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Gary Seronko, left, and husband Curtis Rathmeier get a hug from the Rev. Peg Esperanza after their brief wedding on the steps of the Polk County Administration Building in Des Moines, Iowa, on Monday.
Gary Seronko, left, and husband Curtis Rathmeier get a hug from the Rev. Peg Esperanza after their brief wedding on the steps of the Polk County Administration Building in Des Moines, Iowa, on Monday.
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DES MOINES, Iowa — Same-sex couples in Iowa began holding hastily planned weddings Monday as the state became the third to allow gay marriage, a leap that even some supporters find hard to grasp in the nation’s heartland.

Within hours of a state Supreme Court ruling legalizing gay marriage taking effect, several same-sex couples had exchanged vows on the steps of the Polk County Administrative Building.

“It’s not very romantic, is it?” Melisa Keeton joked, referring to the location of the ceremony and the media attention, before marrying Shelley Wolfe.

The couple were allowed to wed after getting a judge to waive the state’s three- day waiting period. The waiver was granted after the couple claimed the wait was stressful on Keeton, who is pregnant and due in August.

On April 3, the Iowa justices upheld a lower court ruling that rejected a state law restricting marriage to a union between a man and a woman. The decision added Iowa to the list of states where gay marriage is legal, joining Massachusetts and Connecticut. A Vermont law allowing gay marriage will take effect in September.

Officials said the Polk County recorder’s office had received 82 marriage applications from same-sex couples by 4 p.m.

One of them was Alicia Zacher, 24, and Jessica Roach, 22, who waited in a misting rain to enter the office and file their application. They later got a waiver and planned to get married as soon as possible after seeing how California voters last year reinstated a ban on same-sex marriage.

“You just never know when they’ll try to take it away,” Roach said.

A poll by the University of Iowa taken just before the high court’s ruling showed 26 percent of Iowans support gay marriage.

That number rose to more than 50 percent when people were asked if they supported either gay marriage or civil unions.

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