Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Burbank: Officials keep parade date

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Burbank: Officials keep parade date

    Burbank Leader , CA
    LATimes.com
    June 26 2004

    Officials keep parade date
    Burbank on Parade keeps date, but will consider move in 2010 and
    2021 to avoid overlap with Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day.


    By Jackson Bell, The Leader


    BURBANK - Burbank on Parade will continue its tradition of running on
    the fourth Saturday in April, but will reopen talks of rescheduling
    the parade the next time it conflicts with Armenian Genocide
    Remembrance Day on April 24.

    Keeping the fourth Saturday in April is necessary because other
    events and holidays - including Fire Service Day and National Police
    Week, school band competitions and Easter weekend - make it difficult
    to permanently switch the parade, event Chairwoman Joanne Miller said
    Friday. But the parade will consider rescheduling in 2010 and 2021,
    the next two years the occasions coincide.

    The somber day of remembrance is a time when many of the city's
    estimated 10,000 Armenian-American residents spend the day at homes,
    churches or rallies throughout the area, remembering victims who died
    during the 1915 massacre, local Armenian leaders said. The parade
    this year was on April 24 and drew criticism from the Armenian-
    American community.

    "My personal opinion is that this is the best decision because the
    parade will go in a normal fashion without upsetting every other
    community event or school event," Miller said. "And at the same time,
    it's not offending the Armenian-American community by disregarding
    their day of mourning."

    Miller met with about a dozen parade organizers, leaders of the
    city's Armenian-American community and city officials Thursday to
    discuss the parade organizers' decision.

    Some Armenian-American leaders, however, felt the parade's proximity
    to April 24 still will exclude many in their community who are
    usually active in various activities to commemorate the genocide.

    "It's very ironic that it is supposed to be an opportunity to bring
    all Burbank together and the net result is to exclude some 10% of the
    community," said Garen Yegparian, chairman of community relations for
    the Armenian National Committee's Burbank chapter.

    The controversy started in mid-February, when organizers failed to
    consider the conflict when setting this year's parade to run April
    24.

    The planning gaffe upset the Armenian-American community and prompted
    Mayor Marsha Ramos to have a meeting April 1 to open dialogue between
    the two sides.

    Planning was too far along to change the date, because $25,000 was
    already spent and the parade was already being publicized when the
    error was discovered, officials said.

    Ramos said Thursday's meeting ended the three months of dialogue to
    resolve the conflict.

    "Both sides came to the terms they discussed very thoroughly," she
    said. "Because they were involved in the decision-making process,
    there is a clear direction for the future."
Working...
X