Council may ax committee
Alicia Robinson
A sword of Damocles hanging over Costa Mesa’s human relations
committee may fall tonight.
The council in June slashed the committee’s annual $3,710 budget
and will vote tonight on whether to disband the group -- almost a
moot point, since it is now unfunded.
The 11-member committee was formed in 1987. Its goals are lofty --
reducing prejudice and discrimination in the city, encouraging
respect and understanding between different cultures, offering an ear
to residents with grievances, and broaching social issues with the
City Council.
With members who represent a cross section of religious and ethnic
groups, the committee was a good sounding board for people who might
not feel comfortable going to the City Council with a problem, said
Dennis Short, a Harbor Christian Church minister who has been on the
committee for three years.
The committee’s signature event was an annual volunteer
recognition, but it also has tackled controversial issues. In 2002,
it supported the Orange County Dyke March, a lesbian pride event.
That same year, the committee discussed allegations that some of its
members -- including current Mayor Allan Mansoor -- had posted
racist, homophobic or otherwise intolerant comments on a website.
Short said he’s puzzled by the council’s motive for axing the
committee and wonders why the committee wasn’t approached before the
cut.
“Our whole budget was just a couple thousand dollars, and they’re
giving hundreds of thousands to a number of other things, and the
money is really not the issue,” he said. “It seems to me the issue is
a committee that is made up of multi-ethnic, multi-religious
organizations is very important to have.”
Councilwoman Katrina Foley said she thinks the human relations
committee has done useful work.
“It seems to be a pattern when there is a controversial item to
just blindside people with it without allowing for full public
discussion,” Foley said.
Councilwoman Linda Dixon, Councilman Gary Monahan, and Mansoor,
who proposed cutting the committee’s budget, could not be reached for
comment.
Councilman Eric Bever was skittish when asked about whether he
thought the committee should be dissolved.
“I’d rather not even talk about that one,” Bever said.
One former committee member said it will be no surprise if the
council decides to disband the group tonight. Although the committee
shied away from hot-button issues such as the Job Center, the
positions it would have taken are different from those of the current
majority on the council, said Arlene Flanagan, whose four-year term
on the committee ended in April.
“I could see all along that it was going to be short-lived....
Everything we would do had to go through the City Council first,” she
said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON may be reached at (714) 966-4626 or
alicia.robinson@latimes.com.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.