Jayne Rowse and April DeBoer never thought they’d be crusaders for marriage equality. After being together for more than 13 years and welcoming three adopted children into their lives, “we’re already married, in our minds” said April to msnbc.com, her children’s laughter coming through over the speakerphone.
It’s sometimes difficult to get ahold of April and Jayne at the same time, their attorney warned, as both women work as nurses–April in the NICU, and Jayne in the ER–but you can usually reach one of them. The two women make sure to stagger their shifts at the hospital so that one parent can stay home with their three adopted children–4-year-old Nolan, 3-year-old Jacob, and 3-year-old Ryanne–all born with varying medical issues. Jacob was born at 25-weeks with special needs and has “had a huge struggle” developmentally, said April. Their daughter Ryanne has also had to overcome some delays after being abandoned by her biological mother–who suffered from drug addiction and received no prenatal care–shortly after she was born at the hospital where April works. Despite these early challenges, however, the children are all doing great, said their parents cheerfully.
While April and Jayne’s lives differ very little from those of any other parents in Hazel Park, Mich., they in fact have an odd arrangement. Jayne is the legal parent of Nolan and Jacob, while April is the legal parent of Ryanne. The state does not legally recognize both women as the parents of all three kids, even though both women are raising the children together as a family. That’s because under the Michigan adoption code, only a single person, a married couple, or one-half of a married couple can adopt a child. And because the marriage amendment to the Michigan Constitution limits marriage to opposite-sex couples, the state’s adoption law prevents same-sex couples from adopting together.
On Thursday, April and Jayne will appear before a federal judge to challenge both the Michigan adoption code, and the state’s ban on same-sex marriage, in what could potentially be a watershed moment for marriage equality.
For Dana Nessel, one of April and Jayne’s attorneys, the chance to argue against Michigan’s treatment of same-sex couples can’t come soon enough. “It’s so dumb,” she said of Michigan’s adoption code. “If you are legally married, one of the two people can adopt without even the advice or consent of the other person…. You could be single, or a married couple, or one-half of a married couple, but the law still excludes same-sex couples because they can’t legally marry.”
Nessel has been working with April and Jayne since 2011, when the couple first approached her about an estate matter. They wanted to challenge the Michigan adoption code so that their kids could have all the same legal protections given to children of heterosexual parents. As it stands, the state denies April and Jayne the right to make medical decisions for all their children, the right to leave property and benefits to all their children, and even the right to see all their children in the event that their relationship with each other ends.
“I wanted to challenge that law forever,” said Nessel, who has handled multiple cases before involving gay parents who have lost access to their children as a result of Michigan’s adoption restrictions.
“In Michigan, you could have a child who is 14-years-old forced back into foster care, after spending his whole life with his same-sex parents,” said Emily Dievendorf, director of policy at Equality Michigan, an LGBT advocacy group. “When the legal guardian decides he or she wants to move across the country, this law can deny access for the other parent.”
Michigan is not the only state that prohibits same-sex couples from jointly adopting, but it is one of the few that does not give parents in same-sex relationships the opportunity to adopt their partner’s child–a process known as second-parent adoption. While there is no law in Michigan that explicitly bans second-parent adoption, there is also no law that expressly allows it. Up until 2002, some judges were granting adoptions to unmarried partners, but they were pressured to stop that year by Michigan’s then-Supreme Court Justice Maura Corrigan.
“Michigan is a fascinating and unique place in that we have neither a law that bans same-sex couples from adopting, nor do we have a law that allows it,” said Dievendorf. However, “Michigan is one of the few states where there has been a decision made that specifically asks that gay people not be issued legal rights to children,” she said of the Corrigan ruling.
April and Jayne set out to challenge only the adoption code so it could include a path for second-parent adoption. Nessel and her team agreed to take on the case pro bono, and argue in federal court that Michigan’s adoption law was unconstitutional in that it discriminated against same-sex parents without serving a legitimate state purpose.
On August 29, Nessel went before U.S. District Judge Bernard Friedman, a Reagan appointee, to challenge the adoption law, and said she was “shocked” by what he had to say. “He said I think this issue is not about the adoption code, I think it’s about marriage,” said Nessel. “What you need to do is challenge the marriage amendment.”
Friedman gave Nessel and her team ten days to amend their complaint so it included a challenge to Michigan’s ban on same-sex marriage, which was enacted in 2004 by voter referendum. Given the scope of the challenge, however, ten days felt like an incredibly short amount of time, especially in comparison to the legal team and resources devoted to challenging California’s ban on same-sex marriage, Proposition 8. “We didn’t raise any money for this,” said Nessel. “It was just a few of us who decided these laws were brazenly unconstitutional.”
“We never in our wildest dreams thought it would go this way,” said Jayne. “We never set out to fight for gay marriage. We just wanted second-parent adoption… This was quite a twist for us.”









