City council decides heritage month ‘excludes people’

[Source]

Temecula City Council has decided to stop declaring federally recognized heritage month, including Asian American (AANHPI), and Native Hawaiian Pacific Islander(AANHPI) Month.

In the city council’s meeting on Tuesday, Councilmembers Jessica Alexander, James Stewart and Brenden Kalfus voted against declaring citywide proclamations that celebrate cultural diversity, arguing that the “inclusionary” decrees actually “exclude people,” reported The Press-Enterprise.

The declarations of commemorative months, including Black History Month, Women’s History Month, Pride Month, Hispanic Heritage Month and Native American Heritage Month, will now be determined by Temecula’s diversity commission.

“When we bring one group up above the entire city, we basically exclude everyone else,” Stewart said, according to The Press-Enterprise. “I have a problem with that. I don’t have a problem with any of those proclamations that are inclusionary. I do have a problem at this level of government using this platform to promote another group over another.”

NextShark has more: Suspect in botched robbery that left Asian mother dead in NYC is now wanted for HOMICIDE

“Why, again, are we elevating one (group) over the other?” Alexander, who led the vote, asked. “Maybe these types of cultural proclamations would be a wonderful place for the REDI Commission. That way we don’t get somebody saying, ‘Well you’re elevating this group, and not this group.’”

Curtis Brown, the newly elected Councilmember, and Zak Schwank, the Mayor, voted no to defend the declarations.

Brown said that federally recognized heritage months are about “awareness and education” and “the struggles that each one of these individuals or groups have had to get where they are.”

NextShark has more: Man Rams Truck Into Picnic-Goers After Allegedly Shouting Anti-Asian Comments in Chicago

“We are acknowledging subsets of our community,” Schwank said in agreement with Brown. “I don’t see it as an elevation above one person. It’s important that we not send a message to all the proclamation recipients that they are somehow less than.”

Many Temecula residents spoke out in support and against the decision of the city council.

“Declaring Gay Pride Month is a waste of time, energy and money, and it’s causing division — and entertainment, clearly,” Jessica Christopher said, according to The Press-Enterprise. “When does this end? Temecula has been family-friendly for many years. Let’s keep it that way. Pride Month exists already. Let those who would like to celebrate Pride Month do so. If you’re going to have an LGBTQ+ Month, then I, too, want a heterosexual month.”

NextShark has more: Gov. Ron DeSantis used to pronounce Thai as ‘thigh’ to assess dates, former Yale classmate claims

Dr. Sandra Cox, a psychiatrist, is a member of Defense of Democracy.

“It could certainly create an environment wherein people don’t feel they are included and welcomed in this community,” Cox said, according to The Press-Enterprise. “And that could have an effect on a family making a decision not to move here because they have a family member who is of that community, or a business could say [Temecula] doesn’t look like a place we could grow into.”

Cox was also concerned about Alexander bringing her religious beliefs before the council.

NextShark: More Amendment Defunding Colleges ‘Discriminating’ Against Asian American Students Voted Down

In June last year, Alexander opposed Temecula’s declaration of Pride Month, saying that it would “dishonor” her god and “do nothing to contribute to the running of our city.”

She was a woman in 2021 criticized by colleagues for an email in which she called the coronavirus the “China Virus.”

“The change was made to pacify the personal and religious feelings of one council member,” Jeff Pack, a One Temecula Valley PAC organizer, said. “It is an insult and a demotion to valuable members of the community by relegating them to a less visible and prestigious venue.”

Tuesday will be the other monthly proclamationsThe council has approved all of these, as well those that honor senior residents and first responders.

Similar stories:

Previous post All the Fashion, Outfits and Looks
Next post Vikings season is over as Kirk Cousins fumbles with the sticks vs. Giants