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Going to the Chapel, Gonna Get ...

For a long time my partner and I have known that our futures would be intertwined.  About a year ago, the conversation began to shift from both of us dreaming of law school to each of us taking active steps towards attending law school.  As our conversation moved from dreaming to paying for it (and the sticker shock that is private and public law schools in this country), we began toying with the idea of making our relationship legitimate (read: legal).  We figured that if we had legal standing as a partnership, both being in law school, our potential loan cap could increase.  Romantic, no?

We began to discuss seriously how legalizing our union would change our lives; how we would have some legal protections for our relationship and a responsibility to care for each other, would always be able to visit each other in the hospital and have power of attorney over each other, and could take family and medical leave to care for each other.  We talked about traveling together, and how the US embassy would see us differently if we traveled together as legal partners.
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Seattle PrideFest and Parade

Date: Sunday, June 27, 2010 - 11:00am - 7:00pm
Location: Downtown Seattle
March with the ACLU-WA contingent in the Seattle Pride Parade, and stop by our info table in Seattle Center.
 
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QLaw Banquet

Date: Thursday, April 29, 2010 - 8:50pm - 10:50pm
Location: Hyatt at Olive 8
At its annual dinner, Washington's LGBT bar association will recognize the ACLU-WA and cooperating attorney Jim Lobsenz for ongoing work to repeal "Don't Ask, Don't Tell."
 
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Recognizing Relationships

Bill: HB 2482
Position: support
Status: The bill passed the House Judiciary Committee but did not advance out of the House.
The bill provides that same-sex couples who have married in other states can register as domestic partners under state law. Washington already recognizes civil unions and domestic partnerships formed by couples in other states. This measure revises state law to ensure that couples married elsewhere have the legal rights and responsibilities granted by our "everything but marriage" domestic partnership law adopted in 2009. Regrettably, under Washington's Defense of Marriage Act, out-of-state same-sex marriages still cannot be recognized as marriages.
 

R-71 Wins! Voters Back Domestic Partnership Rights

In a campaign that drew national attention, Washington voters have approved a referendum that supports domestic partnership benefits enacted by the 2009 state legislature. This is what Family Values really are about.
 

ACLU Contributes $32,000 to Approve 71 Campaign

September 23, 2009
The American Civil Liberties Union announced today that it has contributed $32,000 to the Approve 71 Campaign. In addition, the ACLU of Washington office and the national ACLU LGBT Project are making significant staff contributions to the campaign. The ACLU is backing the campaign’s effort to gain voter approval for Referendum 71 in order to provide necessary protections for Washington families.
 

Making Definition of "Sexual Orientation" Consistent across Laws

Bill: SB 5952
Position: support
Status: The legislature passed SB 5952 and Gov. Gregoire signed it into law. (It goes into effect three months after the legislature adjourns.)
 

Domestic Partnership, Marriage

Position: support
Status: The Legislature passed SB 5688, and Gov. Gregoire signed it into law.