Gay marriage: Couples from across state descend on San Francisco
San Francisco will resume performing gay marriages Saturday morning, and officials are bracing for big crowds.
Line for marriage licenses at San Francisco City Hall beginning to grow Saturday morning after #prop8 ruling.@LANow pic.twitter.com/6PuN5EuWxu— Joe Serna, LAT (@JosephSerna) June 29, 2013
While Southern California county clerks won’t begin same-sex unions into Monday, San Francisco is open this weekend. Officials expected couples from the city as well as from the rest of California to get hitched.
Adding to the lure, the annual gay pride festival is scheduled for Sunday in San Francisco.
Katie Pomerantz and Mikaela Pollock were among those who planned to attend, and maybe tie the knot. They decided on a whim Friday morning that they would head to San Francisco. After the two landmark decisions from the Supreme Court on Wednesday, they couldn’t miss what was sure to be a jubilant gay pride celebration in the city.
“We just thought, ‘We’ve got to there,’ ” Pomerantz said.
When news broke Friday afternoon that the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals had lifted its stay on same-sex marriage in California and that ceremonies could resume effective immediately, they were thrilled.
“I’ve been waiting for my wedding band,” Pomerantz said. The couple had held a wedding ceremony in front of friends and family in 2011 but promised to wear their engagement rings until they could legally marry.
San Francisco and Sacramento counties extended their hours late into Friday evening to accommodate the demand for same-sex marriage licenses. San Francisco quickly saw lines form.
The appeals court order lifting the ban was made public about 3:30 p.m. Friday.
Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/Clerk Dean Logan said he received a call from Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris at 4:07 p.m., informing him that marriage licenses were to be issued immediately. Couples who called were told they could obtain a license if they did so by 5 p.m. Keyser said he saw at least a dozen other people turned away.
The office will reopen at 8 a.m. Monday, according to county officials.
Only one marriage license was issued in Los Angeles County on Friday, for Proposition 8 plaintiffs Paul Katami and Jeff Zarrillo of Burbank, who were to be wed by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa in City Hall on Friday evening.
“We did not know the decision was coming today,” said Logan, adding that the county was preparing to offer expanded access to civil ceremony services for at least 60 days.
“There’s a lot to be happy about, and we certainly share in that happiness. We just want to be sure that our job is done correctly and that we have adequate resources to serve the public.”
Orange County will begin marriages Monday.
San Bernardino County did not issue any same-sex wedding licenses Friday because the assessor-recorder-county clerk’s office did not receive official word until 5:10 p.m., after the offices had closed.
“We will commence with the issuance of marriage licenses to same-sex couples on Monday ... and will also perform same-sex marriages on that day,” the office’s Dan Harp said in an email.
The appeals court bypassed a normal waiting period in lifting a hold on a trial judge’s order that declared Proposition 8 unconstitutional.
“It couldn’t come a moment too soon,” said Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, who sparked the legal effort for gay marriage in California when he was San Francisco mayor.
“What extraordinary timing, right before [gay] pride weekend,” Newsom said. “ All that time, all the struggle, and the moment has arrived.”
Supporters of Proposition 8 were furious that the 9th Circuit acted before the normal waiting period. ProtectMarriage, the sponsors of the ballot measure, has 25 days from the ruling to ask for reconsideration.
“It is part and parcel of the utter lawlessness in which this whole case has been prosecuted, said Chapman Law professor John Eastman, a supporter of Proposition 8. “Normally, courts let the parties kind of pursue their legal remedies before they issue a mandate.”
He said the 25-day period for asking the Supreme Court to reconsider still applied and a rehearing, though extremely unlikely, remained a technical possibility.
“Tonight it is chaos and lawlessness, and anyone who is concerned about the rule of law ought to be deeply troubled by what happened here,” the constitutional law professor said.
Andy Pugno, general counsel for ProtectMarriage, expressed astonishment and dismay.
“I am not sure what we do at this moment,” he said. “It is 4:30 p.m. on a Friday. I am not sure what can be done at this point. This is beyond belief. I don’t think anybody expected this. The Supreme Court decision is not even final, and yet the 9th Circuit is rushing forward.”
ALSO:
Sacramento same-sex couples race to wed: ‘History, baby!’
California holds first gay wedding since 2008, in San Francisco
L.A. gay couple upset they can’t get marriage license till Monday
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.