December 6, 2012
W.Va. woman denied driver's license with wife's last name
AP Photo
In this 2011 photo provided by Comzick Photography, Cyndee Landis(right) and her wife, Melissa Landis, as well as their daughter Anne Hatton, celebrate after a wedding ceremony in Washington. For the year since she married her partner, waitress Cynthia Landis has legally been a Landis. But the West Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles will not issue Landis a drivers license because she is married to a woman and state law forbids the agency from recognizing any documents related to a same-sex marriage.
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Since January, people whose names have changed since birth have faced new hurdles in proving their identities. They must produce multiple forms of ID and proof of name changes to obtain, transfer or renew a driver's license.

The state recognizes passports, heterosexual marriage certificates, divorce decrees that order a name change and court orders, Dale said. Proof of residency is also required.

The process is often a hassle for women, who are more likely to change their names after a marriage, but Dale said many people change their names for other reasons, often because they just don't like the one their parents chose.

A Social Security card isn't good enough in Landis' case because it's not evidence of a legal name, Dale said. Her Virginia license merely shows she was a valid driver, so West Virginia could waive the written and road skills tests.

"Her only solution,'' he said, "is to go to court and have a judge order a name change.''

Brenda Green, executive director of the West Virginia American Civil Liberties Union, said Thursday she isn't surprised by the situation. It's just another way the state's marriage law discriminates against a portion of the population, she said.

"That she should have to jump through these extra hoops is discriminatory, most definitely,'' Green said.

Even women who don't marry a same-sex partner are discriminated under the DMV policy, Green argues. A woman who divorces and wants to change her name back, for example, has to pay an extra free that her ex-husband doesn't.

Landis said she can't afford a lawyer. Nor will she seek a license in her ex-husband's name.

Her marriage certificate, she adds, doesn't specify the gender of either spouse.

"It doesn't even specify bride or groom,'' she said. "If one of us had an androgynous name like Jesse or Pat, we'd probably fly right through the system.''

Earlier this year, retiring Delegate John Doyle, D-Jefferson, introduced a bill to give gay and lesbian couples the same legal protections as heterosexual married couples. They should have the same safety net to deal with the death of a parent or the loss of a job as married couples, he argued.

Fairness WV, which advocates on behalf of the gay, lesbian and transgender community, said it was the first time a civil union bill was introduced in West Virginia.

It went nowhere.

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Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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