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TexasTowelie

(116,765 posts)
Fri Oct 20, 2017, 02:11 AM Oct 2017

Arkansas Supreme Court orders gender neutral treatment of parents on birth certificates

As ordered by the U.S. Supreme Court, a fractured Arkansas Supreme Court today ordered that same-sex couples must be treated the same as opposite-sex couples in the issuance of birth certificates.

But the court again resisted rewriting statutes to provide for equal treatment, as a lower Arkansas court had originally decided.

The Arkansas Court acknowledged that state law was unconstitutional, as directed by the U.S. Supreme Court. That is, opposite-sex couples were presumed to be parents on a birth certificate, but same-sex married couples were not given the same presumption.



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Arkansas Supreme Court orders gender neutral treatment of parents on birth certificates
Posted By Max Brantley on Thu, Oct 19, 2017 at 10:45 AM
HISTORY MAKER: Marissa Pavan, with her child, was the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit that made U.S. Supreme Court law acknowledged today by the Arkansas Supreme Court. - MICHAEL HIBBLEN/KUAR

Michael Hibblen/KUAR
HISTORY MAKER: Marissa Pavan, with her child, was the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit that made U.S. Supreme Court law acknowledged today by the Arkansas Supreme Court.

As ordered by the U.S. Supreme Court, a fractured Arkansas Supreme Court today ordered that same-sex couples must be treated the same as opposite-sex couples in the issuance of birth certificates.

But the court again resisted rewriting statutes to provide for equal treatment, as a lower Arkansas court had originally decided.

The Arkansas Court acknowledged that state law was unconstitutional, as directed by the U.S. Supreme Court. That is, opposite-sex couples were presumed to be parents on a birth certificate, but same-sex married couples were not given the same presumption.

An opinion written by Justice Robin Wynne said:

The birth-certificate law must be addressed, but we cannot simply affirm the circuit court's previous order, which impermissibly rewrote the statutory scheme. An order rewriting a statute "amounts to a judicial intrusion upon the legislative prerogative andviolates the constitutional doctrine of separation of power."

On remand, the circuit court should award declaratory and injunctive relief as necessary to ensure that same-sex spouses are afforded the same right as opposite-sex spouses to be listed on a child's birth certificate in Arkansas, as required under Pavan u. Smith, supra. Extending the benefit of the statutes at issue to same-sex spouses will implement the mandate of the Supreme Court of the United States without an impermissible rewriting of the statutes.


Read more: https://www.arktimes.com/ArkansasBlog/archives/2017/10/19/arkansas-supreme-court-orders-gender-neutral-treatment-of-parents-on-birth-certificates
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