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BY: Ted Parks
The new position reverses the Salvation Army's earlier opposition to domestic partner benefits. The organization lost about $3.5 million in government funds when it decided not to comply with a San Francisco law stipulating that companies doing business with the city must offer the benefits.
The dramatic change was made by the Salvation Army's western corporation, which takes in 13 states, including Alaska and Hawaii. The new policy applies only to the western corporation at present, Lt. Col. Richard Love, divisional commander of the Salvation Army's Golden State Division, said in an interview. One of largest private providers of social services in the nation, the Salvation Army has four "corporations" nationwide.
Salvation Army officials based the shift on what they believe is a realistic view of the American family and see the move as consistent with the organization's evangelical Christian identity. "Our decision is a reflection of the concern we hold for the health of our employees and those closest to them, and is made on the basis of strong ethical and moral reasoning that reflects the dramatic changes in family structure in recent years," said Col. Philip D. Needham in a statement released by the Salvation Army's USA Western Territorial Headquarters in Long Beach, Calif.
"We do not ask people to pass our morality litmus test before we give them help," he noted. "Christian compassion is not conditional. We neutralize our enemies with love," he added. "We do not deny them their needs."
Needham, the chief secretary of the Army's western corporation, insists the decision does not endorse homosexual lifestyles and does not condone same-sex unions. "We hold that same-sex relations (homosexual acts) are contrary to God's intention for the sexual life of human beings," Needham said on the group's Web site. He explained the organization grants benefits "as a right consistent with our policy for all employees, not as a reward for those employees whose personal and domestic lives conform to the pattern of our views on sexuality and marriage."
Earlier this year, the Salvation Army and the White House came under intense criticism for a proposed plan that would have exempted the Salvation Army from local anti-discrimination laws in exchange for its support for President Bush's "faith-based initiative." When the closed-door discussions became public, both sides backed off and the proposal was dropped.
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