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Meg York

Senior Policy Counsel, Director of LGBTQ+ Family Law & Policy at Family Equality Council

Meg York joined Family Equality as Senior Policy Counsel & Director of LGBTQ+ Family Law and Policy in 2023. In this role, Meg advances a proactive agenda for family formation, expansion, and recognition; lobbies in support of legislative and policy changes at all levels of government that are beneficial to and affirming of LGBTQ+ families; drafts and advocates for model family-inclusive legislation; and provides legislative drafting and other technical assistance to national, state, and local partners and elected officials. Of the Policy Department’s priority areas, Meg specifically focuses on family formation and protection. Before joining Family Equality, Meg was a Professor of Law at Vermont Law and Graduate School (VLGS) and Director/Lead Attorney of the Family Law Project at VLGS’s Legal Clinic. There, Meg served the legal needs of vulnerable Vermonters while simultaneously teaching students how to practice law both inside and outside of the courtroom. Her practice areas included working with LGBTQ+ Vermonters, representing children, assisting victims of domestic violence, and providing legal services to populations with limited resources. Throughout her legal career, Meg’s primary focus has been on LGBTQ+ advances and support of the LGBTQ+ community. To that end, Meg represented LGBTQ+ clients free of charge and supported LGBTQ+ law students. Meg helped clients establish and protect their legal rights to their children through policy, procedure, and litigation. Notably, Meg argued and won several cases that changed the legal landscape for all LGBTQ+ people in Vermont. She successfully appealed a Vital Records decision to deny a couple the ability to use an X gender marker on an initial birth certificate, resulting in the first non-binary birth certificate in the state. Meg secured parentage for a non-genetic father, arguing that the marital presumption should apply despite the law’s discriminatory language that excluded gay men from the marriage presumption. Before her professorship at VLGS, Meg worked as a family law attorney in Windham County, Vermont, representing clients in divorce, parentage, custody, and adoption proceedings. She also supported the specific needs of the LGBTQ+ community. Meg has worked as a contract juvenile defense attorney representing children and parents in abuse and neglect cases. Her background also includes working with various nonprofits focused on LGBTQ+ rights, social justice, racial equity, rural advocacy, and animal welfare issues. Meg has published numerous articles on legal advocacy and LGBTQ+ rights.

Meg was named LGBTQ+ Bar Association’s Top 40 Lawyers Under 40. Meg is committed to providing high-quality legal advocacy to the most vulnerable, and to making law accessible to all. When she is not working, Meg enjoys spending time with her wife and three children in Vermont’s great outdoors.