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    92 Days of Summer

    A week after DOMA dies, Dallas family takes road trip to monumental D.C. wedding

    Dawn McMullan
    Jul 7, 2013 | 11:12 am

    A few months ago, our friends Sue and Angie announced they were getting married while on their family vacation. They were spending a week in New York City and another in Washington, D.C., two places they could legally seal the deal. So, after 27 years together, why not?

    At first, it was just a small gathering with their teenaged sons. Then this family member wanted to come and this friend would be happy to fly in. Suddenly, it was a thing. And, of course, we were invited.

    My initial thought, after a quick consultation with Google maps, our bank account and calendar, was wow, that’s a 1,338-mile trip. Each way. We couldn’t afford to fly, at least not all four of us. Our two-week road trip vacation is in just a few weeks. Not an ideal time for my husband to take off of work. There were plenty of reasons we couldn’t make it happen.

    If they had been straight or DOMA and prejudice had never existed, things would’ve been different. Their wedding wouldn’t have been an add-on to a family vacation. It would’ve been an event all by itself.

    If they had been straight or DOMA and prejudice had never existed, things would’ve been different. They could’ve gotten married at our church in the M Streets. Or, actually, they would’ve gotten married 27 years ago when they fell in love. It wouldn’t have been an add-on to a family vacation. It would’ve been an event all by itself.

    But let’s let unconstitutional bygones be bygones. Within a couple of days, we figured out ways to make it work. Within another week, DOMA was history.

    When explaining to my 16-year-old son what the U.S. Supreme Court was considering these past few months, he paused for a moment to think about what it would mean if all our gay friends could be legally married. “We’d spend all our time going to weddings for the next year,” he said, only slightly exaggerating.

    Our friends John and Mario have been together for a decade. Mario wasn’t U.S. citizen when they met, which has caused a ridiculous amount of stress and legal maneuvering during their relationship. If they had been straight or DOMA and prejudice had never existed, things would’ve been different.

    Laura and Cabrina have been together for 17 years. Laura has significant medical issues and must have insurance. When she was laid off a few years ago, she had to pay ridiculous COBRA bills and rely on the kindness of pharmaceutical companies (known for their empathy) to get medicine she has to have. If they had been straight or DOMA and prejudice had never existed, things would’ve been different.

    Kristin and Connie have been together for six years. They have a 1 1/2-year-old son. Kristin wanted to stay home with him after he was born but couldn’t because she needed insurance to cover her next pregnancy. So she works and their baby goes to daycare. It isn’t the end of the world, but if they had been straight or DOMA and prejudice had never existed, things would’ve been different.

    Glenn and Jon have been together for five years. They got married three years ago in a civil ceremony in D.C. We didn’t know about it until recently. Few people did. Jon comes from a family of evangelical Arkansans. Enough said. If they had been straight or DOMA and prejudice had never existed, things would’ve been different.

    Paula and Cindy have been together for 10 years. They’ve thought about getting married but, becaise it hasn’t been a legal option, it wasn’t a priority. While still not legal in their state, there may now be some federal benefits to it. But, in their 50s and without children, is there a need? Are there actually more cons than pros?

    Marriage is a practical discussion that involves planning for their long-term health care more than legally celebrating that they’ve found their soul mate. If they had been straight or DOMA and prejudice had never existed, I believe things would’ve been different.

    My two sons standing there, witnessing the legal marriage of two women who are like second and third mothers to them, was the most important thing we could possibly be doing on a Tuesday afternoon.

    Craig and Monty are our boys’ godparents. Their first date was almost exactly 14 years ago. As I write this, they are celebrating their nine-year anniversary in Canada. At that point, their options were Canada or Massachusetts, the first state in the U.S. to legalize gay marriage just two weeks before their July 5, 2004, wedding. Now, 13 states have legalized gay marriage, 12 of them since 2008. We weren’t at Craig and Monty’s wedding. It was far away; the boys were 4 and 7 at the time. In retrospect, although I knew in my head it was legal, it felt symbolic.

    If they had been straight or DOMA and prejudice had never existed, things would’ve been different. Their wedding would not have been in a different country. Craig’s parents would’ve been there. We would’ve been there. We should’ve been there.

    As we were at Sue and Angie’s wedding. Being with them at 12:30 on a Tuesday in D.C., six days after DOMA became our country’s unfortunate history and not our unequal present was more than I could’ve imagined. I felt the monumental love of these two women and of all our gay friends who have fallen in love and built lives despite everything trying to stand in their way. I felt the monumental change in our country’s history.

    And, so much more importantly, so did my boys. The two of them standing there with two of their closest friends, witnessing the legal marriage of two women who are like second and third mothers to them, was the most important thing we could possibly be doing on a Tuesday afternoon.

    Like the journey of equality for women and African-Americans — of which I can only read about — this exchange of vows changes everything. Monumentally. To be there to witness it was something I could not fully grasp until I was in the moment.

    As he did at our wedding, my husband read one of his favorite poems at Sue and Angie’s ceremony, Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Sonnets from the Portuguese 43. It begins with, “How do I love thee? Let me count the ways,” and ends with, “I love thee with the passion put to use in my old griefs and with my childhood’s faith. I love thee with a love I seemed to lose with my lost saints. I love thee with the breath, smiles, tears, of all my life; and, if God choose, I shall but love thee better after death.”

    If they had been straight or DOMA and prejudice had never existed, things would’ve been different. But these words and these loves would not have been. That my boys know that — saw that on this special day and every day we are with all of these friends — means everything on this journey we’re all traveling together.

    Cabrina and Laura, getting married in Cape Cod, 2009.

    Photo by Allison Gilbert
    Cabrina and Laura, getting married in Cape Cod, 2009.
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    Park news

    New I-35 deck park in southern Dallas moves closer to spring 2026 debut

    Luciana Gomez
    Feb 20, 2026 | 1:14 pm
    Halperin Park
    Courtesy rendering
    Renderings for Halperin Park.

    A massive deck park spanning Interstate 35E in southern Dallas is set to open in late spring 2026. Called Halperin Park, the five-acre community space has been under construction since 2017 and will be completed in two phases:

    Phase One (finishing in late spring) will include the section from Ewing Avenue to Lancaster Avenue and will feature a pavilion, amphitheater, playground area, interactive fountains, a second level overlooking the Dallas Zoo and the highway, and a large event room for every dining and special events.

    Phase Two (to be completed over the next five years) will add the park section toward Marsalis Avenue, with an additional pavilion and extra gathering space.

    The project is being developed by the Southern Gateway Public Green Foundation and built by the Texas Department of Transportation. Funding comes from the North Central Texas Council of Governments, as well as the private Halperin Foundation, which donated $23 million in 2024 and secured naming rights.

    In January, the Dallas City Council approved spending up to $8 million to complete Phase One for spring completion.

    The public-private initiative will create $1 billion in economy impact over the next five years, according to a study by UNT Dallas.

    Halperin Park Rendering of Halperin ParkCourtesy rendering

    A park with purpose
    Developers say the park aims to integrate the west side of Oak Cliff, which was somewhat segregated with the construction of I-35 in Oak Cliff in the 1960s, leading to low-income communities and generational poverty.

    The project started nine years ago, when the Texas Department of transportation planned a reconstruction of I-35 and began gathering neighbors’ feedback. The result was a plan to widen bicycle and pedestrian lanes in the service roads alongside the highway, and to build a deck over the highway between Ewing and Marsalis avenues, adjacent to the Dallas Zoo. (Similar Klyde Warren Park's "deck park" concept.)

    While the project faced some skepticism at first, it later gained momentum as private supporters continued to join.

    “Forty percent of the Dallas population lives in South Dallas, yet this segment only accounts for 15 percent of the tax base,” says April Allen, President and CEO of the Southern Gateway Public Green Foundation, citing the opportunity to address the economic equality in the area through the development of the park and all the business it can bring.

    Halperin Park Rendering of Halperin Park.Courtesy rendering

    Neighborhood pride
    For Allen, this project is personal. The Toronto-born executive first moved to Dallas 22 years ago to work at Neiman Marcus, after getting her engineering degree in Canada and her MBA at Harvard. Oak Cliff felt like the right place for her as an intown neighborhood, with a confluency of cultures, local pride and an entrepreneurial spirit, as she describes it. Her first Realtor told her Oak Cliff was “not the right place for her." Instead of choosing a different neighborhood, Allen chose a new Realtor.

    She has lived on the same street in North Cliff since, now raising her two kids with her husband, an Oak Cliff native, whom she credits for her further understanding of the neighborhood, its roots and civic dynamics.

    Under Allen’s leadership, Halperin Park is focused on a community-first approach that provides support to the neighbors through programs around health and wellness, after-school activities, local food trucks and markets, and educational workshops to help expand homeownership and financial acumen.

    To highlight the history and culture of Oak Cliff, they will feature an annual Walk of Fame, lifting up the stories of those who contributed to Oak Cliff history, with the first one happening as part of the inauguration of the park, organizers say.

    They will provide their own 24-hour security team to ensure a safe place for families and kids, with clean and well-lit crosswalks.

    Given their proximity with the zoo, parking will be available on the East side of the park at the zoo site, with a walkway to the park. They are working on parking options for the West side.

    “We want to create a space for community growth and more business in the area," says Allen. "We are already seeing this come to life with projects such as East Dock, and we are excited for future investment that the park will bring."

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