Marchers asking for equal rights
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After reading Sharon Williamson’s letter to the editor (“March
organizers should think of community,” Tuesday) I felt obliged to
clarify why the Dyke March Organizing Committee, the Center Orange
County and the American Civil Liberties Union continue to pursue
legal action against the city of Costa Mesa. It is not, as Williamson
suggests, for publicity or to push an agenda. Rather, it is for the
protection of the rights of all community members and any
organization which hopes to hold an event in the fine city of Costa
Mesa.
I appreciate that Williamson has been through the permitting
process with the city and I wish her much success with her event.
While it is true that the four conditions attached to her permit are
similar to four of the conditions attached to the Dyke March permit,
the march organizers and I feel that the additional 17 conditions
attached to the Dyke March permit are burdensome and unreasonable.
The lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community has often
been accused of asking for special rights or, in Williamson’s words,
“shoving our interests down the throats of the public.” But the fact
is, we are not asking to be treated any differently than any other
group which applies for a special events permit from the city of
Costa Mesa. We are just asking that all groups be treated the same
and be held to the same conditions -- conditions that do not
interfere with any group’s constitutional right to free speech and
peaceful assembly. We believe the city’s permit scheme vests
unbridled discretion in city officials and places unconstitutional
restrictions on 1st Amendment rights. We are fighting not only on our
own behalf, but on behalf of other groups who may follow. Whether
Williamson realizes it or not, we are fighting for her rights, as
well.
As for Williamson’s admonition of the permit applicants, I take no
shame in drawing attention to the inequities and injustices of life
when I see them and doing all I can to eliminate them. My parents,
who raised me in Costa Mesa, taught me to stand up for not only my
rights, but the rights of all people when they are trod upon.
PAUL BLANK
Corona del Mar
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Paul Blank is the chairman of the board of the
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Community Services Center of
Orange County, the fourth largest such community center in the United
States.
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