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网络研讨会:密歇根州家庭保护法和家庭法更新

网络研讨会:密歇根州家庭保护法和家庭法更新

3 月 4 日星期二 • 美国东部时间晚上 6:30 至 8 点 • 免费虚拟活动

参加深入的网络研讨会 关于将于 4 月 1 日生效的《密歇根州家庭保护法案》,以及对当前家庭平等威胁的概述和对密歇根州公民权利的审查。

这项具有里程碑意义的立法为密歇根州通过辅助生殖和代孕出生的儿童确立了重要的保护措施。研讨会将全面概述亲子关系和家庭法,包括法院在辅助生殖儿童亲子关系认定中的作用、AOP条款的更新以及代孕出生儿童亲子关系的法律框架。

由密歇根平等组织、密歇根生育联盟、COLAGE、GLAD Law 和密歇根贫困法律项目主办

了解更多 关于密歇根州家庭保护法

Exploring the Michigan Family Protection Act 

Exploring the Michigan Family Protection Act 

What Attorneys Need to Know to Protect Families

Wednesday, October 23 | 10-11am & 1-2pm EST | 在此注册

Join the American Academy of Adoption & Assisted Reproduction Attorneys (AAAA) for a two-part training series on the Michigan Family Protection Act (MFPA). In the hour-long first session, we’ll explore the Assisted Reproduction provisions of the MFPA that impact parentage, offering insights that go beyond surrogacy to cover the full spectrum of family-building through ART. The second session will focus exclusively on surrogacy. To gain a comprehensive understanding of the MFPA, which is made up of nine individual bills, we strongly encourage participants to attend both sessions. 

小组成员包括:

  • Polly Crozier – Director of Family Advocacy, GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders
  • Angie Martell – Iglesia Martell Law Firm, PLLC and Colibri Institute of Social Justice
  • Megan Reynolds – Michigan Poverty Law Program, State Bar of Michigan Family Law Council
  • Beverly Cox – ART fellow, family law in the specialty of ART & surrogacy
  • Meryl Rosenberg – ART fellow, family law in the specialty of ART & surrogacy
  • Fabiana Quaini – International surrogacy specialist, ART fellow, family law in the specialty of ART & surrogacy

博客

密歇根州修订亲子法,保护LGBTQ+家庭

4 月 1 日,州长格雷琴·惠特默签署了 密歇根州家庭保护法这项法律将确保通过辅助生殖和 LGBTQ+ 父母出生的孩子能够平等地与父母建立安全的法律关系并享有随之而来的基本权利。 

Governor Whitmer, sitting center at a table in a library in front of a crowd of seated individuals while professionally-dressed people stand behind her. Two women behind her to her right commemoratively hold up a piece of paper and lean into each other.
州长惠特默签署《密歇根州家庭保护法案》

全国各地的过时法律继续使 LGBTQ+ 父母及其子女以及所有通过辅助生殖组建的家庭处于危险之中。 更新这些法律,将LGBTQ+家庭纳入其中是同性恋者联盟(GLAD)的首要任务。目前,类似《密歇根州家庭保护法》的法案正在等待 马萨诸塞州、明尼苏达州和宾夕法尼亚州,我们希望密歇根州能够成为其他州效仿的榜样。

同性恋者联盟 (GLAD) 家庭倡导主任波莉·克罗齐尔 (Polly Crozier) 与密歇根生育联盟的基层地方倡导者以及律师考特尼·乔斯林 (Courtney Joslin) 密切合作,后者是 2017 年《统一亲子法》(UPA) 的记者,共同推动了《密歇根州家庭保护法》的推进。UPA 是一项无党派示范性立法,旨在确保各州的亲子法符合宪法、以儿童为中心,并包容所有家庭,无论父母的性别、婚姻状况或家庭构成方式如何。密歇根州是继缅因州、华盛顿州、佛蒙特州、罗德岛州、康涅狄格州和科罗拉多州之后,美国中西部第一个、也是美国第七个根据 2017 年 UPA 全面更新其亲子法以保护 LGBTQ+ 家庭的州。 

克罗齐尔说:“密歇根州向我们展示了 2024 年强化家庭制度的面貌:让所有家庭,包括 LGBTQ+ 家庭,都能更容易地获得合法父母身份带来的安全和稳定。” 

去年 6 月,GLAD 与运动推进项目、COLAGE、全国女同性恋权利中心和家庭平等组织合作发布了一份关于亲子法现状的报告。 关系岌岌可危:为何我们需要更新州亲子法以保护儿童和家庭 详细说明了目前全国各地的亲子关系法参差不齐,其中许多法律几十年来都没有更新,这让 LGBTQ+ 父母及其子女处于危险之中。 

美国近三分之一的LGBTQ+成年人正在抚养18岁以下的子女,其中许多州的法律仍然过时。这意味着太多LGBTQ+家庭的孩子面临潜在风险,LGBTQ+父母必须克服昂贵、耗时且具有侵犯性的法律障碍来保护他们的家庭。 

过时的亲子法可能意味着孩子在最需要父母的时候(例如在医疗危机期间)无法与父母团聚,或者可能导致父母在其所在州的法律下没有法律保障,在法定父母死亡或父母关系终止等情况下失去与孩子的联系。

密歇根州的新法律出台之际,全国各地都在积极限制美国人就是否、何时以及如何建立家庭做出个人决定的能力,并试图破坏 LGBTQ+ 人士和家庭的平等权利。

A woman in a suit jacket and red dress and a woman in a grey suit with her arm around the other woman stand next to each other, smiling.
惠特默州长和家庭事务主任
倡导者 Polly Crozier

自美国最高法院于2022年裁定联邦宪法不赋予堕胎权以来,限制堕胎、避孕以及体外受精等家庭建立的措施不断升级。今年早些时候,一场前所未有的 阿拉巴马州最高法院裁决 在立法者匆忙出台部分且存在问题的解决方案之前,该州的 IVF 服务已被有效关闭。 

阿拉巴马州裁决引发的全国性强烈抗议表明,试管婴儿、其他形式的生育治疗和辅助生殖对许多人来说都是重要的家庭构建选择。然而,即使在许多对生育自由有严格保护的州——比如马萨诸塞州, 马萨诸塞州亲子法 悬而未决——通过辅助生殖出生的孩子仍然缺乏重要的保护。

“在许多州,亲子关系法已经过时几十年了,跟不上家庭组建的步伐,”乔斯林说道。“至关重要的是,这使得许多通过辅助生殖(包括试管受精和代孕)出生的孩子与父母缺乏明确的法律关系。当孩子与父母缺乏法律关系时,他们极其脆弱;他们可能无权获得子女抚养费或重要的政府保护。”


克罗齐尔补充道:“在限制美国人生育自由和削弱对 LGBTQ+ 人群及其家庭的保护的努力中,《密歇根州家庭保护法》为其他州提供了一个鼓舞人心的例子,因为这些州的亲子关系法存在漏洞,导致家庭继续处于危险之中。”


这个故事最初发表在 2024 年夏季 GLAD Briefs 时事通讯中。 关于一个更多.

消息

Michigan Updates Parentage Laws to Protect All Families

New law protecting Michigan families and access to family building provides an example for the nation amid efforts to restrict reproductive freedom

ROYAL OAK, Mich. (April 1, 2024) – The Michigan Fertility Alliance (MFA), one of the largest grassroots citizen-led groups of its kind in the country, today applauded Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s signing of the Michigan Family Protection Act (MFPA).

The MFPA updates Michigan law to ensure that all children, including children born through assisted reproduction and to LGBTQ+ families, will have equal access to a secure legal relationship with their parents and to critical rights such as health insurance, inheritance, social security, and decision-making about medical care and education that flow from that relationship. The law also removes Michigan’s criminal ban on surrogacy contracts and provides legal safeguards for family building through surrogacy to protect all involved – parents, children, and surrogates.

“This is an incredible victory for Michigan families,” said Stephanie Jones, Executive Director of the Michigan Fertility Alliance. “Hundreds of thousands of Michiganders who want children rely on assisted reproduction to build their families. Whether straight, LGBTQ+, cancer survivors, coupled or not, Michiganders needed a clear law in place to protect all children and parents as well as those who help parents grow their families as surrogates. We’re grateful to Governor Whitmer, legislative champion Representative Steckloff, and all our legislators who heard our stories and recognized the need to support and protect children, families, and access to family-building in Michigan.”

The MFA served as a lead voice for families while the Michigan House and Senate considered and passed the package of bills collectively known as the Michigan Family Protection Act. During the legislative process, several members of the MFA, including parents, surrogates, and doctors, alongside nationally known experts in parentage and family law across the country, told lawmakers their personal and professional stories of how Michigan’s outdated statutes have adversely affected children. 

“This family-focused law came together thanks to the grit and unwavering determination of our grassroots group of parents and other citizens that make up the Michigan Fertility Alliance with the support of family, parenting, reproductive equity, and LGBTQ+ advocates and experts,” added Jones. “Families take many forms – and we’re so glad we came together and learned from one another to create a law that will make having children a loving reality for everyone.”

This timely legislation also makes Michigan an example to other states for updating outdated parentage and family-building laws. It comes in the wake of aggressive efforts around the country to restrict Americans’ ability to make personal decisions about whether, when, and how to build their families, as well as efforts to undermine equal rights for LGBTQ+ people and families.

Since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2022 that there is no federal constitutional right to abortion, efforts have escalated to restrict not only abortion but contraception and access to family building like IVF, surrogacy, and other forms of assisted reproduction. Michigan is the first state to update its parentage laws after an unprecedented Alabama Supreme Court ruling effectively shut down IVF access in that state. 

“The nationwide outcry against the Alabama ruling showed how crucial IVF and other forms of assisted reproduction are to many people’s family building process,” said Courtney Joslin, Professor at U.C. Davis School of Law and Reporter for the Uniform Parentage Act of 2017, upon which the Michigan Family Protection Act is based. “Yet in many states, parentage laws are decades out of date and haven’t kept pace with how families are formed. Critically, that leaves many children born through assisted reproduction – including IVF and surrogacy – without clear legal ties to their parents. When children lack legal relationships with their parents, they are extremely vulnerable; they may not be entitled to child support or to important government protections.”

“Michigan has shown us what strengthening families should look like in 2024: making it more possible for people to fulfill their dreams of building a family and more accessible for all families, including LGBTQ+ families, to obtain the safety and stability that comes with legal parentage,” GLBTQ 法律倡导者和辩护人组织 (GLAD) 家庭倡导部主任 Polly Crozier 说道。 “Amid efforts to restrict Americans’ reproductive freedom and roll back protections for LGBTQ+ people and their families, the Michigan Family Protection Act is an inspiring example for other states where gaps in parentage laws leave families vulnerable.”

Protecting Michigan Families

更新: On April 1, 2025, The Michigan Family Protection Act goes into effect!

Michigan parentage laws received a vital update with the passage of this law, which provides essential protections for families across the state.

The Michigan Family Protection Act ensures:

  • Clear parentage laws to create stability for children in all families, regardless of LGBTQ+ identity, marital status, or their use of assisted reproduction.
  • Legal recognition of surrogacy as a path to parentage, which was previously banned in Michigan, and best-practice guidelines for children, intended parents, and people acting as surrogates.
  • Access to legal parentage for unmarried parents of children born through assisted reproduction; and
  • Expanded access to voluntary acknowledgments of parentage for families formed through assisted reproduction and gamete donation. 

This victory, achieved in close partnership with the Michigan Fertility Alliance, marks a critical step forward for LGBTQ+ families and other families formed through assisted reproduction. While challenges remain nationwide, Michigan now has powerful legal safeguards to protect the relationships between children and their parents.

Pueblo v. Haas

Carrie Pueblo and Rachel Haas—partners in a committed same-sex relationship—chose to have a child together using assisted insemination, with Ms. Haas carrying the child. When their child was born in November 2008, same-sex marriages were not legal in their home state of Michigan. The relationship between Ms. Pueblo and Ms. Haas ended before same-sex marriage was legalized.

After their separation, Ms. Haas denied Ms. Pueblo all contact with the child she had raised since birth.

Ms. Pueblo filed suit in family court seeking shared custody and parenting time, but both the trial court and Michigan Court of Appeals held that because she is not the child’s biological mother, she did not have standing. This left Ms. Pueblo as a legal stranger to her own child. The case is now at the Michigan Supreme Court.

When parents separate, children in families created by same-sex couples, just like children in families created by different-sex couples, need legal protections that recognize the parents’ and children’s fundamental rights in their relationship. Custody and parenting time decisions for the children of same-sex couples should be made based on the best interests of the child, just as they are for the children of different-sex couples.

Some of the most important civil rights of LGBTQ people in Michigan are at stake in this case: the rights to become parents, to form families, to raise children, and to maintain relationships with those children. The Court should act to protect those rights, and the judgment of the Court of Appeals should be reversed.

GLAD joined an 法庭之友陈述 with the ACLU of Michigan, Lambda Legal Defense & Education Fund, LGBTQA Law Section of the State Bar of Michigan, Affirmations LGBTQ+ Community Center, and the National Center for LGBTQ Rights.

更新:

On July 24, 2023, the Michigan Supreme Court reversed the appellate ruling and sent the case back to the trial court, saying that Ms. Pueblo has a right to make the case that she is a parent to their child. Read more from NBC News.

麦金太尔诉惠特默案

为一名因变性而面临非自愿退伍的密歇根州国民警卫队专家和陆军退伍军人辩护。

密歇根西区地方法院
提交日期:2020 年 10 月 30 日

Blaire McIntyre
密歇根州国民警卫队专家布莱尔·麦金太尔

2020 年 10 月 30 日,GLAD 和国家 LGBTQ 权利中心 (NCLR) 提出新的挑战跨性别军人禁令 代表密歇根陆军国民警卫队专家布莱尔麦金太尔。

麦金特里(McIntrye)专业军士自2015年4月以来一直是密歇根州国民警卫队(Michigan Army National Guard)一名敬业且成绩优异的成员,此前她曾在现役陆军服役,并被派往阿富汗。现在,她因公开自己的跨性别身份而面临退役。

麦金特里专家同时也是国民警卫队一名身着制服的文职人员,专长于武器装备。由于她拥有双重身份技术员,因此从国民警卫队退役也将导致她失去文职职位。

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