Gay married couples could add tens of millions of dollars to the economy in Virginia in the span of three years if a federal appeals court upholds a recent ruling that overturned the state’s same-sex marriage ban, a new report has found.
Total spending on wedding arrangements and tourism would generate between $46 and $60 million to the state and local economies in the first three years if same-sex marriage becomes legal in Virginia, according to a report published this month by the Williams Institute at UCLA’s School of Law. An estimated 5,000 marriages in the first year alone would generate about $38 million in revenue to the economy. Half of the 14,244 gay couples who live in Virginia would wed during the first three years, according to the report.
A judge in February struck down Virgina’s constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage, which Virginia voters enacted in 2006, ruling that amendment violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. Courts in Utah and Oklahoma have also ruled similar bans unconstitutional. A three-judge panel in the Fourth U.S. Circuit of Appeals will hear arguments about the Virginia case — the judge in February issued a stay on the ruling — on May 13.
“This study confirms that all Virginians benefit from marriage for same-sex couples, not just the LGBT community,” Lee Badgett, an author of the study, said in a statement.
The spending on weddings could generate nearly 600 new jobs and add about $3 million in taxes to the Old Dominion State, the study also found.
Researchers based their findings on trends in Massachusetts and other states where same-sex marriage is legal, and from the 2010 U.S. Census data, the most recent national survey information available. The numbers, however, don’t include out-of-state gay couples who might travel to Virginia to marry.
State and federal courts continue to hear marriage equality cases. Just last week, news broke that the Proposition 8 lawyer who previously argued to uphold California’s ban on same-sex marriage has since changed his stance on the issue because one of his children is gay.
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