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7 May2009

Gay Marriages To Count In Next Census

Same-sex marriages will counted by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) in the next national Census due on 9 August 2011.

Paul Lowe, Head of the ABS Population Census Branch, announced in an email to Australian Marriage Equality (AME) that "the count of people in same-sex relationships who tick the 'husband or wife of person 1' box at question 5 will be made available as a part of the standard output from the 2011 Census".

 
   

"In the past, if someone reported that they were married to a person of the same gender, we would then change that response to indicate 'de facto'," said Lowe.

"From 2011 we will record their response as married, and release this information in what we call our standard output – in other words, the publicly accessible, standard census information released every four years."

Lowe said the ABS had decided to include same-sex marriages in the Census count due to representations from AME and other groups, which showed there was a demand for the information.

Australian Marriage Equality (AME) national convener, Peter Furness, welcomed the decision, which will count the number of married same-sex couples living together even though such marriages are denied recognition under Australian law following amendments to the Marriage Act in 2004.

"As government agencies like the ABS begin to recognise the reality that some same-sex partners are married, the Rudd Government's opposition to recognising same-sex marriage looks increasingly outdated", said Mr Furness.

"The Rudd Government may choose to bury its head in the sand and pretend same-sex marriages don't exist, but clearly the ABS will not."

AME has been lobbying for several years to have the ABS find a way to count same-sex marriages in the Census.

In addition, the ABS has also committed to producing a 2011 Census analysis report on same-sex couples who have indicated they are married along the lines of a similar report produced by Statistics Canada following the 2006 Canadian Census.

AME will actively encourage same-sex couples to participate in the 2011 Census. "Same-sex couples can now be confident that their marriages will be counted", said Mr Furness.

"An increasing number of Australian institutions, organisations and corporations, with the exception of the federal government, now recognise same-sex marriages. Step by step, we are chipping away at this final barrier to equality."

"It is time Kevin Rudd was forced to properly explain his government's denial of this basic human right to so many of his fellow Australians."

 

Copyright © 2009 Australian Marriage Equality Inc.