Officials call for committee member’s removal
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- County human relations officials are calling for the
removal of a city committee member who they suspect is trying to sabotage
the group’s goal of bridging gaps between differing cultures.
But leaders closer to home see the resulting controversy as an
opportunity to finally delve into “tough issues” that are often glossed
over.
Rusty Kennedy, the executive director of the Orange County Human
Relations Commission, said it appeared that Costa Mesa Human Relations
Committee member Allan Mansoor regularly posts comments on a Web site
that are offensive to Latinos, homosexuals and immigrants and that he
should be removed from the committee.
Kennedy and members of his staff started to monitor the Costa
Mesa-focused Web site, located at
groups.yahoo.com/groups/ConcernedCostaMesaCitizens, after an organized
group of residents called to question the appointments of three Costa
Mesa Human Relations Committee members based on allegedly racist and
homophobic posts.
Resident Mira Ingram spoke at both last week’s Human Relations
Committee meeting and Monday’s City Council meeting regarding posts by
committee members Mansoor, Joel Faris and Janice Davidson, which she
called offensive and intolerant.
Mansoor, Faris and Davidson have consistently denied those
accusations.
Judging from Mansoor’s posts -- which include copies of articles that
condemn the homosexual lifestyle and original contributions that tout
immigrant assimilation -- the city committee would have more success
without him, Kennedy said.
The most important role of a human relations committee is to establish
a rapport with various communities to protect their rights, Kennedy said,
adding that Mansoor does not appear to have that same goal in mind.
“It appears that, unfortunately, the City Council has appointed the
kind of person who is more interested in fanning the flames than
extinguishing them,” Kennedy said.
Human Relations Committee member John Rule, who founded the Gay
Community Center of Orange County 30 years ago, agreed with Kennedy and
also asked that Mansoor step down. If not, Rule said he will formally
request that the City Council remove him.
“We don’t need anyone on a city committee that promotes hate to our
community or any other group of people in our city,” Rule said.
Mansoor, who was appointed to the committee in April and is a
candidate for City Council, defended his involvement with the group,
saying he offers a more conservative viewpoint that should also be heard
and appreciated by those with differing opinions.
The point of the Human Relations Committee is to “encourage the
interaction, sharing, and understanding of each culture’s riches,”
Mansoor said, quoting from the city’s Web site, and adding that he thinks
he is simply bringing another opinion to the table.
“I don’t feel that expressing my viewpoints is grounds for removal,”
Mansoor said. “Where is the tolerance and understanding for my point of
view?”
Councilwoman Libby Cowan, who is a lesbian, said she is the first to
disagree with some of Mansoor’s more conservative opinions but said he
can support the committee’s mission, albeit by different means.
“I think you have a group of people who are very conservative in their
social views and others who are more progressive,” Cowan said about the
members of the committee. “It is my belief that every single person,
regardless of their legal or economic status, race or ethnicity are
valuable members of the Costa Mesa community, and we need to embrace
everyone.”
Mansoor’s membership on the committee, and the resulting controversy,
will ultimately be good for the community because it has sparked an
essential dialogue about diversity, Cowan said.
Cowan added that the Human Relations Committee has been ineffective
for the past six years -- so ineffective that the council considered
cutting it two years ago. As a result of Ingram speaking out, the
committee is finally scratching the surface of a number of social issues
that have plagued the city.
“If we can get past the rhetoric and the hurt feelings -- if we can
get past this initial blow up -- I think that, in the long run, this will
be a good thing for our community,” Cowan said.
Cowan said she hopes that not only members of the committee but the
community as a whole will embark upon dialogues and open their minds to
differing opinions.
She cautioned residents about using inflammatory labels such as
“racist” or “homophobic.” She also said that those whose views are being
questioned should not react in a knee-jerk fashion, rather ask what about
their behavior has been perceived as “racist” or intolerant and work to
eliminate that perception.
“It is not a debate. There is no right or wrong. It is simply a
conversation,” Cowan said. “You don’t have to agree with [the person], or
even accept [the person], but you do have to understand that [they] are a
person of value in this community.”
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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