tool name

close
tool goes here

Couples get early chance for legal same-sex marriage licenses

University Place resident Nancy Mellor was married March 28, 2009, during a ceremony witnessed by family members on Fox Island. Thursday, she and her partner will no longer have to concern themselves with this distinction as Washington becomes the seventh state to legally recognize same-sex marriage.

Published: Dec. 5, 2012 at 8:03 p.m. PSTUpdated: Dec. 6, 2012 at 6:43 a.m. PST
0 comments
Partners who will legally wed, Kariena Martonik, left, and Nancy Mellor, embrace at the Pierce County Auditor’s Office Wednesday. Mellor showed up at 7:30 a.m. to reserve a spot to apply for a marriage license Thursday. Auditor Julie Anderson said in a news release that she expects 150 couples to apply for a license Thursday. (DEAN J. KOEPFLER/Staff photographer)

University Place resident Nancy Mellor was married March 28, 2009, during a ceremony witnessed by family members on Fox Island.

It wasn’t legal in the eyes of the state. But it was in the eyes of the only person who mattered, partner Kariena Martonik.

Thursday the couple will no longer have to concern themselves with this distinction as Washington becomes the seventh state to legally recognize same-sex marriage after voters approved Referendum 74 last month.

“Now we can say we’re married, and people won’t say, ‘You can do that?’ ” Mellor said.

The couple still must go through some formalities to make their union legal. Mellor was first among several people who showed up before the doors opened at the Pierce County Auditor’s Office on Wednesday.

They were there to reserve a spot to become among the first same-sex couples in the county to obtain a marriage license Thursday. The county decided to hand out numbers a day earlier so couples didn’t have to camp overnight in their bid to make local history.

Gov. Chris Gregoire made the law official by signing Referendum 74 in a ceremony at the state Capitol later Wednesday.

Mellor, a 49-year-old mental health counselor, and Martonik, a 44-year-old textbook manager at Pierce College bookstore, will be the third couple to get their Pierce County license Thursday; the first two couples were selected ahead of Wednesday’s reservations.

“This is just a historic day,” Mellor said after an office employee gave her the No. 3 card. “It’s awesome to be part of this.”

As of closing Wednesday, 20 couples had reserved a spot, although others can show up Thursday morning without a reservation. Auditor Julie Anderson has estimated that 150 couples will visit the office Thursday to obtain a license. The office will offer extended hours Thursday and Friday and open over the weekend to accommodate an expected rush for licenses.

Mellor showed up at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday, expecting a long line of people. She was surprised to find no one ahead of her. Martonik, who had to work, stopped by later.

Mellor was accompanied by friends Zara Lujan, 27, and Lizzie Munday, 30, both of Tacoma. Mellor and Martonik, who are both ordained ministers, will preside over Lujan and Munday’s wedding in September.

Mellor, who co-founded Oasis, a Pierce County support group for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth, said she’d been optimistic Washington would legalize same-sex marriage, while her partner had been more pessimistic.

The No. 3 card they picked up Wednesday morning is significant in more ways than one. On Sunday, following the three-day waiting period required by state law, the couple will reunite with the officiant who presided over their wedding three years ago.

The couple will have a small ceremony at Lake Tapps to sign the wedding certificate that serves as legal proof of their union. Mellor’s father, Dean, and Martonik’s brother, Kris, will serve as witnesses.

“For us, this is important, but not as important as our marriage ceremony,” Mellor said.

But the tears in Martonik’s eye as she left the auditor’s office with her future legal spouse belied that.

For her, Thursday means it may get easier to hold Mellor’s hand without having to think about it. It means others may not have to see their friends bullied due to their sexual orientation, the way she has. It means others may not have to mourn friends lost to suicide, as she has.

It means the struggle for acceptance may get a little easier.

“It’s emotional for me because I honestly didn’t think this day would come, not in my lifetime,” Martonik said. “It’s actually happening. The world is changing.”

Christian Hill: 253-274-7390

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

CONTESTS

Similar stories

  • More than 2,400 gay couples have married in Wash.

    More than 2,400 gay and lesbian couples have gotten married in Washington state since the state's voter-approved same-sex marriage law took effect last December, according to numbers released Thursday by the state.

  • Finally, a celebration

    Nancy Nickelson and Gayle Stringer will cherish Dec. 10, 2012. That's the day they legally got married.

  • Calif. readies for possible return of gay marriage

    Planning a party for thousands of people would be a challenge under the best of circumstances. Now imagine trying to pull off such a gathering without knowing what day it should happen or if there even will be cause for celebration.

  • Our Voice: Richland florist must follow anti-discrimination laws when it comes to same-sex marriage

    It's not often you see a flower shop turn away an order for wedding flowers.

    Weddings are big business. A quick scan of wedding websites -- of which there are many -- shows a formula of reserving 10 percent of the wedding budget for flowers. On average, that's $1,500 to $2,000.

    So it came as a surprise to a longtime customer of a Richland florist when the owner turned down his order for wedding flowers.

  • Richland florist sues state for violating her religious freedom

    A florist facing lawsuits from the Washington attorney general and the American Civil Liberties Union for refusing to provide flowers for a same-sex wedding has filed her own lawsuit against the state for violating her religious beliefs.