Archive for the Category ◊ In the Media ◊

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• Monday, March 29th, 2010

By Staff Writer, PinkNews.co.uk • March 29, 2010 – 15:26

One of the British Army’s oldest regiments, the Household Cavalry, has celebrated its first civil partnership.

Lance Corporal James Wharton, 23, who was the first gay soldier to be featured on the cover of Soldier magazine last year, tied the knot with air steward Thom McCaffrey, 21.

The couple held their ceremony on Saturday, on the same day that Europe minister Chris Bryant and Jared Cranney became the first gay couple to hold their civil partnership in parliament.

They had their civil partnership at Old Marylebone Town Hall in London, followed by a reception at the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment’s Knightsbridge barracks.

L/Cpl Wharton told the Independent: “The entire regiment has been really supportive.

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• Saturday, March 27th, 2010

By Staff Writer, PinkNews.co.uk • March 27, 2010 – 18:44

The gay Europe minister Chris Bryant has held the first civil partnership ceremony to take place in the Houses of Parliament.

He entered into a civil partnership with Jared Cranney in a ceremony in the members’ dining room of the House of Commons earlier today.

Up until now, gay MPs were unable to tie the knot in the Houses of Parliament like their straight colleagues. This was because ceremonies took place within the Chapel of the Palace of Westminster, and at present, houses of worship can not conduct civil partnership ceremonies.

The Speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow obtained a licence from Westminster city council to hold the services in the Palace of Westminster. This means that members of the public will also be entitled to conduct civil partnerships and civil marriage ceremonies too, with slots allocated via a ballot.

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• Monday, March 22nd, 2010

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(Enlarge) On the first day that Washington recognized marriages of same-sex couples, the Rev. Lorilyn Candy Holmes, left, and the Rev. Elder Darlene Garner, right, from Laurel, walked down the aisle at the Human Rights Campaign building as they were married by the Rev. Dwayne Johnson, pastor of Metropolitan Community Church, where they both serve. (Staff photo by Matt Roth)

After being legally married last week on a historic day in Washington, two Laurel women are in the throes of planning a more traditional wedding to celebrate their union a second time.

Mexico will be the locale for the repeat proclamation of love by Darlene Garner and Lorilynn “Candy” Holmes, one of the first couples to marry March 9 under the District of Columbia’s new same-sex marriage law.

“It surprised me how liberating it felt to get married,” said Garner, who proposed to Holmes on New Year’s Eve.

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Category: In the Media  | 2 Comments
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• Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Terrance Health, left, and Rick Imirowicz exchange rings as Rev. Robert Hardies officiates during their wedding at All Souls Unitarian Church on the first day same-sex couples are legal to wed under a new law March 9, 2010.Terrance Health, left, and Rick Imirowicz exchange rings as Rev. Robert Hardies officiates during their wedding at All Souls Unitarian Church on the first day same-sex couples are legal to wed under a new law March 9, 2010. (Getty)
Rick Imirowicz and Terrance Heath

Same-Sex Couple
Wednesday, March 10, 2010; 1:00 PM

With the issuing of the first marriage licenses to same-sex couples Tuesday, the District follows five states — from Iowa to Massachusetts — in allowing gay couples to marry. Same-sex couples were first able to apply for licenses in the District last Wednesday but, like all couples, had to follow the city’s three-day waiting period before getting hitched.

Rick Imirowicz and Terrance Heath, who were married Tuesday, were online Wednesday, March 10, at 1 p.m. ET to discuss the new law in the District and what it means to them and others in the GLBT community and the nation.

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• Thursday, March 11th, 2010

By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON. D.C. (AP) – One gay couple met on a Star Trek fan site, another dancing at a country western bar. Some have been together for months, others more than a decade.

About 150 pairs had something in common March 3, though: applying for wedding licenses on the first day same-sex unions became legal in the nation’s capital.

The mood at the marriage bureau inside the city’s Moultrie Courthouse was celebratory. Couples clapped, called out “Congratulations” and cupcakes and tulips were handed out. One family said it was important to show up the first day.

“It sets a good example,” said district resident Christine Burkhart, who married Denise Gavin in a ceremony in 2006 in Washington.

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• Thursday, March 11th, 2010
Gay Couples Wed in Washington D.C.

Date: Wednesday, March 10, 2010, 6:01 am
By: Jessica Gresko, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — One bride wore a black suit, the other had on a white one with rhinestones. They walked down the aisle to Billy Joel’s “Just the Way You Are” and kissed after the pastor pronounced them “legally married.”

The Rev. Darlene Garner, 61, and the Rev. Candy Holmes, 53, were among the first same-sex couples to marry in Washington on Tuesday, when the district became the sixth place in the country to conduct the unions.

“You have been in love, and you have recognized it all along. But today, the love that you have recognized in your heart is recognized by the District of Columbia,” the Rev. Dwayne Johnson told the couple.

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• Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

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• Tuesday, March 09th, 2010

Sign the Petition Now!

Washington, D.C. has now joined five states in allowing same-sex couples to marry. Other states have legal protections for domestic partnerships, civil unions, or recognize same-sex spouses who have married in another state.

Yet all same-sex couples are still denied the full federal rights of marriage – hospital visitation, Social Security benefits, equal treatment under U.S. immigration laws, the right to take leave to care for a spouse, and more.

This civil rights struggle is simply about day-to-day life. Two people who are in committed, loving relationships should be able to protect each other with basic legal rights and safeguards.

More than a million people have already signed this petition. Sign below and help us reach 2 million!

After you’ve signed the petition, you’ll have an opportunity to send a note of congratulations to some of Washington’s newest newlywed couples!

Sign the Petition Now!

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• Tuesday, March 09th, 2010

Darlene Garner (L) and Candy Holmes embrace after they exchanged marriage vows during their wedding ceremony at the Human Rights Campaign building in Washington on March 9, 2010. In December 2009, the DC Council approved a bill that would allow for same-sex marriages to be performed in the District. Today, same-sex couples were able to obtain marriage licenses they applied for last week.

Photo Credit: UPI/Alexis C. Glenn

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• Tuesday, March 09th, 2010

‘I do’ in DC: Same-sex couples wed in Washington
By JESSICA GRESKO (AP) – 1 hour ago

WASHINGTON — One bride wore a knee-length lace dress and pearls. The other bride wore a yellow shirt and white suit. And when a pastor pronounced them “partners in life this day and for always” Tuesday, they hugged and smiled in front of wedding guests and nearly a dozen TV cameras and reporters.

On the first day same-sex couples could marry in Washington, brides Angelisa Young and Sinjoyla Townsend were the first of three couples taking the plunge in morning ceremonies at the offices of the Human Rights Campaign, which does advocacy work on gay, lesbian and transgender issues. Other ceremonies were planned throughout the day.

“Today was like a dream for me,” Young said.

The Rev. Darlene Garner married her partner, the Rev. Candy Holmes, both of Metropolitan Community Churches, a Christian group that primarily serves the gay and lesbian community.

“Equality and justice for all now includes us,” Garner said.

Fifteen licenses were picked up in the first hour the marriage bureau was open and two couples quickly got married and returned to pick up their certificates, courthouse spokeswoman Leah Gurowitz said. More couples were also coming Tuesday to apply for licenses.

Rebecca and Delia Taylor picked up their license early Tuesday and immediately were married outside the courthouse by a minister friend. The couple said they long ago exchanged rings and considered themselves married. Still, they were grinning after picking up their certificate back inside the courthouse following the ceremony.

“We’ve referred to each other as wives,” Rebecca Taylor said. “It’s just a legal document, so if anything happens to one of us, we have rights.”

But Delia Taylor said she found it moving to recite the vows. “My parents have a wonderful marriage,” she said.

Young and Townsend married in a room with about 100 guests sitting on white chairs and standing next to bouquets of white snapdragons and yellow chrysanthemums, roses and carnations. A cellist played before the ceremony, and cream and gray programs announced the names of the three pairs along with: “Congratulations to the couples on this historic day.”

D.C. bakery Cakelove supplied a three-tiered butter-cream frosted cake with a fresh strawberry filling for each couple.

About 150 couples were eligible to pick up marriage licenses Tuesday after applying on the first day the licenses were made available. Many of them stood in line for four or more hours last Wednesday. Townsend and Young were the first in line that day.

The District of Columbia is the sixth place in the country permitting same-sex unions. Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont also issue same-sex couples licenses.

Couples had a variety of plans for their ceremonies. One couple planned to marry Tuesday at All Souls Church, the Unitarian Universalist house of worship where Mayor Adrian Fenty signed the bill legalizing the unions in December. District residents Eva Townsend and Shana McDavis-Conway said they were planning a wedding Tuesday by their plot in a community garden, where they have grown carrots and potatoes.

Other couples said they already had ceremonies and would simply wed at the courthouse, which has space for about 15 people in a ceremony room. Most of those celebrations will take place during the weeks of March 22 and March 29, courthouse spokeswoman Leah Gurowitz said.

Normally, the courthouse hosts four to six weddings a day, but over the next several weeks they are expecting 10 to 12 per day because of the demand for same-sex ceremonies. Some courtrooms and judge’s chambers may be used for the ceremonies, with the couple’s OK. The court’s official marriage booklet has been updated so that the ceremony will end by pronouncing the couple “legally married” as opposed to “husband and wife.”

Associated Press writer Sarah Karush contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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