Gay Marriages in California Surpass Those in
Massachusetts
Los Angeles Times
By Dan Morain
October 07, 2008
An estimated 11,000 couples have wed in the Golden State in the
first three months since such unions were legalized,
a study finds.
More gay couples were married in California in
the first three months that same-sex marriages were
legal than were married in the first four years it
was legal in Massachusetts, according to a new
study.
The data, released Monday by UCLA's Williams
Institute, found that an estimated 11,000 same-sex
couples were married in California from June 17,
when the California Supreme Court began allowing the
weddings, to Sept. 17.
As of spring, 10,385 same-sex couples had wed in
Massachusetts since the state legalized such unions
in May 2004, according to a study by the institute
released in July.
Next month, Californians will decide whether gay
couples can continue to marry when they vote on
Proposition 8, which would amend the state
Constitution to define marriage as between only a
man and a woman.
Predictably, the two sides in that battle had
dramatically different reactions to the study.
"People have waited for so long to be able to do
this. . . . I'm sure that is the reason for the big
response," said Stevie St. John, a spokeswoman for
the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center. She added that she
thought the huge number of marriages was "great."
Pastor Jim Garlow of Skyline Church in La Mesa,
who has been rallying voters to pass the
constitutional amendment, said: "The fact that there
are big numbers doesn't change the reality that it
is still bad for the country."
Garlow, who along with hundreds of other
Christians, is observing a fast until election day
as a way to show his support for the proposed
amendment, added: "There are enormous numbers of
people doing cocaine right now. . . . Simply because
large numbers of people are doing something does not
make it right."
Gary Gates, a demographer at the Williams
Institute, a think tank devoted to the study of
sexual orientation and the law, said the number of
marriages, though large, represents only about 10%
of the same-sex couples in California
"Who are these people getting married? What the
other studies tell you is they are people in pretty
long-term, stable relationships," he said.
There are more than 109,000 same-sex couples in
California, an increase of 19,000 since 2000,
according to a Williams Institute analysis of the
U.S. Census. Nearly a quarter of these households
have children -- and all together, there are more
than 50,000 children living in same-sex households.
There is no way to know exactly how many same-sex
marriages have been performed in California because
the state does not collect information on the sex of
couples who register to marry.
Gates said researchers arrived at their estimates
by comparing the number of marriages in each county
last year, before gay marriage was legal, with the
number this year. Any increase was assumed to be
from same-sex couples tying the knot.
The only exception is San Francisco, which is
keeping an exact tally of same-sex marriages. There
have been 2,708 from June 17 to Sept. 17.
Gates speculated that many of the marriages in
San Francisco and some other counties may be
attributed to out-of-state couples, because many of
the places with the biggest spikes in marriages --
Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco and Riverside
counties -- are top tourist destinations.
California and Massachusetts are the only two
states in the country to allow same-sex marriage.
And until recently, Massachusetts allowed only legal
residents to marry.
Also this month, the California Department of
Public Health said that it is changing the state's
marriage license form -- again.
After same-sex marriage became legal, the state
released forms that eliminated "bride" and "groom"
and replaced them with "Party A" and "Party B."
Many couples were offended by the change. One
couple filed a lawsuit demanding to be allowed to
identify themselves as bride and groom.
State officials refused to comment on the suit,
but the new forms, set to go into effect Nov. 17,
give couples the option of identifying themselves as
bride and groom.
Couples can also choose to identify themselves as
bride and bride or groom and groom. Or they can
leave the space blank.
Of course, if Proposition 8 is approved by
voters, the state may need to change the forms
again.
In a report filed with the secretary of state's
office, the No-on-8 campaign disclosed it had raised
$15.75 million by the end of last month, including
$1.36 million from donors giving less than $1,000.
The no-campaign has spent $14.7 million this year,
including $10.4 million on television advertising.
Among the major donors to No-on-8 were several
wealthy gay rights advocates; in addition, the
Service Employees International Union has given
$500,000 and the California Teachers Assn. $250,000.
The Yes-on-8 campaign had not filed its
disclosure by late Monday.