WEARING THE MESSAGE: : Hundreds of Central Coast residents—including Santa Maria residents—joined a Nov. 15 protest in San Luis Obispo to make known their displeasure over Proposition 8’s passing. Credit: PHOTO COURTESY CRAIG SHAFER

On Nov. 4, Proposition 8 passed with a four-percent margin, amending the California Constitution to define marriage as a union ā€œbetween a man and a woman.ā€

The longevity of that controversial clause, however, remains in question. On Nov. 19, the California Supreme Court announced it would review three petitions challenging the legality of Proposition 8. The petitions were filed by Proposition 8 opponents who believe it denies civil rights to a minority group. But opponents aren’t just restricting their efforts to the legal arena.

WEARING THE MESSAGE: : Hundreds of Central Coast residents—including Santa Maria residents—joined a Nov. 15 protest in San Luis Obispo to make known their displeasure over Proposition 8’s passing. Credit: PHOTO COURTESY CRAIG SHAFER

Since the proposition’s passing, thousands of its opponents have taken to the streets—from the steps of the State Capitol to corners and parks on the Central Coast—to protest the measure’s legality.

Proposition 8 opponents are also protesting with their pocketbooks, boycotting businesses connected to contributions to the Yes on 8 campaign. In southern California, opponents are targeting several businesses, including health food chain store Lassen’s Natural Foods.

According to information released by the California Secretary of State, tens of thousands of dollars were donated to the Yes on 8 campaign in the Lassen name. As a result, the chain’s founding store in Ventura has been picketed, and all six of the chain’s stores have been boycotted in some way.

The public outcry, however, has left some Lassen’s employees confused.

ā€œThe donations were not made by the Ventura store or any of the other locations,ā€ said Scott Parvel, a manager at Lassen’s in Ventura, who explained that people have every right to make personal donations because of their beliefs.

Still, many activists remain skeptical about where the donation originated since the published records list the business name as the contributor.

ā€œI know what it looks like on the records, but I know for a fact that none of the stores contributed to the campaign,ā€ Parvel said.

Mike Johnson, manager of the Lassen’s store in Santa Maria, agreed with Parvel, stating that any donation ā€œwas completely personal.ā€

ā€œAs a business manager, you try to keep home at home and work at work,ā€ Johnson said, noting that it’s unfortunate people haven’t respected donors’ rights.

ā€œWe have a lot of gay employees,ā€ he said, adding that none of the company’s gay employees has quit over the news of the donations.

Johnson explained that Lassen’s doesn’t discriminate when it comes to hiring and managing its employees, noting that people are paid and promoted based on merit alone.

But businesses aren’t the only organizations facing criticism for their involvement with the Yes on 8 campaign. Proposition 8 opponents are also targeting churches and other religious organizations.

The most prominent of these is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. While the church didn’t make any contributions to the campaign, its members are being credited as major campaign contributors.

According to the No on 8 campaign, LDS members donated approximately $22 million to the Yes on 8 campaign. Many Proposition 8 opponents believe the donations infringe on the separation of church and state doctrine. But LDS members maintain that the donations fall well within their civil rights.

Denton Hyder, director of the LDS Religion Institute of Santa Maria, said that he donated to the Yes on 8 campaign because it represented his personal beliefs.

ā€œI put up the money, and so did everyone I know,ā€ Hyder said, adding that he is in no way a representative for the LDS Church.

ā€œIt’s not that we’re against the gay population we just think that marriage is a religious thing that should be between a man and a woman,ā€ he said.

When asked what kind of reaction the institute has received since Proposition 8’s passing, Hyder said: ā€œWe’ve received some phone calls, all of which have been positive. They’re from non-members thanking us for our involvement in getting the proposition passed.ā€

The Mormon church might not have made a straightforward donation to Yes on 8, but many Proposition 8 opponents, along with political and legal experts, still question the church’s involvement in the campaign. And then there are the churches that actually made donations to the cause, blurring the line between church and state even more in some citizens’ eyes.

Since Proposition 8’s passing, many of its opponents have questioned whether or not churches with nonprofit tax exemptions are legally allowed to make donations to political campaigns.

According to an e-mail from Internal Revenue Service representative Jesse Weller, under the IRS code, all section 501(c)(3) organizations—charities, churches, and the like—may lobby to influence legislation, including initiatives and propositions, so long as they don’t devote a ā€œsubstantial partā€ of their activities to doing so.

Nonprofits are absolutely prohibited from directly or indirectly participating in any political campaign for a candidate for public office.

ā€œ[Churches politicizing] has become such a gray area at this point that a lot of churches think they can overcome the problem,ā€ said Dan Payne, a political science professor at Allan Hancock College. ā€œBetween you and me, it’s a bag of worms.

ā€œThe question isn’t, ā€˜Does the church have the right to uphold family values?’ We all know the answer to that,ā€ Payne said. ā€œThe question is: ā€˜How far can they go?ā€™ā€

Payne said it’s important to ask why parishioners donate to a certain cause.

ā€œWas it because the command came down from the pulpit?ā€ he questioned. ā€œWould they have donated the money otherwise?ā€

In Santa Maria, Foursquare Church was the only church listed as making donations to the Yes on 8 campaign.

Head Pastor Roger Wheeler said the donations coincided with the church’s ideological beliefs.

ā€œWe can say ā€˜Yes on 8,’ but we can also say that God loves homosexuals,ā€ Wheeler said. ā€œBut we believe that being homosexual is a social choice.

ā€œI know that that has been debated by psychologists, but we’ve had numerous homosexual people who have been members of the homosexual community but no longer are,ā€ he said. ā€œThey’ve changed their orientation.ā€

When it comes to supporting any cause, Wheeler said it’s important that churches be ā€œloving and gracious,ā€ which he believes has been the case with the Yes on 8 campaign.

ā€œWe have not seen any of the hatred or animosity that has come back as a recourse from the people who are against Prop 8,ā€ he said.

David Kilburn, chapter leader of Marriage Equality USA in San Luis Obispo, said that there are some people who are angry.

ā€œIt’s pretty upsetting to have people vote to make you a second-class citizen,ā€ he said.

In an effort to bridge the gap between the two opposing sides, Kilburn said, many anti-Proposition 8 organizations are ā€œfocusing [their] actions right now on bringing people together and having an open dialogue.ā€

Locally, Marriage Equality USA and Pacific Pride Foundation in Santa Maria are in the process of setting up town hall meetings with individuals on both sides of the issue.

ā€œI think the churches are looking at the issue from a religious and biblical perspective, and we’re looking at it from a civil and legal perspective,ā€ Kilburn said. ā€œWe really need to put human faces on the issue.ā€

Overall, Kilburn remains optimistic about the future of gay marriage.

ā€œI think people are going to come around. They’ll see that this isn’t really a threat and that it’s actually going to strengthen marriage,ā€ he said.Ā 


Contact Staff Writer Amy Asman at aasman@santamariasun.com.

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