Carroll County?s divorce rate outpaces state, nation?s averages

Published September 13, 2006 4:00am ET



Experts attribute Carroll County?s high divorce rate to an increase in the number of couples living together before marriage.

More than half of all first marriages nationwide are preceded by living together, but those who live together are more likely to break up after marriage, according to Rutgers University?s State of Our Unions 2006 report, a nonpartisan initiative that researches marriage and educates the public on the social and economic conditions affecting marital success.

In Carroll County, 70 percent of couples who were married in fiscal 2005 were living together at the time of marriage, according to the circuit court clerk?s office.

Carroll?s average of 50.6 divorces per 100 marriages is higher than state and national figures of 42.9 and 47.5, respectively.

Del. Tanya Shewell, R-District 5A, co-sponsored a bill this year with Baltimore City Del. Curt Anderson, D-District 43, that would extend the waiting period for a marriage license to become effective from the second calendar day to the 30th calendar day after the license is issued if the couple does not submit a certificate verifying that the pair has completed a premarital preparation course.

The bill never made it out of committee, but Shewell said she and Anderson are considering crafting another bill next year that would give an income tax reduction for couples who complete a premarital preparation course.

“Everybody is going to have problems, but if you know how to deal with them, you can keep your marriage intact,” Shewell said.

In Carroll, a total of 524 couples split last year, compared with 522 in 2004 and 467 in 2003.

With numbers like those, “we can?t take for granted [Carroll?s] conservative roots,” said resident Amy Gilford, referring to Carroll?s Republican-dominated voters.

Gilford runs Carroll County Marriage Savers ? a faith-based, nonprofit that organizes counseling and marriage preparation courses with the aim of lowering divorce rates ? with her parents, Bill and Anne McKenna.

Bill McKenna said higher divorce numbers may reflect a growing population.

The family also pointed to the higher instances of cohabitation, or unmarried men and womenliving together and having a sexual relationship, as a factor that hurts the chances of marriages lasting nationwide.

By the numbers

» Anne Arundel

2003

Marriages: 3,633

Divorces: 2,079

2004

Marriages: 3,615

Divorces: 2,025

2005

Marriages: 3,476

Divorces: 1,729

» Baltimore City

2003

Marriages: 5,263

Divorces: 2,669

2004

Marriages: 5,078

Divorces: 2,537

2005

Marriages: 4,940

Divorces: 2,433

» Baltimore County

2003

Marriages: 5,423

Divorces: 3,127

2004

Marriages: 5,354

Divorces: 2,979

2005

Marriages: 5,872

Divorces: 3,124

» Carroll

2003

Marriages: 942

Divorces: 467

2004

Marriages: 1,003

Divorces: 522

2005

Marriages: 992

Divorces: 524

» Harford

2003

Marriages: 1,448

Divorces: 792

2004

Marriages: 1,476

Divorces: 798

2005

Marriages: 1,466

Divorces: 822

» Howard

2003

Marriages: 1,590

Divorces: 929

2004

Marriages: 1,559

Divorces: 939

2005

Marriages: 1,608

Divorces: 898

Source: Baltimore City and Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Carroll, Harford and Howard counties? Clerk of the Circuit Courts

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