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Two Flagstaff couples join same-sex lawsuit


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Arizona Daily sun

Michelle McManimon of the Arizona Daily sun writes on February 11, 2014, "Two Flagstaff couples have joined a federal class-action lawsuit seeking to overturn Arizona’s ban on same-sex marriage.

An amended complaint filed in U.S. District Court by two Flagstaff attorneys Monday added Meagan and Natalie Metz, Renee Kaminski and Robin Reece to a lawsuit asking the federal courts to declare Arizona’s laws against same-sex marriage unconstitutional.

The Metzes, who are legally married in the state of Washington, filed an application in Coconino County Superior Court for an Arizona marriage license so their marriage would be recognized in this state. That application was denied under a law passed by the Arizona Legislature in 1996 that made same-sex marriages the only exception to a state law recognizing legal marriages performed outside Arizona as valid.

Kaminski and Reece, who are not currently married, applied for a marriage license in Flagstaff and were also denied.

In response to those denials, Ryan J. Stevens of the Griffen & Stevens law firm and attorney Mik Jordahl have named Coconino County Clerk of the Superior Court Deborah Young as a defendant in the amended lawsuit.

“We’re honored to bring Flagstaff into this major federal civil rights case of statewide, and national, importance,” Stevens said."

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Same-Sex Marriage and ChildrenSame-Sex Marriage and Children is the first book to bring together historical, social science, and legal considerations to comprehensively respond to the objections to same-sex marriage that are based on the need to promote so-called "responsible procreation" and child welfare. Carlos A. Ball places the current marriage debates within a broader historical context by exploring how the procreative and child welfare claims used to try to deny same-sex couples the opportunity to marry are similar to earlier arguments used to defend interracial marriage bans, laws prohibiting disabled individuals from marrying, and the differential treatment of children born out of wedlock. Ball also draws a link between welfare reform and same-sex marriage bans by explaining how conservative proponents have defended both based on the need for the government to promote responsible procreation among heterosexuals. 

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