Following Threat of ACLU of Virginia Lawsuit, Manassas Suspends Ordinance That Limit Right of Family Members to Live Together (1/5/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
RICHMOND, VA --Shortly after the the American Civil Liberties Union of
Virginia announced plans to mount a legal challenge, the City of Manassas
suspended enforcement of the new ordinance that prevents aunts, uncles, nieces,
nephews, great-grandparents, or great-grandchildren from living together as a
family unit, the ACLU announced today.
“This was the right and responsible decision for Manassas officials to make,”
said ACLU of Virginia Executive Director Kent Willis, who noted that large
number of rights groups were coming together to challenge the ordinance.
In announcing its legal opposition to the ordinance yesterday, the ACLU of
Virginia called the policy an unconstitutional government infringement on the
right of family members to live together and said that it was being enforced
largely, if not solely, against Latino families. “The
ordinance was anti-family because it undermined long-held cultural traditions
regarding how families function, and it was anti-Constitution in that it gave
the government extraordinary power to interfere with the personal, private
decisions made by families about how they will function as a unit,” said
Willis.
Under the Manassas ordinance, a “family” is: “Two or more persons
related to the second degree of collateral consanguinity by blood, marriage,
adoption or guardianship….living and cooking together as a single housekeeping
unit, exclusive of not more than one additional nonrelated person.”
In short, parents, grandparents, children, grandchildren, and siblings can
live under the same roof, but aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews,
great-grandparents, or great-grandchildren are not considered “family,” and no
more than one of them may live together.
In 1977 in the case of Moore v. City of East Cleveland, the U.S. Supreme
Court struck down a similar ordinance. That ordinance permitted only the
parents and children of the head of household, and one dependent child of the
head of the household, their spouse and dependent children to reside
together. The Court held that the restrictive definition of “family”
violated the substantive due process clause, noting that the protection of
family relationships extended beyond the nuclear family.
In his decision, Justice Lewis Powell, Jr. wrote, “The tradition of uncles,
aunts, cousins, and especially grandparents sharing a household along with
parents and children has roots equally venerable and equally deserving of
constitutional recognition.”
“We still have work to do,” added Willis. “The suspension of the
ordinance is only temporary, and it is not clear what step Manassas officials
will be taking next. We will certainly be urging them to repeal it.”
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