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  • Glendale - Council aims to nix tensions

    Glendale News Press, CA

    Council aims to nix tensions

    Members are set to explore the possibility of a permanent human relations unit.

    By Jason Wells
    Published: Last Updated Friday, July 4, 2008 11:22 PM PDT

    GLENDALE - Racial tensions that have played out in various forms
    throughout the city over the past year have renewed calls for a
    permanent human relations commission to address the public rifts and
    facilitate greater cultural understanding.

    Mayor John Drayman on Tuesday called for a report on how to go about
    forming the commission following a string of incidents in the past
    year that have belied racial tensions throughout Glendale, from high
    school campuses to City Hall.

    `I don't want to wait until we have another incident or issue,'
    Drayman said.

    At the political level, the tension has manifested itself multiple
    times during the election campaign, the fight over federal block grant
    funding and a ban on outdoor grilling.

    It was perhaps strongest early this year as the City Council moved
    forward with, and eventually approved, a change to the absentee ballot
    application process to disallow third parties from handling completed
    applications.

    The city's large Armenian community framed the change as an attack on
    the voting rights of recent immigrants, calling proponents of the
    proposal `hateful malcontents' who were perpetuating discrimination
    and bigotry.

    The ongoing battle between neighborhood activists and Armenian
    restaurant and banquet hall operators has also been a constant strain
    on cultural relations with some restaurateurs and their attorneys
    claiming the protest is over racial bias, not the environmental impact
    of their businesses.

    For some city officials, the signs of community discontent among
    neighbors are too many to ignore.

    Graffiti was discovered at St. Peter Armenian Church in February and
    deemed by church and police officials to be `hateful;' a large-scale
    fight broke out at Glendale High School in May 2007 between mostly
    Armenian and Latino students; and spray-painted swastikas were found
    Montrose.

    `The indications are all around us,' Drayman said.

    Glendale has had mixed results with establishing a community-based,
    member-driven human relations commission. The last time the city had
    such an actively involved body was in the years immediately proceeding
    the 2000 stabbing death of 17-year-old Raul Aguirre outside Herbert
    Hoover High School.

    Two Armenian teens were ultimately convicted on attempted murder and
    voluntary manslaughter charges in the death, which spawned ongoing and
    sometimes violent scuffles between Armenian and Latino youths and
    gangs.

    But as the memory of the incident faded, so too did interest in the
    Glendale Human Relations Commission, and it eventually became defunct
    little more than a decade after its creation in the mid-1990s.

    With tensions apparently steaming in a large city that has strong
    Armenian, Latin and Asian immigrant communities, the council appears
    ready to form a more permanent, city-sponsored human relations
    commission that would be proactive heading off future
    misunderstandings through public education and more active
    communication.

    `I think it's a good idea,' Councilman Frank Quintero said. `Any urban
    city in American needs to work to bring different groups together.'

    Congressional representatives and Los Angeles County officials have
    offered to assist Glendale in its quest to determine how the
    commission should operate and under what guidelines.

    A report on those options will come back to the council later this
    year for further direction and public input.
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