolutely clear that violence motivated by bias is not tolerated in our country, because while this is a victory, the true victory will come when everyone is genuinely free from violence and discrimination. That’s what we are working for.”

Transgender people continue to be disproportionately targeted for bias motivated violence and thirteen states and Washington, DC have laws which include transgender people in state hate crimes laws.

JOIN US IN THANKING LOBBY DAY PARTICIPANTS

Over 200 people participated in activities over the past three days as a part of NCTE’s Lobby Days and Religious Leaders Summit. Please join us in thanking them for braving the heat here in DC to talk with literally hundreds of members of Congress about the need to pass the hate crimes bill and protections against employment discrimination. Their presence at the Capitol on the eve of this vote was so important. Thank you to each and every one of them.

WHAT YOU CAN DO NEXT
Important next steps you can take

  • Contact your Senators’ offices and ask for their support for the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act, S.909, which was introduced yesterday by Senator Edward Kennedy.
  • If your Representative voted for H.R. 1913, please call or e-mail them today and thank them for their vote. You can find your member of Congress at www.house.gov. Find out how your member of Congress voted by checking our website later today.

WHAT THE BILL SAYS

The Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act would:

Extend existing federal protections to include “gender identity, sexual orientation, gender and disability”
Allow the Justice Department to assist in hate crime investigations at the local level when local law enforcement is unable or unwilling to fully address these crimes
Mandate that the FBI begin tracking hate crimes based on actual or perceived gender identity
Remove limitations that narrowly define hate crimes to violence committed while a person is accessing a federally protected activity, such as voting.
The Hate Crimes Prevention Act is supported by nearly 300 civil rights, education, religious, and civic organizations. The bill is also endorsed by virtually every major law enforcement organization in the country-including the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the National District Attorneys Association, the National Sheriffs Association, the Police Executive Research Forum, and thirty-one state Attorneys General.

For more information:

Read the specifics about this legislation from the Library of Congress, go to their website and search by bill H.R. 1913
View our fact sheet about the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act and read additional information about hate crimes on our website

Thank you!

Thank you for taking action on this vital issue as we work together to make our world safer for transgender people.

Mara Keisling,
National Center for Transgender Equality

Note: Mara is the founding Executive Director of NCTE. A Pennsylvania native, Mara came to Washington after co-chairing the Pennsylvania Gender Rights Coalition. Mara is a transgender-identified woman who also identifies as a parent and a Pennsylvanian. She is a graduate of Penn State University and did her graduate work at Harvard University in American Government. She has served on the board of Directors of Common Roads, an LGBTQ Youth Group, and on the steering committee of the Statewide Pennsylvania Rights Coalition. Mara has almost twenty-five years of professional experience in social marketing and opinion research.

RELATED:  And this from Joe Solmonese of HRC

“We just got the news: the U.S. House has passed the fully inclusive Matthew Shepard Act.

This was not an easy victory. But we WON in the House – thanks in part to the tireless, fearless Judy Shepard, who joined me in critical last-minute meetings on Capitol Hill today.

Now the battle moves to the Senate.

We need every Senator to know we want quick action on the inclusive hate crimes bill. You’ve emailed, you’ve called, you’ve donated – and I thank you deeply – but I hope you understand that this fight is far from over.

President Obama has pledged to sign the bill, but to get it to his desk we’ll need to pass it through the Senate first. And with the lies from right-wing groups ALREADY intensifying – one group went so far as to say the bill makes “pedophiles a protected class” and is “pro-child molester” – it’s not going to be easy.

Send Judy’s powerful video to ten friends and ask them to write to the Senate.

hate crimes judy shepard video Hate Crimes Bill Passes House of Representatives; Includes Gender Identity

The scare tactics continue. Anti-LGBT groups sent lawmakers a note linking to a poster of Jesus that says “WANTED For Violation of the Proposed Hate Crimes Law In His Teachings.”

Our only defense is the truth: in the ten years since Matthew Shepard’s death, tens of thousands more people have been violently attacked for being who they are. It took ten years of lobbying and educating to get to this point – our long wait for hate crimes protections must end now.

Ten friends of yours can help.  Send the video to ten friends now!”

06ren6 sig Hate Crimes Bill Passes House of Representatives; Includes Gender Identity
Joe Solmonese

President, HRC

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New Hampshire Senate Passes Gay Marriage Bill

April 29, 2009 by ·  

by Steve Weinstein
EDGE Editor-In-Chief  (via EDGE Boston)
Wednesday Apr 29, 2009

 New Hampshire Senate Passes Gay Marriage Bill

The ball--or, rather, bill--is now in Gov. Lynch’s court.

The New Hampshire state Senate’s vote today to legalize same-sex marriage. The Senate voted 13-11, on a second reading, in favor of an amended version of a bill that had passed the House last month by a 186-179 vote.

Since the Senate voted on an amended version, the bill will return to the House again, where it is expected to pass.

The Manchester Union-Leader, the state’s major newspaper, quoted Senate Judiciary Committee chair Sen. Deborah Reynolds, who opposed the bill, as saying voters in her district favored it. She said the added wording “gives everyone in the state the right to seek a civil marriage … This is a compromise that is respectful to both sides in this debate and meets our shared goals of equality in state laws for all the people of New Hampshire. The people of this sate share the core values of equality for all, tolerance and acceptance regardless of our differences.”

The Senate Republicans voted as a block against it, but Sen. Matthew Houde expressed the view that younger voters have accepted gay marriage as a given. “This is not a question of ’if’ for me. It’s a question of ’when,’” Houde told the Union-Leader. “We should be eager to be on the right side of this issue.”

New Hampshire already allowed civil unions. That took effect a year ago.

“Just one month ago, there were only two states where same-sex couples could marry,” said Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese in a statement. “Now, with this vote in New Hampshire, we are on the verge of having five states that recognize marriage equality for same-sex couples. It’s been quite a month, and we look forward to more states joining this group.”

HRC quoted a recent poll from New Hampshire Freedom to Marry that purported to show 55% of New Hampshire voters supporting gay marriage, with only 39% opposed.

The vote now goes to John Lynch, the governor. He hasn’t signaled whether or not he will sign but, as a Democrat, the pressure will probably be on him to do so.

If and when he does, it will mark New England as the most forward-thinking part of the country by far on this issue. While Iowa just started marrying gay couples, every other state that does so–Massachusetts, Connecticut and Vermont–are in this ancient part of the country.

Furthermore, the other two states in the region–Rhode Island and Maine–are increasingly looking as though they may follow. And the giant state immediately to the south, New York, recognizes gay marriages conducted in other jurisdictions. Its governor is fast-tracking gay marriage there.

-30-

EDGE Editor-in-Chief Steve Weinstein has been a regular correspondent for the International Herald Tribune, the Advocate, the Village Voice and Out. He has been covering the AIDS crisis since the early ’80s, when he began his career. He is the author of “The Q Guide to Fire Island” (Alyson, 2007).

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New Hampshire Senate Approves Marriage Equality, Goes to Governor

April 29, 2009 by ·  

via Gay Rights Watch

April 29, 2009 by Bryan Boyd

Seems like each day in the past few weeks it’s a daily occurrence to get news like this. The wave continues as the state Senate has voted to make New Hampshire the fifth state to allow gay marriage.

The 13-11 vote came after a 45 minute debate over an emotional issue that drew 500 people to the Statehouse for a hearing earlier this month.

The vote establishes a two-tier system with a civil marriage and a religious marriage license. The House now must consider the proposal, which is similar to one it rejected earlier this year.

Gov. John Lynch has said marriage is a word that should be reserved for the union of a man and a woman, but he has not said specifically that he would veto the bill.

Call Gov. Lynch and tell him to sign this vital legislation! (603) 271-2121

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Colin Cowie Talks Budget!

April 28, 2009 by ·  

via Madeline’s Weddings

Colin Cowie talks BUDGET with GetMarried.com

Even in a soft economy, taste and good style are free to prevail in wedding plans!

Get Married teamed with Colin Cowie of Colin Cowie Lifetsyle, internationally known as the arbiter of style, to offer brides the latest wedding trends. “Your wedding is an opportunity to make a statement of style, it’s a complete personal manifestation about who you are,” said Cowie, lifestyle expert, celebrity wedding designer and host of Get Married on Lifetime Television and www.GetMarried.com. “The only rule is that taste and good style should prevail in everything you do.”

Colin offers 7 Tips for the Budget-Savvy Bride who seek smart solutions for planning an extraordinary wedding:

1. Dream big: Small ideas get small results, so put budget aside while envisioning your dream wedding, then figure out what you can afford.

2. Cut your coat according to the cloth: It’s better to do 5 things correctly than 10 things on the skinny.

3. Consider a destination wedding: Weddings can take place anywhere, so think beyond the exotic beach and think about a bed-and-breakfast or country inn.

4. Opt for a fantastic DJ: Instead of a big orchestra band, find a great DJ who can create great background music and just as easily keep the guests moving on the dance floor.

5. Invest in a trusted wedding planner: A professional is there to ease some of the pressure while bringing your vision to a reality.

6. Design a signature drink: Rather than serving an open bar, offer guests a specialty beverage that is as delicious as it is memorable.

7. Create monochromatic flower arrangements using one type of flower: When bundled en masse in short ceramic vases, whether roses or carnations, tulips or spider mums; these flowers are beautiful and impactful.

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Iowa Issues Marriage Licenses!

April 27, 2009 by ·  

From an email alert from:

banner email 648 2009 Iowa Issues Marriage Licenses!

“Dear Friend,

What a joyful day — love and happiness are spreading across Iowa on the first day that same-sex couples can apply for marriage licenses. On behalf of Lambda Legal, I send my warmest wishes to all the couples and their families who can celebrate today and in the future because their relationships will now be honored and treated equally under the law.

Together, we made the case for equality. When the Iowa Supreme Court issued its unanimous decision in Lambda Legal’s marriage equality case, history was made not only for Iowans, but for the entire nation. Within days, the Vermont legislature enacted a marriage equality bill and proposed bills are now pending in other states. Equality is taking root and growing strong from coast to coast and in the heartland of our country.

It is hard to describe how thrilling this victory was when the decision was announced on April 3. We want to share the emotions with you:

View our Iowa Marriage Equality video

weddingregistry 2 Iowa Issues Marriage Licenses!

Make a gift in honor of all the Iowa plaintiff couples whose courage made today possible.

Make a Special Gift Today!

We have a lot more work to do to protect the relationships and families of LGBT people and people with HIV in other states, and to advance and protect our civil rights on the job, in school and in all aspects of our lives. Thank you for standing with us and supporting our work.

Today, our thoughts and hearts turn to Iowa. We know there is a long road ahead to protect this victory. We must roll up our sleeves and work with our colleagues at One Iowa to continue to share with Iowans, and the rest of the country, about the importance of marriage equality for our families. But first, we celebrate. Love, justice and history are on our side.

Warm wishes,

Kevin Cathcart

Executive Director”

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Gay Marriages May Begin Today In Iowa

April 27, 2009 by ·  

By Carlos Santoscoy (via OnTopMagazine.com)
Published: April 27, 2009

just gay married Gay Marriages May Begin Today In Iowa

Iowa county recorders began processing marriage licenses for gay and lesbian couples this morning, and the first gay nuptials might take place as early as today; It’s all up to the judges.

Iowa imposes a three-day waiting period before a marriage can take place, but a judge may elect to waive the requirement, leaving the possibility that vows between gay couples might be exchanged as early as today.

Gay marriage foes say they will continue to attempt to disrupt gay and lesbian marriages from taking place in Iowa.

One woman, Gloria Villanueva, is urging people to go to their local courthouse today for a prayer rally. Villanueva says she disagrees with the court’s unanimous decision and is organizing the prayer service to have her voice heard.

A second effort to disrupt gay nuptials asks county recorders to deny marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples and break the law. At least one lawmaker, Senator Merlin Bartz, a Republican from Grafton, is facing possible ethics charges for abetting the illegal action.

“I’m not urging county recorders to ignore the law,” he told reporters. “I’m urging them to exercise their conscience and if they have a wish to invoke that, they have just as much of a right to invoke that as a county attorney does.”

The threatened disruptions were having little affect on gay marriage advocates, who were clearly elated at adding another state in their corner.

“While some have threatened to disrupt this historic day, any who attempt to do so can hardly carry the ‘pro-family’ banner,” Steve Ralls, director of communications for Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG), told On Top Magazine. “The sun still rises each day in states where lesbian and gay couples now enjoy the right to wed, and he only change that will take place in Iowa, like those other states, is that more people will now be able to protect their families.”

Iowa is the third state behind Massachusetts and Connecticut to legalize gay marriage; Vermont the fourth. Gay marriages begin in September in the Green Mountain State.

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DOOD! We just Tweeted a Wedding In real-time!

April 27, 2009 by ·  

THIS IS SO COOL!

We tweeted an entire wedding in Key West on Friday so that our friends and followers, crew and guests could keep up!

Got to love technology! If you’d like to see how this magical day went from behind the scenes, please read this post from the BOTTOM up!

52. Good night everyone!11:41 PM Apr 24th from web

53. We just tweeted an entire wedding and reception in real time and never missed a beat! Thanks Rich, Adam & Richard! Really <3 the internetz!11:40 PM Apr 24th from web

54. OK! Wedding/reception is over.Venue cleared.Entire party (of 50+PPL)walked over to Sloppy Joe’s Bar! We’re pleased, proud & happy 4 couple!!11:37 PM Apr 24th from web

55. RT @djc8080likes Charlie’s Angels. pls #RT. http://tv.tearn.com/2009/04… Pray for Farrah Fawcett.11:15 PM Apr 24th from web

56. Just in: Venue Catering Manager: ” iiiii’m not kicking them out!” on how great a time the guests are having! yay!10:56 PM Apr 24th from web

57. Guest:”You guys throw a helluva party! Everything is perfect & went without a hitch!!” (gst is a NY event professional as are most guests)10:52 PM Apr 24th from web

58. Last call!10:32 PM Apr 24th from web

59. Sent Poor, injured Richard home about an hour ago. GREAT job Richard! We thank you so much! Have a good night sweetheart. <3 U10:30 PM Apr 24th from web

60. 40 min to end of event.last call in 6.Rich, Adam and Marcinho standing by to phone taxis for exiting guests. Still on Dancefloor! Everyone!10:26 PM Apr 24th from web

62. One hour remaining to this reception! just did another fly-by and EVERYbody on dance floor!! Even Parents, Grands, Aunts!! SCORE!10:08 PM Apr 24th from web

63. Pennsylvania Event Tomorrow!7:28 PM Apr 24th from web

64. Thanks Marcinho, Rick, Richard, Adam, Ava, Dave, Liza! Thanks for making their wedding dreams come true! Outstanding job, again, people!7:26 PM Apr 24th from web

65. Happy, happppppy Brides! TOUCHDOWN!!!!7:23 PM Apr 24th from web

66. They’re Partners for LIFE!!!! Formal photos. done. Guests are in reception waiting 4 grand entrance of brides! Back on TImeline!!!!!!!7:22 PM Apr 24th from web

67. Duval Street is BUSY!! Sunset is going to be PHENOMENAL! Yay, Key West!6:58 PM Apr 24th from web

68. We are 13 minutes behind due to traffic. Brides are laid-back, casual and very happy. Will Make up time during photos. Copacetic!6:46 PM Apr 24th from web

69. Just saw guest caravan on webcam passing Green Street. Delayed by HEAVY pedestrian traffic on Duval St. No Prob we’ve got all service ready6:42 PM Apr 24th from web

70. Hourly forecast shows nothing but blue skies for our brides’ day! Webcam views of harbour confirm around the island.6:35 PM Apr 24th from web

71. brides’ pedicab four and half blocks from venue. team in place to greet them at entry under the porte-cochère. Guests 2 arrive in 3 minutes.6:27 PM Apr 24th from web

72. to wedding site/hotel6:02 PM Apr 24th from web

73. 6PM: vans loading for departure to hotel. Thanks Rick!6:02 PM Apr 24th from web

74. Special Key West pedicab for the Brides is waiting too!5:58 PM Apr 24th from web

75. Rick’ at the hotel rounding up the guests to board the fleet of 10 passenger vans. Vans already on site for 6pm pick up. Right on TIME!5:55 PM Apr 24th from web

76. Please support our effort 2 raise money 4 breast cancer educ & mammog for disadvantaged women? http://niifu.notlong.com Thanks. PleaseRT5:25 PM Apr 24th from web

77. T minus 58 minutes until “Here come the BRIDES!!!!”5:24 PM Apr 24th from web

78. 6;30p wedding.ballroom: service ready. Cerem Dock Chairs set. Rick bringing xtra palm trees from dock to ballroom. Ambiance. Great Job Adam!5:22 PM Apr 24th from web

79. Richard ALREADY BACK at the venue & on the JOB! He says he’s just FINE! Thank you Richard! There’s no CRYin’ among event pros! You Rule!5:03 PM Apr 24th from web

80. Dock set up of trees and chairs continues.Callng richard at home to see that he’s OK.T min.1.5 hrs.Thanks Rick and Adam on site.What a TEAM!4:57 PM Apr 24th from web

# WOW! Our designer Richard just tumbled down a flight of stairs at venue! Scratched and scraped. going hm to chg and bandage. Glad he’s OK!4:42 PM Apr 24th from web

# Brides r changing at hotel, centerpieces r being placed at venue,flowers trees being placed on Pier-ah clockwork.Team Leader Rich? priceless4:40 PM Apr 24th from web

# 1 YR &16 Days to plan today’s Key West Wedding and it’s HERE!!! icon smile DOOD!  We just Tweeted a Wedding In real time! icon sad DOOD!  We just Tweeted a Wedding In real time! Congrats to our 2 lovely brides, their families & guests!4:24 PM Apr 24th from web

# Hi everyone! TODAY’S The Day! Key West Oceanfront wedding! Gorg’s Weather, Teams in place! T-minus 2& 1/2 hrs! SO exciting! Good day all!3:35 PM Apr 24th from web

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Iowa, Connecticut, Vermont Marriage Forms Not as Gender Neutral as Might Appear (via MOMBIAN)

April 25, 2009 by ·  

Iowa, Connecticut, Vermont Marriage Forms Not as Gender Neutral as Might Appear

Three of the four states to enact marriage equality for same-sex couples are ignoring the existence of those with two moms or two dads.

On the marriage license applications for Connecticut, Iowa, and Vermont* (PDF’s), applicants are asked to enter their names, with no requirement that one be “groom” and one be “bride.” So far so good.

Then the applicants are asked for their “Father’s Name” and “Mother’s Name.”

You see the problem. As I pointed out earlier, before Iowa issued its new forms, what if the person getting married has two mothers or two fathers?

I am proud to say that Massachusetts has gotten it right, however. It asks for “Name of Father/Parent” and “Name of Mother/Parent.” How simple is that?

(It appears that California is also more open minded about couples’ parents, based on the sample licenses (PDF) distributed to county clerks on 10/3/08. (The samples were post-dated to 11/08, however, but it looks like they were distributed pre-Prop 8.) There seems to be some county-by-county variation, however. The license application currently on the Los Angeles County site (PDF), for example, has only, “Father’s Name” and “Mother’s Name,” but appears to be dated 7/08, when same-sex couples could marry. The current application for San Francisco, however, dated 3/09, has “Father/Parent” and “Mother/Parent.”)

Of course, straight people with same-sex parents exist even where marriage for same-sex couples is illegal. States should make the “Mother” and “Father” sections of the form more neutral in any case. I know, that’s unlikely to happen, if only because of bureaucratic inefficiency, never mind bias. At the very least, however, the states revising their forms to include same-sex couples should take the additional small but inclusive step of recognizing that many people have already grown up with same-sex parents.

*Vermont has yet to issue revised marriage license application forms. I am basing my observations on the version of the marriage bill passed by the Vermont House and Senate, which includes a sample form and states, “the application shall be in substantially the following form.”

Posted on April 25th, 2009 at 12:30 pm by Dana

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BREAKING NEWS: Two major New York newspapers endorse marriage equality

April 23, 2009 by ·  

banner newsalert3 BREAKING NEWS: Two major New York newspapers endorse marriage equality

Today, two important newspapers in upstate New York have editorialized in favor of marriage equality for same-sex couples. The Post-Standard in Syracuse and the Press Republican in Plattsburgh both strongly and eloquently argued the need to immediately pass a bill that would provide access to the 1324 rights and protections that come with a New York State marriage license.

From the Post-Standard:

“Legalizing gay marriage—moreso than the halfway measure of civil union—would strengthen and affirm the long-term commitments same-sex couples make to each other. That doesn’t weaken families; it bolsters them.”

From the Press Republican:

“Same-sex marriage is a civil-rights issue, and on that, the government has only one choice: to come down heavily in favor of the civil rights of everyone.”

These papers join The New York Times, the Buffalo News, Albany’s Times Union, El Diario/La Prensa, Hudson Valley’s Journal News, Middletown’s Times Herald-Record, the Ithaca Journal and the Poughkeepsie Journal as major newspapers in New York State that are on record in support of marriage equality.

Read the full text of today’s editorials below:

The Post Standard: A Civil Right: Legislature has no reason to delay on same-sex marriage

The Press Republican: In same-sex marriage, government has no stake

(via e-mail blast from Empire State Pride Agenda)

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Maine’s marriage debate turns deeply religious

April 22, 2009 by ·  

Posted at: 04/22/2009 2:06 PM
By GLENN ADAMS (via KOB-TV, LLC)

Maine’s marriage debate turns deeply religious

(AP) AUGUSTA, Maine – A legislative hearing to extend gay marriage to Maine took on the atmosphere of a religious revival Wednesday as ministers made impassioned speeches for and against the bill before thousands of cheering spectators packed into a civic arena.

Gay couples also took turns pleading for recognition of their partnerships, while opponents warned that state sanctioning of same-sex marriages would fracture a basic building block of society.

The Judiciary Committee hearing drew so much interest that traffic became snarled early in the day. Gay marriage supporters hoping to build on momentum in the region arrived wearing red, and they gave a standing ovation to the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Dennis Damon, as he opened the hearing. Police said it drew 3,500 to 4,000 people.

“This bill is fair. This bill’s time has come,” Damon, D-Trenton, said to a roar of approval. “It recognizes the worth and dignity of every man and every woman among us.”

Damon’s proposal _ backed by more than 60 legislative co-sponsors _ would repeal a state law that limits marriage to a man and a woman and replace it with one that authorizes marriage between any two people.

Also up for a discussion was a separate bill to allow civil unions _ which offer many of the same rights as marriage _ sponsored by Rep. Les Fossel, R-Alna.

Gay rights activists want to get laws allowing same-sex marriage passed in all of New England by 2012, and they’re already halfway there. Vermont’s Legislature overrode a gubernatorial veto two weeks ago to enact a same-sex marriage law. Connecticut and Massachusetts also allow gay marriage.

New Hampshire’s Senate is expected to take up a House-approved bill later this month. In Rhode Island, a bill is awaiting a vote but is not expected to pass.

Outside of New England, only Iowa allows gay marriage, though a handful of states allow similar arrangements.

The marriage effort’s prospects in Maine are uncertain. The Legislature could approve it or reject it, or the state’s voters could have the final say. Democratic Gov. John Baldacci, who previously opposed the idea, now says he is keeping an open mind.

The Legislature has the option of sending the issue to voters in a referendum. Or, if the measure becomes law, opponents could initiate a “people’s veto” effort.

The earliest a Judiciary Committee vote is expected would be April 28. The bill then goes to the Senate, then the House before it could be sent to the governor’s desk.

The gay-marriage bill led to television ads encouraging people to attend the committee’s public hearing on Wednesday. About 800 people arrived an hour before the hearing began, said Dana Colwill, building director.

Among those testifying was Roman Catholic Bishop Richard Malone, who said the church has long supported domestic partner laws. But he said the church opposes same-sex marriage, which he characterized as one of several challenges facing traditional marriage.

“We speak in opposition to same-sex marriage because we are deeply concerned about the institution of marriage itself _ in this state, and in this nation,” he said.

Malone was followed by pastors who called the bill a threat to families and contrary to traditional religious teachings.

“Our forefathers would be ashamed that we are gathered here today to discuss this horrendous issue,” the Rev. David Adams, of First Baptist Church of West Gardiner, said to thundering applause. “Do not make the decision of not voting on it and passing it back to the Maine people as a lame way of getting out of your responsibilities.”

But leaders of other churches favored the bill, including 120 clergy members active in the Religious Coalition for Marriage Equality.

“Jesus led a life of doing justice. We are called to do the same,” said the Rev. Deborah Davis Johnson of Immanuel Baptist Church of Portland.

Even Maine Attorney General Janet Mills used religious references in her statement in favor of gay marriage, saying, “The (law) will not will not affect my relationship with my God.” Mills added that it would not require any church to perform a marriage ceremony against its beliefs.

Others drew comparisons with the civil rights struggles of blacks.

“More than 40 years ago, even people here in Maine told us it was wrong to get married,” said Robert Talbot, a black man from Bangor who is married to a white woman.

“People say the same thing now about gay and lesbian couples,” he said. “It was wrong 40 years ago, and it’s wrong now.”

But others worried about the consequences of passing the law.

“Same-sex marriage is an impossible situation for children, and I think our culture and our state will suffer as a result of adoption of this legislation,” Howard Allen of Limington told the Judiciary Committee.

(Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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