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Program fights to maintain rural land

In its efforts to preserve rural areas, the County’s Board of Supervisors hasn’t managed to impose restrictions on development rights, known as “phasing.” Yet it has managed to preserve 3,776 acres in the last four years through the Acquisition of Conservation Easements (ACE) program.

Conservation easements overlay certain restrictions on land with the idea of preserving it the way it is. The ACE program, funded mostly by County property taxes, buys conservation easements from those with agricultural or forested land who don’t want to develop it (or sell it to those who would). With an annual budget of roughly $1.4 million, the program aims to preserve 1,000 acres per year.

Already in place are federal and State tax incentives for residents who want to put their land under conservation easements. But because many of these tax incentives have historically worked best for the wealthy, the ACE program is aimed at the “landowner of modest means” who is cash poor but land rich, according to ACE administrator Ches Goodall.

“Frankly, there are properties out there that have been protected through the ACE program that simply would not have been protected if the ACE program didn’t exist,” says Rex Linville, land conservation officer for Piedmont Environmental Council (PEC). “So it’s really filling a need.”

Applications came due October 31, and merely eight were submitted. Goodall says that number is typical and that three-fourths are usually accepted. Over four years, the ACE program has eliminated 258 development rights (roughly the average number of building permits issued in the rural areas each year).

Linville’s only criticism is the length of time the program takes. He estimates that between submitting an application and receiving money for the easement, a landowner would have to wait 12 to 18 months.

Neil Williamson of Free Enterprise Forum thinks the public should weigh in on whether the ACE program deserves more or less funding. “It’s amazing to me that a program that spends $1 million a year has never been up for an independent public hearing,” says Williamson. He also thinks the ACE program’s scoring system, which rewards landowners with lower income levels, should be rejiggered so that “the best lands available” are prioritized instead.

Already, 62,000 of 465,040 county acres are protected under conservation easements, according to PEC.

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Plan proposed to replace streams, wetlands

In its efforts to provide enough fresh water for the next 50 years of area growth, the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority (RWSA) is inching closer to working out the details for expanding the Ragged Mountain Reservoir. At a November 2 meeting, RWSA unveiled and explained the so-called mitigation plan, required to offset the loss of 14,435 linear feet of streams and 3.46 acres of wetlands when the reservoir is expanded.

To meet these needs, RWSA has proposed enhancing, preserving and restoring 75,500 linear feet of Buck Mountain Creek, on property owned by RWSA (originally purchased with the idea of creating a new reservoir). As for wetland mitigation, RWSA proposed restoring as wetlands four acres between Franklin Street and Moores Creek. They value the plan at $7.7 million.

“Most people who know anything about environmental protection recognize that is a very significant mitigation project,” says Thomas Frederick, executive director for RWSA.

But City Councilor Kevin Lynch has concerns beyond the mitigation plan. The City owns 130 acres that will be flooded at the Ragged Mountain Reservoir; Lynch would like that replaced with 130 acres along Moores Creek, from the reservoir to the sewage treatment plant, giving the opportunity for walking trails to replace those lost at Ragged Mountain and a parkland buffer between city and county neighborhoods.

He also wants the project to be phased, so that the dam is initially rebuilt only 15′ to 20′ higher rather than the full 45′ proposed in the 50-year plan. “We don’t want existing rate payers to pay for a facility that’s not going to really be needed until 50 years from now—that’s just crazy, nobody in the private sector does that level of investment,” says Lynch. “When we build more infrastructure than we really need, what we’re essentially doing is subsidizing growth.”

Frederick says RWSA will work with City officials on the remaining issues and that they plan for a meeting in early 2007 to discuss financing and phasing for the project.

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Developers talk affordable housing

“The real answer to solve our affordability problems for our mainstream workforce lie in our for-profit developers.” So thought Dave Phillips, CEO of the Charlottesville Area Association of Realtors, following an August affordable housing info session with various nonprofit groups at the County Planning Commission. To give the County the developers’ perspective on affordable housing, Phillips organized a similar work session on October 24 with local developers Vito Cetta, Josh Goldschmidt and Don Franco.
“The affordable housing aspect is a civic responsibility,” said Franco, of KG Associates. “Our goal is not to talk you out of affordable housing, convince you that you can’t produce it, but to share with you some of the realities of what we’re facing trying to produce that housing.”
Cetta, who leads Weather Hill Homes, began by praising the County’s policies, which has guidelines suggesting 15 percent of housing on projects needing special approval be “affordable”—costing roughly $190,000 or less (developers can also choose to provide money for a County housing fund instead).
“We started the affordable housing process three years ago, and I’d say if nothing changes, we all should be quite pleased with the success we’ve had,” Cetta said. Goldschmidt, CEO of Church Hill Homes, shared that though he originally thought the housing policy a “huge, huge mistake,” he supports it now.
Developers agreed that one large problem with current policy is how to maintain that supply of affordable housing. Characterizing many current affordable units as subsidies provided by developers, Cetta suggested a deed restriction on the homes that would link resale value with the consumer price index.
Concerning the market, Cetta said that he’s finding that land prices are coming down—or at least stabilizing—which came as a surprise to many on the commission. “It’s a buyer’s market right now,” said Cetta.
Both Goldschmidt and Franco were in favor of a 1 or 2 cent property tax increase, designated for a housing trust fund. “I think it’s a community issue and the community should help support it,” said Franco.
Phillips raised the question of UVA’s role: “I think overall the University is the player here that’s not at the table, ever, on this discussion. If we can’t get them on board, we can never solve the affordable housing thing.” Phillips made it clear that the session was about “workforce” housing—not housing for the “working poor.”
Commissioners expressed interest in following up with developers to learn more about unintended consequences of many of the County’s policies.
Developers seemed willing, but Goldschmidt stressed that the process “has to start with trust.”

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Dead tree won’t die

“This is not my comfort zone, I don’t enjoy being here,” said contractor Don Hicklin of Nielson Construction Company when it was his turn to speak. And a quick glance around the room full of tense faces at the October 26 Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA) meeting suggested that he was not alone in those sentiments.
At issue was whether David Turner, who was renovating the Watson Manor property at 3 University Cir. until the City in August issued a stop-work order, had made “every reasonable effort” to preserve a 150 year-old beech tree and followed his own preservation plan. In the end, the BZA agreed with the City that he had violated the final measure of the 15-point plan, which stipulated that “if tree dies, owner shall replace it.” The BZA reasoned that the tree was not technically dead, and that therefore cutting the tree down was a violation of the site plan.
Turner argued, often through his lawyer Frederick W. Payne, that the tree had effectively died and that every reasonable step had been taken. Turner rejected the term “developer” to describe him, instead calling himself a “volunteer” who has been working pro bono to restore a dilapidated “Animal House” (“by day an eyesore, by night…an earsore”) for use by UVA’s Institute for Advanced Studies and Culture.
“I am not now, nor have ever been, a defiant developer that disregards private or public trust,” said Turner, citing 20 years of experience. “I don’t usually resolve issues by hiring lawyers…but when some Planning Commission members make statements that this is a criminal charge and that there ought to be fines of $150,000, I knew I needed legal counsel.”
The arborist, Jamie Powell of Crozet-based Arbor Life, said the 48" beech “never had an ounce of care in its whole life,” calling it “a diamond in the rough.” As construction began on the driveway, however, he warned that if it fell over, it was likely to fall on the neighbor’s house, crushing it.
Jim Tolbert, director of Neighborhood Development Services, said the City didn’t expect them “to murder the tree and call it the death of the tree.” He continued: “The tree didn’t die—they took the tree down.”
Neither Tolbert nor Payne offered comment about what will happen next.

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County bridge reopens

The Advance Mills bridge in northern Albemarle County reopened October 24 after being closed almost a week for inspections—the latest example of the gentle precautions needed to protect an aging bridge.
A truss structure, the Advance Mills bridge on Route 743 carries about 1,000 vehicles per day. Its present site, above the North Fork of the Rivanna, dates to 1948, though it was probably built early in the 20th century, according to Lou Hatter, Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) regional spokesman.
The bridge carries a three-ton weight limit, which excludes everything larger than a passenger car. Even a full-size pickup truck carrying a load of wood would exceed that limit, and it definitely rules out ambulances, school buses or delivery trucks.
After damage to vertical supports—presumably caused by overweight vehicles—the bridge was closed for roughly two months this summer in order to make repairs (the parts had to be specially crafted because of the age). Based on information from residents the limits were being broken, VDOT asked the Board of Supervisors to increase police vigilance of the limit.
If these measures aren’t followed, Hatter says that collapse is the most extreme possibility, but that the more likely outcome would be a bridge closure. “We’re confident that it’s safe for vehicles that weigh three tons or less,” says Hatter. To ensure safety, VDOT has ramped up inspections to every six months from the normal annual basis.
As for replacing the bridge, VDOT has started looking at what type of new bridge might be necessary and has some money to work on the preliminary engineering process. But the Board of Supervisors must prioritize the project in their secondary road improvement plan in order to make it a reality.

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City voting machines cut off names

Recent reports that voting machines in Charlottesville, Alexandria and Falls Church are cutting off the names of candidates—most notably U.S. Senate challenger James Webb—are fueling many conspiracy theories in the blogosphere.
The issue? When voters in Charlottesville reach the “summary page” on the Hart InterCivic voting machines, they will see abbreviated names for every candidate except Al Weed, the Democrat running for the House. A vote for George Allen will show “George F. Allen –”; a vote for Webb will show “James H. ‘Jim’.”
In an election where the Democrat is lacking name recognition and the Republican might very well not wish to be affiliated with the party, those omissions have stirred some paranoia. “Amazing how these voting machine ‘glitches’ negatively affect only democratic party candidates,” reads a comment posted on www.thewolfweb.com. A post on www.dailykos.com asks, “3 f*ing years and they can’t get it right? Seems like someone wanted this to happen.”
“It just makes me sick,” says Sheri Iachetta, general registrar for Charlottesville. “I’m sitting here reading all these blogs, where it’s talking about ‘mechanical machine failure.’ It’s not. It’s not a threat to democracy. It’s an unfortunate situation that we’ve realized and been very proactive in fixing and will get completely fixed at the first of the year.”
When a Charlottesville voter selects the person they’d like to vote for in both the Senate and House races, the full name and party affiliation of the candidate is shown. It’s only after all voting selections have been made that the summary page appears. “Basically, it’s the last ditch effort to change your mind prior to hitting ‘cast ballot,’” says Iachetta.
She spells out that if the problem were fixed now, it would erase all absentee votes already cast. The problem with the summary page, which is caused by an overly large font size, has been an issue since the machines were introduced in 2002. Iachetta notes that Webb’s name was truncated the exact same way in the June primary.
Iachetta says hacking is not a concern. “We don’t have a wireless system—we have very secure procedures and even the security experts have come seen our procedures and told us that we have very good, secure procedures.”

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Ghost of elections past


With a Senate race at a statistical dead heat and a House race that at least looks to be closer than last year, how many locals will actually turn out to vote?
Looking at the last off-year election, in 2002, voter turnout would earn a decidedly failing grade in both Albemarle and Charlottesville: Only 45 percent of registered voters came out in the county and a paltry 39 percent made poll appearances in the city. But voter registration is up to 60,963 in the county, an increase of over 2,000 from 2004, and the City marginally increased registration to 23,571 from 23,373.
Does Democratic challenger Al Weed stand a chance in the House race against incumbent Republican Congressman Virgil Goode? Though Weed earned 71 percent of the city vote in 2004, he narrowly lost the county by 238 votes and got crushed in the Fifth District as a whole: Goode won by nearly 30 percentage points. Weed spokesman Curt Gleeson swears it will be different in Southside this year and that Weed will win Danville, despite winning only 42 percent of the vote in 2004.

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Real lives affected

Putting aside philosophy, Virginia’s proposed marriage amendment is designed to limit the rights available to a real group of people living in the state. Gay-rights groups estimate there are nearly 14,000 same-sex couples in Virginia.
    “I think it’s unconscionable—that’s the word that keeps coming to mind,” says Charlotte Patterson, a professor of psychology at UVA who’s lived in Virginia since 1975. She and her partner, Deborah Cohn, have been together 25 years now, and have three children: twin 9-year-olds and a 13-year old. Patterson assumes the amendment’s intention is “to make gay people feel less comfortable and less happy in Virginia.”
    “I would like to see Virginia leading the nation, not dragging at the very back of the parade, fighting over who ought to have fewer rights than others,” says Patterson. To restrict liberties in the Bill of Rights, as the amendment would do, “would be a truly shameful thing to do to our Constitution.”
    Because she and her partner are not married, family health insurance and other benefits are not available to them through the University. “In our family we have bought private health insurance, but not every family is able to do that. I think it’s an outrage.”
    And their children are obviously a concern. “We have custody agreements and guardianship nominations that might be called into question. These things directly affect children’s welfare.
    “Who wouldn’t rather think their parents were married than not? Because the State denies that option to our family, we have to talk about why that’s the case and that there are people who don’t understand about our family,” Patterson says. “For most kids, it’s part of their sense of security in the world, that my family will be here to protect me and to help me grow up and to love me and to take care of me. It feels like a kind of permanence to children that is good for them.”
    Patterson sees Charlottesville as a supportive community, but if the amendment passes, will she leave Virginia? “I think it poses a question for all of us who are not heterosexual, whose rights would be abridged by such an amendment, whether to leave for greener pastures or stay and fight,” she says. “I have some friends who are long departed over issues of this sort. I know others who are staying to join the battle. So I think each person is going to make their decision after the election, just as we have after previous elections.
    “Speaking for myself, I would love to be married if we could. I trust that someday that will be possible, even in Virginia.”

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Virginia is for losers

At a regular rate (almost biannually), the voters of Virginia are called upon to consider amending the State Constitution, even though most of us are unable to tell the difference between the Constitution and the Code of Laws. Generally, that’s O.K.: The amendments we’re asked to vote on are usually relatively minor technical alterations, and after one reading of the question and the explanation, the average voter is ready to cast his ballot.

But almost never are we called upon to vote for an amendment that is so deeply flawed philosophically, practically and (many would say) morally as is the proposed amendment banning same-sex marriage and civil unions. And this time, before reflexively voting “yes” to something that might seem harmless to the majority of Virginians, we should consider what belongs in a constitution, and the meaning of those actual words we’re about to commit to it. [For full text, see sidebar feature, Not So Fine Print]

“I’ve spent my life thinking about constitutions,” says A.E. Dick Howard. “I’ve thought about it a lot, I can at least say that.” The day Howard speaks to a reporter, he has just returned from casting his absentee ballot for the November 7 election. He has a lot to say about why he voted “no” on the marriage question.

“[The amendment is] grand sounding, but as you read it, you say, ‘What in the world does it really mean?’ You think you know what they’re talking about, but you’re not sure, in practice, where it goes,” he says. “It responds to a non-problem.”

Not many people know the Virginia Constitution like A.E. Dick Howard does. How could they? After all, Howard, a UVA law professor, was the executive director of the commission that rewrote the modern Constitution in 1971.

“This is a bad amendment,” says Howard, even for the reported majority of Virginians who believe that marriage should be defined as a union between one man and one woman.

This guy isn’t some flaming liberal hell-bent on shoving gay rights down the throats of red-state America. “I don’t represent the gay rights community,” says Howard.

What he does represent is the wizened elder who has a broader view of the State Constitution—what it should do, and what it has no business doing. And the State Constitution has no business in the realm of marriage, he says.

An older, married gentleman, Howard, who is reticent about his personal politics, is a distinguished professor who has written volumes on Virginia’s Constitution as well as the Magna Carta. His resumé is impeccable, characteristic of the legal elite: Born and raised in Richmond, he got his undergraduate degree at the University of Richmond before going on to a Rhodes scholarship and then UVA law school. He clerked for Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black. He has argued cases before the State and federal supreme courts. In addition to heading the committee that rewrote Virginia’s Constitution, he has served as a constitutional consultant to countries on nearly every continent: Brazil, the Philippines, Hun-gary, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Romania, Russia, Albania, Malawi, South Africa. It’s a respectable record for a man of any political inclination.

“The people of Virginia are properly concerned with the status of marriage and I have no objection to their making that judgment through the statute book,” Howard says. “And if a majority of people of Virginia think that it ought to be defined as between a man and a woman, they’re entitled to that.” But there’s a huge difference between a statute book and a constitution, and everyone casting a ballot on this amendment should consider the difference.

What’s a constitution?

A constitution doesn’t spell out the specific laws. Rather, it’s more of a framework for the law. It defines the powers of government, establishing which powers belong to the governor, which to the General Assembly, which to the courts, which to local government. It’s the document that establishes the governor’s power to veto a bill and the legislature’s power to impeach the governor. A constitution, in other words, lays out that system of powers, checks and balances.

With its “Bill of Rights,” the Virginia Constitution also defines the rights of individuals in relation to the government, giving them the right to free speech, the right to bear arms, the right to exercise their religion freely.

But the Bill of Rights does not define the relationships between individuals themselves. The Constitution doesn’t say it’s a crime to assault someone; the Code of Virginia, our body of statute law, does that. And for the record, the Code of Virginia already bans marriage between “persons of the same sex” and prohibits civil unions. Neither the federal nor the State Constitution (at this point) so much as mentions the concept of marriage.

“It’s a mistake to put social policy in the Constitution,” says Howard. “It’s a confusion of the fundamental difference between constitutions and statutes. Including provisions like the marriage amendment in the Constitution mistakes [the Constitution] for a code of laws.

“Each generation has tried to read its social preferences into state constitutions. For example, in Virginia we used to have a ban on dueling. In Virginia, in the 19th century, if you fought a duel you lost the right to vote. Well, what is that doing in the Constitution? In writing the present Constitution, we took that ban out. It’s not that we approved of dueling—that’s the kind of policy judgment which the legislature should make. If they want to ban dueling—fine, put it in the Criminal Code. But it doesn’t belong in the Constitution. I haven’t noticed any sudden outbreak of dueling since it was taken out.”


“Whether it has to be this way or not, the fact of American history into its third century has been the enlargement of rights against government,” says A.E. Dick Howard, father of Virginia’s modern Constitution. “This amendment is really not in the spirit of that history.”

A constitution’s bill of rights “keeps government at a distance,” says Howard. “It protects free speech, it protects free exercise of religion, it protects us from illegal searches and seizures, and any number of other rights. It doesn’t regulate conduct among individuals. It forbids government discrimination on the basis of race, but it doesn’t tell private parties how they should treat each other. It doesn’t tell you as a private employer whether you may or may not discriminate on the basis of race in your employment policy—statutory law does that. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 says that public accommodations can’t discriminate on the basis of race. That’s good public policy, but that’s statutory law.

“So there’s a fundamental principle that I think is being disregarded by those who would amend the Constitution and put in the marriage amendment. I would feel that way regardless of what the subject matter was,” Howard says.

How did we get here?

Virginia is not alone in its current obsession with getting a definition of marriage into the Constitution. While last week’s ruling from the New Jersey Supreme Court holding that gay and lesbian unions must be guaranteed all the rights and benefits afforded to traditional marriage cheered gay marriage advocates, 20 other states have already passed constitutional amendments banning gay marriage. Eight other states, including Virginia, have the issue on their ballots this year. Almost all the rest have state statutes that forbid same-sex marriage or civil unions. The exceptions? Only Massachusetts recognizes gay marriage, per se (the New Jersey justices have punted the question of “marriage,” that is, the use of the word itself, back to the state legislature).  Seven states, plus the District of Columbia, allow for some sort of civil union.

America wasn’t always obsessed with banning legal unions between gay and lesbian couples. The hullabaloo started in 1993 in Hawaii with a State Supreme Court ruling that directed the state to find a “compelling reason” to forbid same-sex marriage. The Hawaii legislature responded by passing a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage (but Hawaii has also established domestic partnerships).

The tipping point came in 2003, when the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled that marriage is a right under the State Constitution that couldn’t be denied gay couples. That decision fired up conservatives nationwide to fight “activist judges,” leading to a profusion of proposed amendments banning gay marriage in 2004 that voters overwhelmingly approved.
But, the Massachusetts decision and the recent New Jersey ruling notwithstanding, the threat of “activist judges” may not be as great as advertised. Courts in New York and Washington states have upheld state laws banning same-sex marriage.

That’s not to undercut the debate, which continues to be lively, impassioned, and full of hyperbole, as one would expect from any volatile issue. But that debate is all the more reason to leave the question to the democratic process and not compress the current prevailing sentiment against gay marriage into a document as purposefully rigid as the Constitution.

“Today’s views about marriage and same-sex marriage may not be tomorrow’s views,” says Howard. “This is a Jeffersonian principle, that each generation should decide for itself what public policy should be. ‘The earth belongs to the living generation’ was his language. And this amendment tries to freeze policy of the moment into the Constitution so that the next generation would have its hands tied.

“Curiously, it reflects a distrust that people might change their mind: ‘We better freeze this into the Constitution lest Virginia become too lax in these matters.’ It’s like legislating morality—except this constitutionalizes morality.”

And what of the activist judges, those bogeymen who have become a popular rallying cry for those who want to amend the Constitution?

“In Virginia? Activist judges? Show me Virginia’s activist judges,” Howard exclaims. “The bench of Virginia are simply not people who will go around discovering new undefined constitutional rights. This is not Massachusetts. Talk about a non-problem.
“If there were a problem to be solved, one might take that risk. But since there isn’t a problem to be solved, it seems to be an unnecessary gamble.”


Unintended consequences

Set aside the issue of philosophy—what should and should not be in the Constitution—and this proposed amendment has another problem: the unintended consequences of a vague second paragraph, says Howard.

The wording of the amendment says that the State won’t recognize “another union, partnership, or other legal status to which is assigned the rights, benefits, obligations, qualities, or effects of marriage.” Nowhere, in either the first or second paragraph, does it say anything about gay people, same-sex couples or any other direct reference to the group intended to be excluded. The amendment only speaks of “unmarried individuals.” And many, including Howard, worry that such language might restrict current legal rights of all unmarried couples to own a house together, make life-ending or -prolonging decisions for each other, or access the protections of domestic violence laws.

“That I think is a forceful objection to this amendment,” Howard says. “We don’t even know what doors it opens. And I don’t see why we would want to go down those uncharted roads.”
When you go to the polling place next Tuesday, you’ll get a handout explaining the marriage amendment question. That explanation holds that “there are other legal rights, benefits, and obligations which will continue to be available to unmarried persons” such as joint property ownership, advance medical directives or domestic violence protections. State Attorney General Robert McDonnell in September issued an opinion that these rights will remain for unmarried couples if the amendment passes.

Yet neither the ballot explanation nor the attorney general’s opinion is binding, says Howard. The Constitution trumps State statutory law, of which all those protections are part.

“I’ve read the attorney general’s opinion, that all these things are covered by state law. That begs the fundamental question: Suppose those laws themselves are called into question under this amendment? A judge might decide that this amendment, if approved, overrides any of those laws—we don’t know which ones and we don’t know whether,” says Howard. “But a party to a private lawsuit could easily invoke this amendment to say that [another] amendment is not valid because of the state constitution. So you see the ripples of potential consequence that flows from this amendment. And that can be any judge, it doesn’t have to be the Supreme Court of Virginia, it could be a trial judge. That’s a lot of judges—that’s a lot of lawsuits.”

Lawsuits are stranger than fiction, but a hypothetical case might go like this: I arrange legally for my girlfriend to make life-ending decisions for me. A tragic accident leaves me in a permanent vegetative state, and my girlfriend decides to pull the plug. But my family, unhappy with that decision and wanting to take control, files a suit claiming that the arrangement between my girlfriend and me is unconstitutional because it “approximates” the “benefits” of marriage, to use the language of the proposed amendment.

Howard points out the irony that a fear of “activist judges” sets up the opportunity for more “activist judges.”

“If the concern is judicial activism, here we have an amendment which likely expands the work judges will do. It will give them more occasion to interpret Virginia’s Constitution to see if this particular law or arrangement is valid. So we’ll see more judicial activism, not less.”

Why is this amendment’s language so vague? Part of the answer seems to lie in Colorado: In 1992, that state passed a constitutional amendment essentially forbidding local governments from passing laws that protect gay rights—a response to cities like Denver and Aspen that had passed such laws. Yet in Romer v. Evans, the U.S. Supreme Court voted 6-3 to strike down the state constitutional amendment because it violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Colorado amendment showed “animus” toward homosexuals, wrote the majority. Most amendments, including the one proposed for Virginia, are now trying to get around accusations of “animus” by avoiding any mention of same-sex couples—hence the references instead to “unmarried individuals.”

One doesn’t have to speculate that legal troubles might arise from such wordings. Ohio, which passed language similar to that of Virginia’s proposed amendment, has since faced trouble with domestic violence protections, according to Nancy Neylon, executive director of the Ohio Domestic Violence Network. Appellate courts in two of 12 Ohio districts have ruled that their marriage amendment prevents the unmarried from seeking domestic violence protections. The Ohio Supreme Court will rule on this matter in the spring. Whether this amendment limits legal rights for unmarried straight couples is now in the hands of judges.

Could it be reversed?

If a simple majority of voters choose “yes” on the ballot, then this amendment, vague language and all, becomes part of the Virginia State Constitution. Once that happens, how can we step back? How could we reverse such an action?

There are two conceivable routes. A judge could rule that, like the Colorado amendment, Virginia’s shows animus toward homosexuals, and therefore violates the U.S. Constitution, which would nullify it. Alternately, the people could once again amend the Constitution to expunge the amendment—a process “deliberately cumbersome and difficult,” says Howard, which “should not be undertaken lightly.”

Howard imagines that legislators that would be willing to repeal the amendment would also feel political pressure not to appear “pro-gay.” It’s possible that this amendment will stay on the books for generations, limiting the discussion and debate on the issue of marriage until someone like A.E. Dick Howard comes along and rewrites it.

“Constitutions represent aspirations,” says Howard. “This is the way people speak to the Commonwealth. This amendment is not in the spirit of the Bill of Rights.
“It doesn’t seem to reflect a healthy picture of what Virginia ought to be.”

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Not-so-fine print

Proposed Constitutional Amendment

Article I. Bill of Rights.
Section 15-A. Marriage.

Ballot Question Number 1

Shall Article I (the Bill of Rights) of the Constitution of Virginia be amended to state:

“That only a union between one man and one woman may be a marriage valid in or recognized by this Commonwealth and its political subdivisions.

“This Commonwealth and its political subdivisions shall not create or recognize a legal status for relationships of unmarried individuals that intends to approximate the design, qualities, significance, or effects of marriage. Nor shall this Commonwealth or its political subdivisions create or recognize another union, partnership, or other legal status to which is assigned the rights, benefits, obligations, qualities, or effects of marriage.”?