NY marks 1 year of gay marriage, impact unclear
Topics: From the Wires, News
In this Tuesday, July 17, 2012 photo, Donald Grandchamp, left, and David Janulis, who were married last year in Albany, N.Y., pose in their driveway at their home in Glenmont, N.Y. Their initials are on the license plate. New York lawmakers approved the gay marriage measure after weeks of intensive lobbying and maneuvering by Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The vote was a nail biter, with four Republican state senators whose support made way for its passage revealing their positions at the last moment. Late on the night of June 24, 2011, a Friday, New York became the sixth and largest state to sanction gay marriage, more than doubling the number of Americans living with a same-sex marriage law. The New York law took effect a month later with a whirlwind of weddings that started in the minutes after midnight. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)(Credit: AP)NEW YORK (AP) — One year ago, New York became the largest and most influential state where gay marriage is legal, raising supporters’ hopes that it would boost national momentum and pump money into the state with a flurry of weddings from Manhattan to Niagara Falls.
As the anniversary nears Tuesday, the law’s effects are noticeable if hard to measure.
Thousands of same-sex couples have wed across New York, but it’s unclear just how many, partly because marriage applicants aren’t required to identify themselves by gender. The wedding business is up, but some planners in New York City say it’s not booming.
And while President Barack Obama announced support this year for gay marriage, no state has enacted a law allowing it since New York. And opponents note that North Carolina voters banned it.
California, which is almost double the size of New York, has been tied up in court over the issue since at least 2004 when the mayor of San Francisco ordered city clerks to issue licenses to gay couples and the subsequent popular vote in 2008 to ban same-sex marriages.
One thing is clear: legalizing gay marriage in the cultural, media and business hub of New York City amped up the national spotlight on the issue.
“Do you know I still have people come up to me and congratulate me on my wedding?” said Carol Anastasio, who was among the first bouquet-waving, teary-eyed newlyweds when New York legalized gay marriage July 24, 2011. News crews swarmed Anastasio and Mimi Brown outside the city clerk’s office in Manhattan.
“I work in a public park so I’m outdoors a lot and people will be walking a dog: ‘I thought that was you! I saw you in the paper! That’s great!’” said Anastasio, a city parks manager. “It’s really amazing how it just continues.”
New York inked its gay marriage law with a nail-biting state Senate vote on the night of June 24, 2011, after weeks of intensive lobbying by Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Exactly one month later, New York became the sixth and largest state to allow gay weddings — more than doubling the number of same-sex couples eligible to wed.
The new law was ushered in with a whirlwind of weddings that started in the minutes after midnight from Niagara Falls to New York City.




Comments
0 Comments