| Christine Meeker, City Recorder |
| Recorder's Office |
Physical Address City & County Building
451 South State, Room 415
Salt Lake City, Utah |
Mailing Address
PO Box 145515
Salt Lake City UT 84114-5515 |
Phone Number 801.535.7671 |
Fax
801.535.7681 |
Email Address
recorder@slcgov.com
|
Hours of Operation
8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday - Friday |
| |
| |
|
Mutual Commitment Registry
What is the new mutual commitment registry?
This registry creates a way for Salt Lake City to recognize relationships of mutual commitment, support, and caring. By doing so, businesses that choose to do so, can easily use the registry to determine eligibility for benefits.
Registry Forms and Ordinance
Declaration
application
Amendment to
declaration
Termination of
mutual commitment
Ordinance in its
entirety
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the benefits of offering a mutual commitment registry?
-
This registry is for adult
residents of the City who share a primary residence and rely
on one another as dependents. The measure would help many of
our elderly residents, people with adult dependent children,
as well as same-sex couples.
-
It is a tool for employers to use,
voluntarily, to determine eligibility for benefits from their
company.
-
It will allow Salt Lake City
residents who register health care visitation rights to Salt
Lake City health care facilities.
-
It allows registered individuals access
all facilities owned and operated by the City, such as recreational
facilities, in the same manner as that of a spouse or children.
How would the registry work?
How does this help employers in Salt Lake City?
-
Mutual Commitment benefits are
offered by over half of the Fortune 500 companies in the United
States and numerous employers throughout Salt Lake City to their
employees.
-
The registry helps those local
businesses that choose to offer benefits to individuals to save time
and money in the process of determining status of their employees
for a variety of purposes.
-
Similar registries are in place in
cities from Baltimore to Phoenix to Eugene and throughout
California.
What will residents have to do to prove their mutual commitment status?
-
Before being considered for mutual
commitment status, there are a number of requirements that must
be met. The requirements include a statement that the
individuals are in a relationship of mutual commitment, support,
and caring, and are responsible for each other’s welfare.
-
Registrants must be each other’s sole
partner; be over 18 years old; be competent to contract; and share a
primary residence in Salt Lake City.
-
Applicants will be required to provide any
three of the following five documents:
-
A joint loan obligation, mortgage,
lease, or joint ownership of a vehicle
-
A life insurance policy, retirement
benefits account, or will designating one declarant as the other’s
beneficiary thereto, or will of one declarant which designates the other
as executor
-
A mutually granted power of attorney for
purposes of healthcare or financial management
-
Proof showing that the declarant is authorized
to sign for purposes of the other's bank or credit account
-
Proof of a joint bank or credit account
What will the registry cost tax payers?
Is it a backdoor into gay marriage?
-
No. The City has the authority to create a
Mutual Commitment Registry under the general welfare clause, which grants
Salt Lake the power to “preserve the health, and promote the prosperity,
improve the morals, peace and good order, comfort, and convenience of the
city and its inhabitants.” Utah Code Ann. § 10-8-84(1).
-
The ordinance does not implicate or conflict with
either Article I, Section 29 of the Utah Constitution, commonly known as
“Amendment 3,” or Utah’s “Marriage Recognition Policy,” the state statute
defining marriage.
Does this ordinance require Salt Lake City businesses to offer mutual
commitment benefits to their employees?
|