Committee faces two hot topics
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Lolita Harper
The city’s Human Relations Committee will hold a special meeting
tonight to address in greater detail two issues raised by a vocal
group of activists that has rocked City Hall in recent weeks with
allegations of intolerance by city leaders.
The Costa Mesa Human Relations Committee will specifically discuss
the allegedly contentious arrest of a city resident during a July 4
protest at Niketown and a request to close streets and waive fees for
the 2002 Orange County Dyke March.
Howard Perkins, a city staffer who serves as the liaison for the
committee, said committee members wanted a chance to review the
details of the Dyke March to make a formal recommendation to the City
Council before council members take action on it next week.
Officials from the Orange County Dyke March, a Garden Grove-based
group, have filed for permits to hold a special event around Lions
Park from noon to 8 p.m. Aug. 17. Organizers are asking for a waiver
of up to $4,669.75 in city fees, a staff report shows. They are also
asking that sections of three streets be closed, including Harbor
Boulevard, Pomona Avenue and 18th Street.
Members of the Orange County Residents’ Council and other
independent residents have voiced support for fee waivers for the
march, saying the event will demonstrate tolerance and work to break
down stereotypes. Since landing on the city’s political radar screen
a few weeks ago, the outspoken activists have taken a hard-line
stance on many of the city’s most controversial issues, including
their involvement in the recent controversy regarding allegedly
racist and homophobic posts on a local Web site from members of the
Human Relations Committee.
Councilman Gary Monahan, who will formally hear the issue at
Monday’s City Council meeting, said the organization “would have to
make a pretty awesome case” for the fee waivers and street closures,
considering the city does not typically extend such generosity.
“If we waive it for them, what kind of door are we opening up for
anyone else?” Monahan asked.
Members of the Orange County Residents’ Council could not be
reached for comment by press time.
Many of the same people have also rallied behind Costa Mesa
resident Naui Huitzilopochtli, whose July 4 arrest at a Niketown
protest will be the second item of discussion for the Human Relations
Committee tonight. Huitzilopochtli was arrested on suspicion of
throwing red paint at a man, a charge he has consistently denied. He
and his supporters say he was the victim of selective law enforcement
and voiced their concerns with Costa Mesa officers at the previous
City Council meeting.
All criminal charges against Huitzilopochtli have been dropped. In
response to a request by the City Council, police have launched an
“extensive” internal investigation regarding police conduct during
the protest, the staff report stated.
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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