New York gay marriage bill: What would happen if it passes?

New York legislators could vote as early as Wednesday to legalize gay marriage in the state. New York would become the sixth state to permit gay marriage. Here’s a list six things that would – and wouldn’t – happen should the bill pass.

6. Wouldn't happen: Churches forced to conduct gay marriage

Hans Pennink/AP
Democratic state Sen. Ruben Diaz talks with a reporter from the New York Hispanic Clergy Organization about the same-sex marriage bill at the Capitol in Albany, N.Y., Monday.

The law specifically exempts religious institutions and benevolent societies from solemnizing or hosting same-sex marriages, though Senate majority leader Dean Skelos (R) on Monday cited continuing concerns over the language of this part of the bill. He suggested the bill was being amended.

The bill shields churches, synagogues, and groups such as the Knights of Columbus from civil lawsuits should they deny gay couples the right to use their facilities for marriage ceremonies, advocates say. The stronger protections sought by Republicans are not necessary, they say.

“Clergy have never been forced to marry couples that they don’t want to marry,” says Sarah Warbelow, state legislative director for the Human Rights Campaign, a major proponent of the gay marriage law. The exemption, she says, is “just a restatement, so there are no questions and it’s 100 percent clear.”

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