Town Cracks Down On Unwed CouplesBLACK JACK, Mo., May 17, 2006
(CBS/AP) The city council in Black Jack, Mo., has rejected a measure allowing unmarried couples with multiple children to live together. The mayor said those who fall into that category could soon face eviction.
Olivia Shelltrack and Fondrey Loving were denied an occupancy permit after moving into a home in this St. Louis suburb because they have three children and are not married.
The town's planning and zoning commission proposed a change in the law, but the measure was rejected Tuesday by the city council in a 5-3 vote.
"I'm just shocked," Shelltrack said. "I really thought this would all be over, and we could go on with our lives."
Mayor Norman McCourt said starting Wednesday the city will begin trying to evict groups who do not fit into Black Jack’s definition of family, reports CBS affiliate KMOV-TV in St. Louis.
The current ordinance prohibits more than three people from living together unless they are related by "blood, marriage or adoption." The defeated measure would have changed the definition of a family to include unmarried couples with two or more children.
McCourt declined to be interviewed, but said in a statement that those who do not meet the town's definition of family could soon face eviction.
In the statement, McCourt said, "the city provides information about its occupancy permit requirements to anyone who requests it. ... As mayor, I am required by state law to uphold the laws of the city of Black Jack."
Black Jack's special counsel, Sheldon Stock, declined to say whether the city will seek to remove Loving and Shelltrack from their home.
Seriously, what the F$%K?!?

3 comments:
Wow... horseshit of the first degree... but then again, I suppose some good might come out of it... like the town becoming Ghostified.
Actually, many towns have these kind of laws. They were popular in the temperance days, as a way of preventing brothels. I know that a similar law was on the books in Fort Collins when I lived there, because a pack of my college student friends who wanted to rent a place together were refused a five bedroom house on the grounds that it violated the law for them all to live there together. I have also heard that the various Greek organizations at CSU have to file papers and be granted an exemption in order to have frat or sorority residences.
This particuilar version of the law is pretty strict, and in ordinary practice these ordinances aren't applied to couples with children. Could it be that the good Chritians of Black Jack, MO object to the fact that Mr. Loving is black and Ms. Shelltrack is white? Hmmm....
The moral of the story seems to be "don't live in the Bible Belt."
Can I get an amen?
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