05.28.08
California Same-Sex Weddings to Begin June 14 in Some Counties
Same-sex couples in some California counties will be able to marry as soon as June 14, the president of California’s county clerks association said.
Clerks would be authorized to hand out marriage licenses as soon as that date, which is a Saturday and exactly 30 days after the California supreme court ruled that gay marriage should be legal.
The court’s decisions typically
take effect after 30 days, barring further legal action.
It would be up to each county clerk to decide whether to open their offices to gay and lesbian couples on that Saturday or to wait until the following Monday.
Some clerks have said they would try to accommodate couples at the earliest possible date, depending on their staffing and anticipated demand, he said.
If the court’s decision does take effect on June 14, couples could, in theory, plan to obtain their licenses and take their vows at 12:01 a.m. that day.
An effort, however, is under way to stay the supreme court’s decision until voters can decide the issue with an initiative planned for the November ballot. The measure would overrule the justices’ decision and amend the state constitution to ban gay marriage.
Justices have until the ruling’s effective date to weigh the request, but could give themselves longer to consider it, attorneys have said. Another complicating factor is that the supreme court also directed a midlevel appeals court that upheld the state’s one man-one woman marriage laws a year ago to issue a new order legalizing same-sex marriage, and it’s not clear when the appeals court would comply.
Massachusetts is the only other state to legalize gay marriage, something it did in 2004. More than 9,500 same-sex couples in that state have wed.