Imperial Valley Press

California governor signs domestic partnershi­p law

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Heterosexu­al couples now have an alternativ­e to marriage in California.

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law on Tuesday that lets straight couples register as domestic partners.

California has recognized domestic partnershi­ps since 2000. But the law only applied to samesex couples who, at the time, were not allowed to get married. The law’s goal was to give same-sex couples the same legal protection­s as marriage.

In 2015, a U.S. Supreme Court ruling effectivel­y legalized same-sex marriage nationwide. The ruling had no effect on the state’s domestic partnershi­p law, giving same-sex couples the choice of getting married or filing as a domestic partnershi­p.

Same-sex couples — except for those older than 62 — still had just one option: marriage. That changed Tuesday, when Newsom signed a law authored by San Francisco Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener.

“Couples should be able to protect their relationsh­ips under the law by registerin­g as domestic partners, without being forced to marry,” Wiener said in a news release. “(This law) brings long overdue parity to samesex and opposite-sex couples.”

After same-sex marriage became legal, some states either got rid of their nonmarital statuses or converted them to marriages. But Wiener’s office said some couples prefer domestic partnershi­ps because they “are not associated with traditiona­l gender-differenti­ated roles” and don’t have “the same historic and cultural connotatio­ns that some people may find undesirabl­e.”

Other couples, Wiener said, might prefer domestic partnershi­ps for financial reasons. California law treats domestic partners and married people the same for tax purposes. But federal law does not recognize domestic partners. That could let some couples avoid the federal “marriage penalty,” which is a higher tax resulting from when two people marry who have the same income.

Wiener’s bill passed the state Senate 30-4 and the state Assembly by a vote of 60-0. It had no registered opposition from outside groups.

When it took effect in 2000, California’s domestic partnershi­p law guaranteed domestic partners had hospital visitation rights and allowed health benefits to domestic partners of state workers. That same year, voters overwhelmi­ngly approved Propositio­n 22, which said California would only recognize marriage between a man and a woman. That propositio­n was later invalidate­d by the California Supreme Court.

Over the years, the state expanded its domestic partnershi­p law several times, including in 2003 when the Legislatur­e voted to make registered domestic partners have “the same rights, protection­s, and benefits” as married people.

 ?? AP Photo/RIch PedRoncell­I ?? In this July 11 file photo, California Gov. Gavin Newsom talks with reporter’s at his office in Sacramento, Calif.
AP Photo/RIch PedRoncell­I In this July 11 file photo, California Gov. Gavin Newsom talks with reporter’s at his office in Sacramento, Calif.

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