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Adoption News - 27 -
CALIFORNIA - Gay Couple Win Lawsuit
Against Adoption Web Site Service in
Arizona Posts Profiles Only Of
Married Pairs
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CALIFORNIA
GAY COUPLE WIN LAWSUIT AGAINST
ADOPTION WEB SITE
SERVICE IN ARIZONA POSTS PROFILES
ONLY OF MARRIED PAIRS
By Henry K. Lee, San
Francisco Chronicle
Wednesday, May
23, 2007
An
out-of-state Internet service will
no longer post profiles of
California residents seeking to
adopt children as a result of a
settlement with a gay couple from
San Jose who sued after their
information was barred from the Web
site, attorneys in the case said
Tuesday.
Michael
and Rich Butler, domestic partners
since 2000, filed a federal civil
rights suit against Adoption.com of
Arizona in 2004 after the company
told the men it posted profiles only
of married, opposite-sex couples.
The
adoption company had argued that it
was governed by Arizona law, which
does not prohibit discrimination
against people on the basis of
marital status or sexual
orientation. It said requiring it to
post profiles of same-sex couples
would violate its freedom of speech.
But in a
March ruling, U.S. District Judge
Phyllis Hamilton in San Francisco
said California law applies to the
defendants and allowed the suit to
go forward.
Under
the terms of a settlement announced
Tuesday, ParentProfiles.com, a
sister company to Adoption.com,
cannot post profiles of California
residents "unless the service is
made equally available to all
California residents qualified to
adopt in California."
That
means the defendants have a choice:
either "treat everyone in California
equally or don't benefit from the
state's economy," said Neel
Chatterjee, an attorney for the
Butlers.
Glen
Lavy, an Alliance Defense Fund
lawyer representing the company,
said Tuesday that ParentProfiles.com
will no longer accept profiles from
California and will phase out all
profiles from California within six
months.
"The
managers of the adoption profiles
believe that it's in the best
interests of children to be placed
with a married mom and dad," Lavy
said. "They believe that when
there's an option, children are
better off having a married mom and
dad than any other circumstance."
It was
unclear how many California
residents have used the service.
There is
no monetary payout as part of the
settlement, as the Butlers were
never after money, Chatterjee said.
The
couple sued under California's Unruh
Civil Rights Act, which prohibits
businesses from discriminating
against customers on a variety of
grounds. For at least 20 years,
state courts have interpreted the
law to require equal treatment of
lesbians and gays. Bias based on
marital status was the subject of
conflicting rulings until the
Legislature outlawed such
discrimination, effective in 2006.
The
Butlers adopted a baby girl in 2004
through a California adoption
agency.
"We
think it's a great agreement for us
because it really ends the
discriminatory practice of
Adoption.com in the state of
California," Rich Butler, 35, said
Tuesday. "We hope that they continue
doing business in the state, but if
they can't comply with the
nondiscriminatory policy and they
stop doing business in the state,
it's still a victory for
Californians. We're not allowing
them to profit on the back of
Californians."
E-mail
Henry K. Lee at
hlee@sfchronicle.com
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/05/23/BAGKBPVT3D1.DTL
This
article appeared on page B - 12 of
the San Francisco Chronicle
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