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After 20 years of marriage, father of three Eric Mongerson came out as gay. In the court’s “Final Order,” filed in September of 2007, a blanket restriction was imposed on the father that prohibited him from “exposing his children to his homosexual partners and friends.”

Lambda Legal filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case in February 2009, arguing on behalf of Children of Lesbians and Gays Everywhere (COLAGE) that restrictions in custody and visitation matters should not be determined based on sexual orientation and that court-ordered restrictions based on the sexual orientation of a parent’s friends and partner is contrary to state and federal law.

The Court agreed with Lambda Legal’s arguments in their opinion on this issue, ruling that, because there was no evidence that such a visitation restriction harmed the children, the imposed ban was arbitrary and contradicts existing public policy in the state. Writing for a unanimous court, Justice Robert Benham said:

“The prohibition against [the children having] contact with any gay or lesbian person acquainted with Husband assumes, without evidentiary support, that the children will suffer harm from any such contact. Such an arbitrary classification based on sexual orientation flies in the face of our public policy that encourages divorced parents to participate in the raising of their children.”

The case is Mongerson v. Mongerson.

President Obama issued a Memorandum on Federal Benefits and Non Discrimination directing the Director of the Office of Personnel Management and the Secretary of State to extend a small number of federal benefits to the same-sex partners of federal employees. While same-sex partners will be given access to some health care services and employee benefits previously available to different-sex spouses, health insurance coverage has not been included.

The Memorandum issued on June 17, 2009 provides that the domestic partners of civil service employees can be added to the long-term care insurance program and that employees can use their sick leave to take care of domestic partners and non-biological, non-adopted children. For foreign service employees, benefits included the use of medical facilities at foreign posts, medical evacuation, and inclusion in family size for housing allocations.

Despite this modest step in the right direction for recognition and benefits for the partners and spouses of LGBT federal employees, the new policies fall far short of treating such employees equally. The most obvious and perhaps the most significant benefit missing is full health insurance eligibility for the domestic partners or spouses of gay and lesbian employees.

As a presidential candidate, Obama vowed to fight hard for LGBT people and those with HIV. As part of our health care fairness campaign, Lambda Legal is conducting a national survey to document the unique health care experiences and needs of LGBT people and people living with HIV. The results will be used to educate elected officials and other decision makers about the specific problems health care reform must address.

Nearly three months after oral argument in the case against Prop 8, the California Supreme Court rejected constitutional arguments embraced by preeminent law professors, dozens of bar associations, leading law firms and civil rights standard-bearers, as well as hundreds of religious groups and faith leaders, labor unions, business leaders and scores of community groups.

In response to the ruling, Lambda Legal is launching Marriage Watch: California, a legal resource and education campaign designed to inform and assist same-sex married couples who encounter discrimination or disrespect for their married status.

The Court voted 6/1 to uphold Prop 8. Considering a question of first impression in California, the court opted to defer to majority voting power and uphold the ballot measure that, for the first time in California history, withdrew a basic right selectively from a minority group singled-out in a legally suspect manner. In the majority opinion authored by Chief Justice George, the Court stated:

"We conclude that each of the state constitutional challenges to Proposition 8 advanced by petitioners and the Attorney General lacks merit. Having been approved by a majority of the voters at the November 4, 2008 election, the initiative measure lawfully amends the California Constitution to include the new provision as article I, section 7.5. In a sense, petitioners' and the Attorney General's complaint is that it is just too easy to amend the California Constitution through the initiative process. But it is not a proper function of this court to curtail that process; we are constitutionally bound to uphold it." The Court added that "if there is to be a change to the state constitutional rule embodied in [Prop 8], it must 'find its expression at the ballot box.'"

Speaking from her mother's bedside, Karen Strauss, lead petitioner in the case, said, "My heart, already on the verge of breaking, has just been dealt an irreparable blow. I was so hoping the court would find its way to a decision that continues, rather than repeals, our equality under the law and that would allow our family to celebrate the love Ruth and I have shared for nearly 18 years."  Strauss continued, "My mother's poor health a major impediment to Ruth's and my wedding plans last year has taken the turn our family has been dreading; she is now under hospice care. The opportunity for her to witness my marriage has gone forever."

Her intended spouse, Ruth Borenstein, said, "While I am confident the voters ultimately will overturn Prop 8 and restore our equal rights, having to wait comes at a tremendous personal cost to us and our parents."  Borenstein added, "We've already lost my dad and Karen's mom is in precarious health. This ruling is a devastating disappointment to us and our surviving parents, who had hoped to share our joy at our long-awaited wedding."

The Court did, however, uphold the rights of the 18,000 same-sex couples who married between June 16 and November 4, 2008 a position Lambda Legal and our co-counsel pressed to protect those couples' expectations, and to allow them and their families and friends to show that marriage equality respects personal dignity and strengthens communities. The Court stated:

"[E]xcept with respect to the designation of 'marriage,' any measure that treats individuals or couples differently on the basis of their sexual orientation continues to be constitutionally 'suspect' under the state equal protection clause and may be upheld only if the measure satisfies the very stringent strict-scrutiny standard of review that also applies to measures that discriminate on the basis of race, gender, or religion."

Dissenting Justice Moreno wrote, "In my view, the aim of Proposition 8 and all similar initiative measures that seek to alter the California Constitution to deny a fundamental right to a group that has historically been subject to discrimination on the basis of a suspect classification, violates the essence of the equal protection clause of the California Constitution and fundamentally alters its scope and meaning." 

In addition to Marriage Watch: California, Lambda Legal is also launching enhanced collaborations with four community partners engaged in educational work in communities of color and faith in California: API Equality-LA, the Jordan/Rustin Coalition; the Latino Equality Alliance and California Faith for Equality. For years these groups have increased understanding among California's diverse communities and congregations. Lambda Legal is proud to help amplify these voices for equality for same-sex couples and their families in California. 

Stefan Johnson, Lambda Legal National Help Desk Attorney and Board Member of the Jordan/Rustin Coalition, explained, “We have seen for years that domestic partnership rights too often are ignored by those who see same-sex couples as unequal. Because we don’t want that history to repeat for the thousands of same-sex couples who married in California last year, we have trained a special ‘Marriage Watch’ team for Lambda Legal's Help Desk and invite any married same-sex couples with questions or problems to visit our website or call us.”

A broad coalition of California organizations that represent or work with people of color, including allies to these groups, issued a statement expressing deep disappointment at the decision to uphold Prop 8, vowing to "restore marriage equality to California." Lambda Legal is among more than 100 organizations that joined the statement.

For a case history and court documents, including the Supreme Court decision, visit Lambda Legal's case page for Strauss v. Horton.

Reverend Dr. Robert Franke, a 75-year-old retired university provost and Unitarian minister, relocated to Little Rock to be closer to his daughter, Sara Franke Bowling. Franke moved into Fox Ridge of North Little Rock, an assisted living facility, after fulfilling all residency requirements — including submitting medical evaluation forms from a local physician.

But the day after Franke moved in, Fox Ridge officials forced him from the facility when they learned he has HIV, despite the fact that he requires no special medical attention beyond daily medication and regular check-ups with a physician. A Fox Ridge staffer went so far as to tell Bowling that her father's personal effects could stay, but that the "body" had to be out by the end of the day.

Lambda Legal filed suit in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas against Fox Ridge, on behalf of Franke and Bowling. We seek damages for our clients under the Fair Housing Act, the Arkansas Civil Rights Act and the Arkansas Fair Housing Act and, by seeking intervention from the court, intend to prevent Fox Ridge from continuing to engage in this kind of discriminatory conduct. "I was stunned," says Bowling. "The people at Fox Ridge were supposed to make sure that he was comfortable and cared for, and instead they shunned and rejected him, making him feel like a complete outcast."

Fox Ridge is licensed by the state to provide Dr. Franke with the kind of assistance he and his daughter were seeking for him. "This isn't about money to me," says Franke. "I want to make sure something like this doesn't happen to anyone else — because no one should ever be made to feel the way I did."

The case is Franke v. Parkstone Living Center, Inc.

In 2006, Gary Day, a disabled gay father, completed applications for insurance benefits for his children. Day provided birth certificates and court documents that established him as the legal parent, but the Social Security Administration (SSA) ignored his repeated requests for assistance for more than two years — the standard response deadline being 45 days.

After more than a year with no response, Lambda Legal sent a letter on Day's behalf seeking action by the agency. After the SSA's refusal to determine eligibility for the children based on what it called "legal questions and policy issues," Lambda Legal, along with co-counsel from McDermott Will & Emery LLP, filed a lawsuit on behalf of Day in 2008. Several days later, the SSA issued the eligibility determination Day had been waiting more than two years to receive, only it was a denial; the SSA claimed his kids were not his for the purposes of social security benefits. We then filed an immediate appeal of the decision with SSA, arguing that although Day wasn't allowed to adopt his children in Florida, they were legally his kids through a California court order.

In a recent letter, the SSA announced that it would provide benefits for Day's children, giving his family the social safety net he had paid into for decades and that other families benefit from on a regular basis. The letter recognizes the legal relationship between Day and his children without discrimination based on his sexual orientation or family status. "As a parent, it is my job to provide for my children," Day says. "I am relieved to be able to fulfill my promise and also relieved that the SSA will provide the benefits my family needs, just as they do for other families."

The case is Gary Day, and C.D.G., and E.D.G., et al. v. Social Security Administration, et al.

On May 6, Governor Baldacci of Maine signed a marriage equality bill into law, extending marriage equality to same-sex couples in the state. Advocacy efforts were led by EqualityMaine, the Maine Civil Liberties Union, the Maine Women's Lobby and Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders (GLAD). Baldacci's announcement came shortly after the Maine Senate gave its final approval. "I have come to believe that this is a question of fairness and of equal protection under the law, and that a civil union is not equal to civil marriage," said the governor in a written statement. Baldacci's support comes despite a history of opposition to marriage for same-sex couples.

Marriages for same-sex couples will not begin immediately in Maine and may be challenged by a voters' referendum. These developments come in the wake of victories in Vermont, Iowa, Connecticut and Massachusetts (the first state to grant same-sex couples the right to marry in 2004). New England is poised to become the only region in the nation where all states but one offer full marriage equality. The New Hampshire legislature has passed a marriage bill that now awaits governor approval. And in nearby Washington, D.C., the mayor is set to approve or reject a marriage recognition bill recently passed with overwhelming support from the D.C. City Council.

"Today in Maine, old-fashioned New England values of fairness and common sense again have carried the day," says Jennifer Pizer, Lambda Legal Marriage Project Director. "People of all ages understand that marriage makes families, and that separate and unequal are not the American way. Seeing fairness prevail — not just across common sense New England, but in our nation's capital and the heartland of Iowa — it's clear that we have turned a corner from 'Yes We Can,' to 'Aye' and 'I Do'."

On April 27, Iowa began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples, following our landmark victory in Varnum v. Brien. Lambda Legal also helped win marriage for Connecticut same-sex couples in 2008 by filing a 'friend-of-the-court' brief in the successful legal challenge brought by GLAD. And on the west coast, advocates for fairness and opportunity await the California Supreme Court decision in Strauss v. Horton — the case against a discriminatory ballot measure narrowly passed by voters last year brought by Lambda Legal and co-counsel NCLR and ACLU. 

Days after Lambda Legal filed a lawsuit against the Indian River Central School District, school officials have taken a first step toward improving the climate for LGBT students by saying they will allow a gay-straight alliance to form.

Lambda Legal is representing Ashley Petranchuk, a current sophomore, and her older brother, Charlie Pratt, in the suit. Charlie endured years of antigay harassment at school. Students attacked him relentlessly with antigay and sexist slurs, including names like "faggot," "sissy," "queer" and "fudgepacker," often in the presence of teachers who failed to intervene. Charlie was pushed into walls and lockers, and was spat on and threatened by his classmates. Even staff members joined in by ridiculing him with stereotypically effeminate gestures in front of other students. The school also refused to let Charlie form a student gay-straight alliance.

Charlie's younger sister Ashley attempted to start a gay-straight alliance at the same school this fall, but she was turned down by both the assistant principal and principal, who said such a club would bother parents and students.

On April 8, Lambda Legal filed a lawsuit at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York on behalf of Charlie and Ashley. Days later, the school district revealed that it would now allow Ashley to form the gay-straight alliance.  

"After years of denying students like Ashley, her brother Charlie and others their right to form a GSA, Indian River is taking an important first step toward righting its wrongs," said Lambda Legal attorney Michael Kavey. "Respecting students' freedom to stand up for themselves and each other is a key part of creating a safe learning environment for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth and their allies."

The discrimination suffered by Charlie Pratt was severe. Then-principal James Kettrick — now the district's superintendent — refused to take appropriate action, and instead told Charlie and his parents that Charlie should "tone it down" to avoid harassment. Not only did Mr. Kettrick refuse Charlie's mother's request to train teachers to address antigay bullying, but he also failed to update the school's written policies to match state antiharassment laws covering sexual orientation. Left with no other choice, Charlie's parents withdrew him from school for his own protection.

While the district's approval of a GSA addresses some aspects of the lawsuit, Lambda Legal will press forward with other claims, including claims for damages on behalf of both plaintiffs. The lawsuit seeks damages for Charlie for violations of the federal Constitution's Equal Protection Clause and Free Speech Clause, as well as for violations of Title IX, the Federal Equal Access Act and New York state antidiscrimination laws.  

On April 17, as part of GLSEN's National Day of Silence, students everywhere took vows of silence to raise awareness about the harassment of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth and their allies. Lambda Legal has designed a FAQ sheet and several toolkits — Bending the Mold and Out, Safe & Respected — to empower LGBTQ students and their allies, both in their communities and at school.

The case is Charles Pratt and Ashley Petranchuk v. Indian River Central School District et al.

In a powerful unanimous decision, the Iowa Supreme Court has ruled that denying marriage to same-sex couples in the state is unconstitutional. Iowa now joins Massachusetts and Connecticut in offering marriage licenses without discrimination based on couples' sexual orientation.

Writing for the entire court, Justice Cady wrote: "We are firmly convinced the exclusion of gay and lesbian people from the institution of civil marriage does not substantially further any important governmental objective. The legislature has excluded a historically disfavored class of persons from a supremely important civil institution without a constitutionally sufficient justification."

Immediately following the decision, Lambda Legal, the statewide political group One Iowa and the plaintiffs held a press conference outside the courtroom. "The Court's decision is exhaustive, well-thought out and supported by the Iowa Constitution," says Lambda Legal Supervising Senior Staff Attorney Ken Upton. "The ruling is legally compelling and consistent with the most basic of Iowa values — fairness, strong communities and protection for families."

In 2005, Lambda Legal filed a lawsuit with the Polk County Court on behalf of six same-sex couples who were denied marriage licenses in Iowa, and on behalf of three of their children, arguing that denying marriage to same-sex couples violates the liberty and equality guarantees in the state's constitution. In 2007, the trial court ruled in our favor. Less than a year later, 15 friend-of-the-court briefs were filed supporting same-sex couples seeking the right to marry, and the right of their children not to have their families labeled as inferior by the government. Those briefs were signed by hundreds of Iowans including former Lieutenant Governors Joy Corning and Sally Pederson. The April 3, 2009 decision by the Iowa Supreme Court upholds the 2007 ruling.

Iowa currently requires a three-day waiting period between applying for a license and receiving it unless the couple pays a $5 fee and a judge signs a waiver. According to the decision, county recorders will start issuing marriage licenses on April 24.

Lambda Legal and One Iowa celebrated equality across the state with marriage rallies. Together, we've been making the case for equality in Iowa. "This is an amazing day — we're smiling ear to ear," says Jason Morgan, a plaintiff in the case.  Morgan's spouse-to-be Chuck Swaggerty added, "Marriage and commitment are important values in our family and when we marry we'll be able to show our children just what that means."

Lambda Legal's case page for Varnum v. Brien

The Iowa Supreme Court Decision

Iowa Marriage FAQ

Varnum Plaintiff Couples

Varnum Supreme Court Victory Teleconference

On April 27, the state of Iowa began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples, following Lambda Legal's victory in Varnum v. Brien. View our Iowa Marriage Equality video below.

Together, we made the case for equality in Iowa! Lambda Legal, One Iowa and other organizations hosted a number of rallies throughout the state related to this historic decision.

Iowa Marriage Victory Rally Photos

To say Thursday March 5th was "intense" hardly captures the boisterous, often angry cacophony outside the California Supreme Court. I've rarely seen anything like the anticipatory drum roll of public attention in the weeks before — the community rallies and vigils, and the rising tide of media coverage. Have we ever had so many community "court watching parties," let alone a JumboTron screen in the plaza outside the court? It seemed like a Super Bowl of constitutional litigation, except that this contest is no game.  It's about a vulnerable minority defending our equal personhood and whether California's constitutional guarantees are solid or gossamer.

Inside the high court's majestic chamber the atmosphere was dignified, but as the legal arguments unfolded, passions and tension grew. Sitting huddled with our litigation team, puzzling over the layers of meaning in each question, I struggled to sort out the potential implications.

We should win. We have an extraordinary team. We worked long and hard on our strategy and papers, and have confidence in our legal arguments. More than forty friend-of-the-court briefs — representing hundreds of organizations, civic leaders and esteemed scholars — agree with our approach. Given California's history and constitutional structure, I believe our analysis is the most legally sound. And win or lose, we have made impressive strides, because whenever people notice and think about antigay discrimination we make progress.

It's like "the Emperor's New Clothes." The right wing clamors that society must exclude gay people and label us as different and "less than," because heterosexual couples supposedly need that. But the more the subject is discussed, the more people realize they do not need "defending" against same-sex couples, or need gay people excluded and oppressed to have happy relationships themselves. They see that the Emperor's "new clothes" have no substance. Then many feel concern and regret about how we have been treated.

Our cases are designed to prompt this recognition and I think we saw evidence of it during the argument. For example, why so many questions about whether the state should "get out of the marriage business" and offer civil unions to all? That is not a serious proposal here or anywhere in this country. Millions of heterosexual couples are very attached to their marriages, as thousands of same-sex couples now are as well. But I see these questions as a promising sign, because they acknowledge that excluding gay people from marriage and relegating us to a subordinate status is not equality. Proposing the same status for all shows the justices know what equality demands. Whether or not their decision will meet this demand, our position is much improved from just a few years ago.

I was surprised to hear Chief Justice George ask whether this dispute is "just about nomenclature." Of course the answer is that there's nothing "just" about it. And the Chief Justice understands that, as he himself gave one of the most cogent explanations of this principle in his eloquent Marriage Cases decision of last year. The dispute is about civic equality — one of our core constitutional values. "Nomenclature" matters because words connote status and unequal status has profound, real-life consequences.

One of the advocates on our side offered a pointed hypothetical by asking if it would be mere nomenclature if male judges were called "justices" while female judges were renamed "commissioners." In last year's litigation, we similarly noted that the issue is the same whether the statuses are marriage versus domestic partnership or "parent" versus "registered guardian." This discussion left no serious doubt that gay people lose something precious if denied marriage. Plainly, a majority of the court still understands this.

The Court's questions showed how the justices were struggling with these important questions. For example, Justice Kennard asked, doesn't Prop 8 merely take away "just" one right — the right to marry — while leaving us with ample rights and duties through domestic partnership? Yet she and most of the public surely know that the magnitude of the fight on both sides is a measure of the significance of the right at stake. And to take the next step: if Prop 8 is upheld, what will the next initiative target? Our parenting rights, as in Arkansas this fall? Tax equality?

We believe that equality with exceptions is not equality. 

And we believe the California constitution has promised us all equality. As a matter of legal history, giving initiative power to California voters in 1911 did not transform California into a direct democracy without limits. Those who framed the initiative power aimed to counterbalance entrenched business power in the Legislature, not do an end-run around the equality guarantees. The initiative power created by a constitutional amendment did not and could not negate the courts' role as an essential check against majoritarian abuse of vulnerable minorities.

The two sides could not have presented more starkly contrasting visions of this state's constitution. Arguing in support of Prop 8, Ken Starr put a charming face on a horrifying jurisprudence that provides no protection at all to minorities. He admitted openly that his view of the constitution means a bare majority of voters could reinstate the racial restriction on marriage struck down in 1948.

The notion that the initiative process can be used this way has alarmed civil rights and religious leaders, academics, elected officials and so many others. Our shared concern has brought us closer together and strengthened our alliances. Our work on this litigation and in communities is nourishing and deepening relationships that will shape the next stage of our work, regardless of the litigation outcome, just as the public focus on this case has prompted people of good will to think again about what our society is about. Do we have an inspired constitutional system that promises "liberty and justice for all"? Or is it a "tyranny-of-the-majority" democracy in which those who are different are always at risk?

We have many new partners who recognize all too well the painful consequences of bigotry and abuse of power. Writing for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference — the group that carries the banner of Rev. Martin Luther King's social justice movement and a friend-of-the-court in this litigation — Rev. Eric Lee wrote: "As an organization with a proud history of social justice advocacy inspired by biblical values of compassion, respect for individual dignity, and freedom, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference believes … all couples must be treated equally and be free to have their marriages 'consecrated' by the faith of their choosing, or not, as they wish, without being subject to oppressive whims of popular or powerful majorities." His views ring true to many who have not thought favorably about marriage equality before.

We will not know the jurists' thinking until we receive the decision. One of the lessons we learn early in law school is not to assume that questions reflect judges' actual views, but to realize they may instead be attempts to speak through a lawyer to other judges. We do know, though, that whatever happens will be important to California law — and in our lives. And it will be part of a much larger effort to win full equality nationally — an effort in which we are making obvious progress. We are poised for a marriage decision from the Iowa Supreme Court — an independent court in an independent, heartland state. There is promising legislative activity on marriage equality in many places including Vermont, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island, and other important steps to protect same-sex couples being considered in at least Hawaii, Illinois, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Washington. Congress and the new administration are poised for a long-awaited shift on issues affecting same-sex couples.

Our challenge to Prop 8 poses a new question, and the Court's answer will break new ground. Win or lose in this case, we believe our analysis is correct and will be adopted.  We hope it will be adopted within weeks. We are confident it will be eventually.

We will receive a decision in Strauss v. Horton no later than June 3, and likely earlier. While we wait, we continue to expand community relationships, plan next legal steps and engage more fair-minded people in the productive conversations that test-case litigation always inspires.

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