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NYC marriage bureau rebuffs same-sex couples

Verena Dobnik The Associated Press

Issue date: 2/13/09 Section: News
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Proponent of same-sex marriage chant on the steps of the  Manhattan Marriage Bureau after they were turned down for marriage license Thursday. Protesters sang
Proponent of same-sex marriage chant on the steps of the Manhattan Marriage Bureau after they were turned down for marriage license Thursday. Protesters sang "Love and Marriage" and chanted, "What do we want? Marriage! When do we want it? Now!," part of the 12th annual Freedom to Marry Week. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

NEW YORK (AP) - Hundreds of same-sex couples seeking to wed were turned away from marriage license counters around the nation Thursday, part of an annual protest that took on renewed urgency in light of recent setbacks in the gay marriage movement.

Activists in Manhattan wearing signs that said "Just Not Married" were part of a wave of demonstrations expected throughout the day at marriage bureaus or county clerks' offices from New York City to California, in communities large and small.

Matt Flanders, 37, of Brooklyn, participated with his 29-year-old partner, Will Jennings. Both wore gold engagement rings.

When he was denied a marriage license, Flanders said he told officials: "'I should be able to marry the person I love.' And they said, 'We can only offer you a domestic partnership.'"

Micah Stanek, 23, stood outside in a floor-length wedding veil after he and his partner were rejected. He said he moved to New York from San Francisco after gay marriage was outlawed in California on the November ballot.

"New York is especially important because the rest of the country follows what happens here," he said.

Outside the bureau, protesters sang "Love and Marriage" and chanted, "What do we want? Marriage! When do we want it? Now!" One man held a sign that read: "Love your husband? Let me love mine!"

The Valentine's week protests, part of the 12th annual Freedom to Marry Week, were considered especially important this year because they come in the wake of California's Proposition 8 vote that overturned gay marriage and just as New Yorkers look to their state Senate to pass legislation that could lead to legalized gay marriage.

In Augusta, Maine, on Thursday, dozens of proponents of gay marriage gathered outside the Maine House and Senate to distribute Valentine's Day cards while urging support for a bill to legalize same-sex marriage in the state.
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