MURIEL LIGHTS' CANDLE DESIGNS

Thursday, June 27, 2013

DOMA STRUCK DOWN BY SUPREME COURT




The justices struck down the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), a 1996 law passed by Congress that barred recognition of same-sex marriages and thereby denied more than 1,100 benefits to married gay and lesbian couples. They also declined to rule in the case of Proposition 8, which barred same-sex marriage in California, saying supporters of the ban didn't have the legal standing to lodge an appeal of a lower court’s decision against the measure. That should allow weddings in the Golden State to resume in July.`
84-year-old Edie Windsor, the New York lesbian widow who challenged DOMA, and two gay couples from California who challenged Proposition 8.  Windsor launched her lawsuit after getting a bill for $363,000 in estate taxes after her wife, Thea Spyer, died in 2009 – two years following the couple's marriage in Canada. She noted that if her spouse had been named “Theo,” she wouldn't have received that bill.
This law has affected other couples like Patrick Bova, 75 and Jim Darby, 81 who will celebrate 50 years together in two weeks.  Their state, Illinois has recently failed to pass same-sex marriage.  As an advocate for equality in health outcome this could affect issues like family leave where immediate family can take off time to be with a family member.   Death benefits, pensions, health insurance that is usually left to a spouse.
The victory means the federal government must recognize the marriages of gay and lesbian couples married in the 12 states that allow same-sex marriage, plus the District of Columbia, and give them the same benefits that they had been previously denied under the struck-down law, the Defense of Marriage Act (or DOMA).
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