Same-Sex Marriage Ruling Could Boost California’s Ailing Economy
Gay and Lesbian Times
June 19, 2008Marriages to generate 2,200 jobs and millions in tax
revenue for state
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – The flowers have been selected, the Veterans’
Memorial Center has been booked, and the three-piece band has been chosen.
The e-invitations have gone out and relatives are flying in. The brides –
and there will be two of them – might not have time to buy something new
to wear, but that’s OK.
Shelly Bailes and Ellen Pontac, who have been together for 34 years, do
not want to wait a day longer than necessary to tie the knot now that
California’s Supreme Court has legalized same-sex marriage. They had five
weeks to plan a June 21 reception for 250 people.
“We should have been ready, but we weren’t,” Pontac said with a laugh.
“We are taking care of all the details we can, and no matter what happens,
we know we will have good company and good music and food and drink.”
The same-sex marriage ruling could give a big, sudden boost to
California’s sputtering economy, as thousands of same-sex couples from
across the nation are expected to converge on the state when the decision
took effect Tuesday. Hotels, restaurants, florists and other wedding
services are reporting a flurry of business.
“The good news for California is that in the face of probably the worst
budget problems the state has ever faced, the LGBT wedding industry is
going to be a financial shot in the arm,” said Jeffrey Prang, mayor of
West Hollywood, a popular destination for gay travelers in Southern
California.
A study issued last week by UCLA’s Williams Institute for Sexual
Orientation and the Law projected that gay men and lesbians will spend
$684 million on cakes, photographers and other services over the next
three years unless voters reverse the high court’s ruling in the fall.
The researchers found that about half of the state’s more than 100,000
same-sex couples will get married during the next three years, and an
additional 68,000 out-of-state couples will travel to California to
exchange vows. The study estimated that over that period, same-sex
weddings will generate $64 million in tax revenue for the state, $9
million in marriage-license fees for counties, and some 2,200 jobs.
Rena Puebla, who makes wedding-cake figures that can be customized to
come in bride-bride and groom-groom pairs, said she has gone from selling
50 a day to 150 since the May 15 ruling.
“It’s unbelievable,” said Puebla, whose Costa Mesa company, Renellie
International, sells the cake toppers online. “People are just so excited
that there’s something like this out there for them.”
Puebla’s company designs a variety of single figurines and then pairs
them according to the customer’s wishes. Some bride figurines come in a
tailored skirt and tuxedo jacket instead of a big gown. “People can do
whatever they want because it’s not already stuck together,” Puebla said.
The possibility that the window for weddings could close after the
November election – when a constitutional amendment that would ban
same-sex marriage will appear on the ballot – has added to the rush to
wed. Also, the prospect of getting hitched in a hurry became even more
inviting when New York state announced recently that it would recognize
same-sex marriages performed in California and other jurisdictions.
Unlike Massachusetts, the only other state where same-sex couples can
wed, California does not have a residency requirement for marriage
licenses.
Gay-friendly destinations such as West Hollywood, Palm Springs and San
Francisco are not the only places saying “We do” to couples planning
long-awaited weddings. The California Travel and Tourism Commission posted
a special gay wedding page on its Web site last week listing spots in Napa
County, Yosemite National Park and comparatively conservative Orange
County that are offering wedding and honeymoon packages.
For the first time on June 10 the Golden Gate Business Association, a
gay and lesbian chamber of commerce in San Francisco, held a same-sex
wedding expo featuring bakers, videographers and other service providers.
Among them was Rom Silvas, a salesman for Simayof, a jewelry store that
was offering 40 percent off to couples who register to participate in a
mass in-store wedding ceremony scheduled for June 26.
“I just sold two rings yesterday to two ladies who are getting
married,” Silvas said. Asked who was officiating at the promotional
wedding, he said, “We’re not sure yet.”
Susannah Layton was at the expo, too, celebrating the launch of her new
same-sex wedding Web site, MyQueerWedding.com. Layton and two partners had
been thinking about creating the site for some time, but switched into
hyperdrive when the court’s decision came down. So far, she has 35
advertisers – “cakes and caterers to tuxedos and limos. And we definitely
are looking to expand,” Layton said.
Brian Siewert, co-owner of the Sonoma Orchid Inn in Guerneville, a
small town in Sonoma County wine country, said the region is already home
to a lot of gay-owned and gay-operated businesses, including his own,
which he runs with his partner.
“We’ve always had honeymoon getaways here in the Russian River Valley,
but it’s really nice that now they will be gay honeymoons this time,” he
said.
Pontac said that she is having a lot of fun planning her wedding and
that the rush has made certain decisions – such as what to serve – a
little easier.
“It’s amazing how when you have no time, it’s ‘Anything but gorgonzola
is fine,”” she said. |