Lawmakers leave gay marriage ban on books


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  • | 12:00 p.m. February 16, 2016
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Rep. Alan Williams
Rep. Alan Williams
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It’s been more than a year since same-sex marriages became legal in Florida, but a state law banning the unions is still on the books and a proposal to repeal it seems doomed.

Clearing the statutes of the gay-marriage ban is among a handful of measures dealing with LGBT issues either ignored by the Republican-controlled Legislature or fated to fade away before the 2016 session ends next month.

Only one piece of legislation — aimed at giving lesbians the opportunity to be named as a “parent” instead of a “father” on birth certificates — has even a chance of passing this session and that chance is extremely thin.

The birth certificate measure, the proposed repeal of the ban on gay marriage and a third bill that would allow pastors to refuse to marry same-sex couples — something already guaranteed under the First Amendment — are by-products of court decisions striking down same-sex marriage bans as unconstitutional.

A closely divided U.S. Supreme Court in June ruled that same-sex couples have a fundamental right to marry. The decision came nearly a year after a federal judge in Tallahassee struck down Florida’s voter-approved ban on gay marriage as unconstitutional.

U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle’s ruling went into effect in January 2015, nearly six months before the high court decision, but Hinkle has yet to issue a final order in the case.

An appeals court in October dismissed Florida’s legal fight about same-sex marriage and said Hinkle should consider questions about whether the state is required to pay fees for the plaintiffs’ attorneys, who are seeking $455,000 for their work on the case.

The “pastor protection” act, which religious conservatives contend is needed to protect minsters and churches that refuse to marry same-sex couples, is headed to the House floor for a full vote and is slated for a final Senate committee vetting this week.

In contrast, an attempt to remove the same-sex marriage prohibition from state statutes has not been heard by a single committee in either chamber.

For Republicans, the issue could be too controversial to even debate, especially in an election year.

Changing the state Constitution, amended by voters to include the gay marriage ban in 2008, would require a statewide vote. But, for many Floridians, leaving the ban in legislatively written statutes carries more than a symbolic threat.

Rep. Alan Williams, D-Tallahassee, who filed the measure to repeal the law, said he wanted to amend Florida’s statutes to reflect the Supreme Court decision and to provide assurances to clerks of court, some of whom initially balked at Hinkle’s ruling, based on advice from their lawyers.

For Rep. David Richardson, the sponsor of the measure dealing with birth certificates, the issue is even more personal. The Miami Beach Democrat is the only openly gay member of the Legislature.

Richardson tried to get Ritch Workman, R-Melbourne, to include the repeal of the gay-marriage ban in what is known as a “reviser” bill, passed by lawmakers annually to clean up state statutes.

But Workman said reviser bills are supposed to correct errors such as punctuation and grammar and aren’t intended to deal with policy issues.

Richardson said he understands that Republicans control the agenda in Tallahassee, but he called the repeal of an unconstitutional law a “no-brainer.”

Richardson’s plan to change birth certificates to reflect the Supreme Court decision (HB 1151) received unanimous approval from a House committee this month after he amended the measure to ensure that documents will still label husbands as “father.”

But the measure has two more committee stops before it is scheduled to go to the House floor and a Senate companion bill has not received a hearing.

Meanwhile, the issue may be settled in court if lawmakers don’t act.

Two female couples and an advocacy group are asking a federal judge to require the Florida Department of Health to list both spouses on birth certificates of children born into same-sex marriages — as the department typically does when married parents are a man and a woman.

 

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