CHICAGO - As same-sex couples fight for their right to marry, some straight couples are deciding against it. Instead, they're registering as domestic partners
an option offered by some cities and counties, mainly with gay and lesbian couples in mind.
National statistics are not available, because some municipalities do nottrack domestic partners' gender or make their registries public. But experts are noting early signs that, while the marriage rate continues to decline, these alternative arrangements are piquing some straight couples' interest.
Some heterosexuals, following a trend already popular in such countries as Sweden and France, choose domestic partnership for practical reasons.
Christopher Price and Bonnie Fletcher, both 25, did so in New York City last fall so they could qualify for student housing for couples at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, where they are graduate students.
Not ready to marry, Price calls their decision a good first small step.
The first thing you do is you move in. The next thing you do is get a dog he says, chuckling. And then you'll find out who's responsible or not.
Others are making a political statement. And some groups are even calling for a marriage boycott to protest a proposed constitutional amendment defining the institution as between a woman and a man.
I just don't think the state should be in the position of sanctioning who should be a family and who shouldn't
says Jennifer Gaboury, another New Yorker.
She and Jacob Goldfinger, both 33, registered as a domestic partners last year and, instead of having a wedding, invited family and friends to their commitzvah. The ceremony included the traditional Jewish breaking of the glass after they exchanged vows. There was no minister or justice of the peace.
Gaboury says she arrived at her decision not to marry in college, after realizing that a lesbian friend could not do so. Goldfinger grew to share her views. He says getting married would have been like eating at a segregated lunch counter.
Those calling for a marriage boycott applaud the decision, even if dissuading couples from legally tying the knot is difficult.
So far, Phoebe Rosenberg Jones - a straight, single, 26-year-old from Los Angeles, who recently posted the site Boycott-marriage.com - says she's persuaded one couple to postpone their wedding and has others considering it.
I would just like to get more straight people engaged in the issue - no pun intended
says Rosenberg Jones, whose opposition to a constitutional amendment inspired her to act.
Dorian Solot says she's also heard from several couples who are boycotting marriage. She is executive director of the Alternatives to Marriage Project, a nonprofit that provides information and support to couples who don't wish to marry.
It becomes clearer every day that when it comes to relationships and families
there's no one size that fits all
says Solot, who is registered as a domestic partner with her longtime companion, Marshall Miller. They live in Albany, N.Y., and recently celebrated, as Solot calls it, their 11th unmarried anniversary.
Frank Furstenberg, a sociologist at the University of Pennsylvania, says it's not surprising that some couples - especially young ones - are shunning marriage as a sign of solidarity with their lesbian and gay peers. In fact, he wonders if pushing the one man
one woman definition might only further the trend.
We are genuinely running the risk of making marriage uncool
says Furstenberg, a senior research scholar at the Council on Contemporary Families.
But David Popenoe, a sociologist who tracks marriage trends, calls the idea of a marriage boycott idiotic.
As co-director of the National Marriage Project at Rutgers University, he argues that the focus should be on creating more stable and committed relationships.
My concern about that is children. The less stable the relationship
the worse it is for children
he says. Choosing domestic partnership over marriage, he contends, often represents a decline in commitment.
Marion Willetts - a sociologist at Illinois State University who has surveyed straight domestic partners - argues that that's not always the case.
She says couples that choose domestic partnership need to do more to define their relationships legally. She found, for instance, that those she surveyed had done little to prepare for the death of a partner or a potential break up.
It concerned me




