The Marine Corps has advised its legal staff that spouses clubs
operating on its installations must admit same-sex spouses if they wish
to remain on the bases.
It's a step that the other service branches have not yet announced as
they grapple with how to accommodate same-sex couples following repeal
of the don't ask, don't tell policy that barred gays and lesbians from
serving openly.
Underscoring the challenges, the Marines' legal advisory –
obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press – refers to an ongoing
controversy at the Army's Fort Bragg in North Carolina where the
officers' spouses club has denied admission to a same-sex spouse.
The Marine Corps commandant's Staff Judge Advocate, in an e-mail to
legal offices throughout the corps, said the Fort Bragg events had
"caused quite a stir" and cautioned, "We do not want a story like this
developing in our backyard."
The memo noted that spouses clubs and various other private
institutions are allowed to operate on bases only if they adhere to a
non-discrimination policy encompassing race, religion, gender, age, disability and national origin.
"We would interpret a spouses club's decision to exclude a same-sex
spouse as sexual discrimination because the exclusion was based upon the
spouse's sex," the memo said.
A Marine Corps spokesman, Capt. Eric Flanagan, said the Marines
cannot directly control the actions of independent organizations such as
spouses' clubs, but added, "We expect that all who are interested in
supporting Marine Corps Family Readiness would be welcome to participate and will be treated with dignity and respect."
The Defense Department has not issued similar guidance
covering all service branches, and for now is taking the stance that
the Fort Bragg spouses club is conforming with the existing rules
because the non-discrimination clause does not extend to sexual
orientation.
Stephen Peters of the American Military Partner Association, which
advocates on behalf of partners and spouses of lesbian and gay service
members, praised the Marine Corps – which had been the service branch
most uneasy about repeal of don't ask, don't tell.
"The Marine Corps putting its best foot forward is great news," he said. "They're being proactive about this."
Peters said his organization would urge the Pentagon to implement a
military-wide policy that would open all spouses clubs to same-sex
spouses.
"You can't have different standards with the different branches," he said.
Peters' organization has been one of several groups advocating on
behalf of Ashley Broadway, the wife of Fort Bragg-based Lt. Col. Heather
Mack, after Broadway was denied admittance into the officers' spouses
club.
The club has said it would reconsider its membership policies at an upcoming meeting.
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