bcla
On our rugged Eastern foothills.....
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2012
- Messages
- 25,755
I forgot, you can also get time off if you do not want to get married but do want a registered partnership (no idea what this is called in English), to put to paper that you are a couple without officially getting married.
Of course you would discuss with your work when you would do this. You do have to let the company know, it is not that you can't show up at work and then call "Oh getting married today, won't be in LOL." That you are entitled to get those day off, doesn't mean that it is without discussion or notice.
And I think it is a fact in a lot of countries that married or registered couples get (tax) benefits single people do not get. Same as parents have certain benefits childless/childfree people do not get. Not fair, but I have a feeling we are slowly moving towards more equality. We are just not there yet.
And being single & childfree has other benefits, I can travel in off season, I do not have to discuss anything with a partner, not deal with teachers. That saves a lot of stress
Life is never 100% fair or equal for everyone, but to me, that doesn't mean that others shouldn't get benefits I can't get /won't use. It is good some benefits exist. It doesn't hurt me when my colleague gets 2 days more in one year. We are equal the rest of our years at the company.
You can also turn the argument around. That when getting married does come out of PTO, a married person can argue that he/she gets less time off than a single person, because the wedding is an extra day off they can't use for a holiday or something else. No perfect solution here either.![]()
At least in the United States we call it a registered domestic partnership.
There were some interesting wrinkles. Back when same-sex marriage became required nationally, one state automatically elevated (all) domestic partnerships to marriages, although there might have been an opportunity to decline. The tax benefits might have been different and may still be. The US federal government doesn't recognize domestic partnerships, so taxes are filed under different categories for federal vs state (when a state recognizes partnerships to be equivalent to marriage for tax filings).
https://sco.ca.gov/Files-PPSD/FAQs_Domestic_Partnerships.pdf