SGN December 6, 2013 - Section 1

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Issue 49 Volume 41

Celebrating 40 Years!

FRIDAY December 6, 2013 FREE! 25¢ in bookstores & newsstands

Sec 2 Pg. 1

Seattle Gay News SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

Jamie Pedersen to succeed Ed Murray in Senate Brady Walkinshaw to take Pedersen’s House seat by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer

nate gowdy / seattle gay news

As expected, 43rd Legislative District activists chose current state Rep. Jamie Pedersen to succeed Ed Murray in the state Senate. Murray, of course, will take office as Mayor of Seattle on January 1. According to procedure, when a vacancy occurs in the state legislature, the Precinct Committee Officers (PCOs) of the legislative district recommend a ranked list of three potential successors, and then the King County Council appoints a replacement. Normally the candidate ranked first by the PCOs gets the spot. Pedersen was the only person who came forward to fill Murray’s seat, and as a veteran House member, his selection was a no-brainer for the PCOs. Moving Pedersen to the Senate created another vacancy in the House, however, and that seat was the focus of a competitive threeway race between Brady Walkinshaw – the eventual winner – Scott Forbes, and Cristina Gonzalez.

Walkinshaw, a program manager at the Gates Foundation, is a newcomer to public office. The son of a Cuban immigrant mother, he was raised on an organic farm in rural Washington. He told the 43rd District PCOs that he grew up “Gay and Latino.” Walkinshaw promised to be a champion of the 43rd District’s progressive values, and insiders told SGN that he was thought to be the most progressive of the three candidates. Forbes is a veteran 43rd District activist, and Gonzalez is an economist with King County. The House seat that was Pedersen’s and will now probably be Walkinshaw’s was formerly occupied by Cal Anderson, the state’s first openly Gay legislator. When Anderson went to the state Senate in 1994, the House seat was taken by Ed Murray, and when Murray was elected to the Senate in 2006, Pedersen won the House seat. The seat has been continuously occupied by Gay representatives since Anderson was appointed to fill a vacancy in 1987.

Jamie Pedersen (l) and Ed Murray

Same-sex couples sue Washington same sex couples: anniversary Burlington Northern data report released Railroads agree to benefits for Gay and Lesbian couples

AP

Mike and Eli Hall display their marriage certificate to Seattle reporters.

by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer Less than 24 hours after Burlington Northern railroad was sued by two same-sex couples – one Gay and one Lesbian – who asked for health insurance coverage for their spouses, the railroad employ-

ers’ association announced an agreement with railway workers’ unions to cover same-sex spouses starting January 1. Mike and Elijah Hall and Amie and Carol Garrand filed suit against Burlington Northern (BNSF), one of the country’s largest railroads, on December 3.

Mike Hall and Amie Garrand are BNSF employees who were denied health insurance coverage for their legally married spouses, even though the company provides health benefits to opposite-sex spouses. see BNSF page 7

OLYMPIA – It’s the one year anniversary of the state’s same sex marriage law, and the latest statistics shows same sex couples made up 17 percent of marriages in Washington in that time. Between the law’s effective date, December 6, 2012, and the most recent complete month of data, September 30, 2013, there were 7,071 same sex couples among the 42,408 total couples who married in the state during that period of time. So far, most of the state’s same sex marriages, 62 percent, occurred between two women. The top five Washington counties where same sex marriages occurred were King County with 3,452; Clark County with 785; Pierce County with 486; Snohomish County with 330; and Thurston

County with 300 marriages. Garfield County is the only county in Washington where no same sex marriages were performed. These numbers may not represent the number of marriage licenses granted by these counties. It appears Washington’s same sex marriage law is drawing people to the state to marry. In 24 percent of same sex marriages, both spouses live in another state. There were 524 same sex marriages in which both parties lived in Oregon. For 170 same sex marriages, the couple lived in Texas, and, for 155 same sex marriages, the couple lived in California. Among opposite sex couples, both spouses see stats page 7


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