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Domestic Partner Registry

Friday, February 15, 2013

A Statewide Domestic Partnership Registry in Florida?

County commissioner Norm Roche said it would be easier to advocate for a statewide domestic partnership registry than have varying registries at the local level, echoing a recent statement made by Safety Harbor Mayor Joe Ayoub.

The governing bodies of Pinellas County, St. Petersburg, Clearwater, Tampa and Gulfport have all passed ordinances within the past year creating domestic partnership registries. Now at least one Pinellas County commissioner thinks the same should be done at the state level before any more communities follow suit.  Domestic registries grant couples, gay or straight, to have a certificate that allows them to have most of the same rights as heterosexual married couples in Florida. Those rights can include hospital visitation rights, end of life decisions, childcare decisions, and in some cases, insurance coverage. Up until Jan. 24 when Hillsborough County Commissioners surprisingly voted against creating a registry, no Tampa Bay-area …

Gary Moos

9:58 pm on Friday, February 15, 2013

Sometime we need to take baby steps it could be done on a countywide basis, with all like minded counties sharing info. It's not ideal, but it could be a start.   more ›

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Pinellas County Commission OKs Domestic Partnership Registry

Unmarried couples, gay and straight, in Pinellas County will be able to register as domestic partners following Tuesday's county commission vote.

Unmarried couples, gay and straight, in Pinellas County will be able to register as domestic partners following Tuesday's vote by county commissioners, the Tampa Bay Times reports. The legal recognition will give couples the right to visit each other in the emergency room, make health care decisions for each other in a crisis and, depending on their employers, share health insurance coverage, the Times reports. Commissioners voted 6-1 to approve the registry, with Norm Roche casting the dissenting vote. The Times story notes that residents of Gulfport, St. Petersburg and Clearwater, where domestic partnership registries are already in place, the planned $50 fee will be reduced. Those residents will only have to pay the difference between …

Tricia Farley

9:23 pm on Monday, January 21, 2013

Actually, many seniors now prefer not want to remarry. I personally know several couples who find it economically advantageous to "live together." Times have certainly changed.   more ›

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