Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Ocean Grove NJ Update ...update
I hadn't heard anything about this for awhile. Let me remind you. Ocean Grove is a beautiful town on the New Jersey shore. Unfortunately, all the land and the beach is owned by the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association, a fundamentalist Methodist organization that will rent you the land if you want to build a home or open an business. The population is strangely quite gay?? We have vacationed there several times. Members of Beloved's shul have a home there and they wanted to marry in the beach pavilion. the OGCM said no. They sued. Here's the follow up. You can find links to previous articles under Ocean Grove:
"NJ finds group discriminated by barring ceremony
Lesbian couple can hold civil union ceremony at public pavilion
MOUNT LAUREL, N.J. (AP) | Dec 29, 1:38 PM
A lesbian couple that was barred from holding a civil union ceremony at a beachfront pavilion owned by a church group has won a legal victory.
The New Jersey Division on Civil Rights said in a ruling Monday that there is probable cause that the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association, a Methodist organization that owns a square-mile of beachfront property near Asbury Park, discriminated against Harriet Bernstein and Luisa Paster by not renting the oceanfront spot to the couple for a civil union ceremony in March 2007.
While the ruling is decisively in favor of the couple, it does not end the case, which has become a major symbol in the gay rights battle in New Jersey and beyond.
An administrative law judge still must decide on a remedy for the parties.
AdSys ad not found for news:instory "What this case has always been about from my clients' perspective has been equality," said Larry Lustberg, the lawyer for the couple. He said they will seek an order that requires the pavilion to be "open to all on an equal basis."
Brian Raum, a lawyer for the Alliance Defense Fund, a Scottsdale, Ariz.-based group that represents the Camp Meeting Association, said his clients would keep pushing back against being forced to allow civil unions on the property.
"Our position is the same," he said. "A Christian organization has a Constitutional right to use their facilities in a way that is consistent with their beliefs."
In a second ruling Monday, the Civil Rights Division said that the Camp Meeting Association did not discriminate against another lesbian couple that applied to use the pavilion for their civil union ceremony in April 2007. That's because by then, the group had stopped renting out the pavilion entirely.
Meanwhile, the parties in the dispute are awaiting a ruling from the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on whether the issue should be decided in the division on civil rights or in federal courts. A lower federal court has ruled that the state could consider the case.
The dispute has become a rallying point for both sides in the political battle over gay marriage.
Supporters of gay rights say the discrimination shows that New Jersey's two-year-old civil unions law falls short of its intent to give gay couples the same legal rights as heterosexual married couples.
Earlier this month, a state commission headed by J. Frank Vespa-Papaleo, the director of the Division on Civil Rights and the author of Monday's ruling, recommended that the state allow gay couples full marriage rights.
Opponents of gay marriage cite the case as a prime example of their contention that by recognizing same-sex couples, states are interfering with religious freedoms.
"It's something we have to be careful about," said the Alliance Defense Fund's Raum. "As the rights of same-sex couples increase, the tendency is to have it conflict with the First Amendment rights of religious organizations."
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2 comments:
Every Sunday our congregation says a prayer for couples celebrating their wedding anniversary.
I wonder that will happen in my parish the day a same-gendered couple comes forward for this prayer.
Seems to me we best start talking about this...
In the meantime I applaud what the NJ courts are doing and hope it helps open the issue further, in the best of ways.
(and, why am I NOT surprised that the legal team for the church based org. is from Arizona....)
Thanks for this post.
The courage to bring this issue to the courts is huge, I think. I so applaud people who do this.
Keep us posted.
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