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The Washington Times Online Edition

Gay couples gain birth-certificate rights

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In keeping with New York Gov. David Paterson's directive for state agencies to change their policies and regulations to recognize out-of-state gay marriages, married same-sex couples can now have both partners' names on children's birth certificates.GETTY IMAGES In keeping with New York Gov. David Paterson’s directive for state agencies to change their policies and regulations to recognize out-of-state gay marriages, married same-sex couples can now have both partners’ names on children’s birth certificates.

NEW YORK | State officials will now let married same-sex couples list both their names on their children’s birth certificates in a policy shift deeply important to many gays and lesbians.

The decision, which echoes similar provisions in states that allow gay marriages or civil unions, is one of many changes since Gov. David Paterson ordered state agencies in May to respect out-of-state gay marriages.

The state Health Department said Friday that it had agreed to the change, which came after a lesbian couple expecting a baby filed a lawsuit. The change would apply statewide except in New York City, which is considering revamping its own birth-certificate forms to accommodate same-sex couples.

Under state law, a woman’s husband is automatically deemed a parent of a child the pair conceives through artificial insemination, whether or not he is the genetic father. Gay couples have complained about having to jump through legal hoops to secure equivalent parental rights.

Carolyn Trzeciak and Nina Sheldon Trzeciak of Ulster County, who got married in Canada in 2006, sued last month. Nina Sheldon Trzeciak is carrying their first child, conceived through in-vitro fertilization.

The couple argued that they both should be designated as parents under Mr. Paterson’s directive. The governor told state agencies to make sure policies and regulations treat married same-sex couples equally, saying a recent court ruling suggests that they would otherwise risk discrimination claims.

Gay couples may be able to secure a second parent’s rights through adoption. But having their names on a child’s birth certificate immediately gives both spouses such rights as nursery visits and information on the child’s medical condition, the lawsuit said.

“That gives them equal treatment,” said the Trzeciaks’ attorney, Melissa B. Brisman of Park Ridge, N.J.

The Health Department said that it had been exploring how to apply Mr. Paterson’s directive to birth certificates for some time but arranged a quick resolution for the couple because the baby was due Friday.

Massachusetts and Connecticut are the only U.S. states that allow gay marriages. California briefly did until voters banned it last month, joining about 30 other states with bans. Some other states let same-sex couples enter into civil unions that offer some of marriage’s legal advantages.

States that allow gay marriage or civil unions have made provisions for birth certificates to list both partners’ names, said Susan Sommer, senior counsel for the gay-rights advocacy group Lambda Legal. It was not involved in the Trzeciak case.

While the group urges couples to cement both parents’ rights through an adoption or other court order, Miss Sommer said getting the names of both parents on the birth certificate is a great help to the children.

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