Task Force votes to send letters to Mayor Parris and Councilwoman Marquez

From the Antelope Valley Press, Tuesday, February 9, 2010:

By Charles F. Bostwick and Dennis Anderson
Valley Press Editors

LANCASTER – The Antelope Valley Human Relations Commission voted unanimously Monday night to send strong letters of condemnation to Lancaster Mayor R. Rex Parris and Councilwoman Sherry Marquez over their recent comments about the Christian and Muslim religions.

The vote followed a three-hour meeting attended by nearly 100 people of whom about 40 were regular members of the task force, formed in 1996 by the cities of Lancaster and Palmdale following a rash of racially-motivated assaults.

By the meeting’s start, most of the members of the commission had heart that Parris twho hours earlier had issued an apology that some, if not all,accepted as basically sincere. That was not the case for the terse two-word apology uttered by Marquez at a hastily called City Hall press conference.

At the meeting were Christians such as Bishop Henry Hearns, pastor of Living Stone Cathedral of Worship in Littlerock as well as Parris’s predecessor as Lancaster mayor; at least 20 members of the Antelope Valley Muslim community; at least a half-dozen supporters of Marquez from Lancaster Baptist Church, which she attends; Unitarian-Universalists; Wiccans; members of the organized gay community; Buddhists, and Jewish and Orthodox Jewish representatives. Also in attendance were Lancaster mayoral and city council candidates, and Palmdale Mayor Jim Ledford.

“I accept the mayor’s apology. I do not accept her apology,” said Kamal Al-Khativ, exectuive director of the American Islamic Institute of the Antelope Valley in Palmdale. “I am disappointed with both individuals.”

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Mayor Parris: ‘I sincerely apologize’

Parris apologizes

REACHING OUT – Lancaster Mayor R. Rex Parris brought together leaders of faith in the Antelope Valley to clarify his position stated earlier about Lancaster being a Christian Community during a press conference Monday at City Hall.

RON SIDDLE/Valley Press

From the Antelope Valley Press, Tuesday, February 9, 2010:

By Charles F. Bostwick and Dennis Anderson
Valley Press Editors

LANCASTER – Mayor R. Rex Parris issued an unequivocal apology to groups of any and all faiths who he said might have felt excluded by his remarks 12 days earlier to Christian ministers about “growing a Christian community.”

“It was about a week and a half ago that I spoke to the Christian ministerial association and said I wanted to grow a Christian community,” he said during a City Hall news conference. “But in talking to my friends of 30 years, it was clear that a lot of people felt excluded.”

Parris spoke from the City Council chambers podium, accompanied by area representatives of the Hindu, Sikh, Jewish and Muslim communities as well as fellow Christians and Councilwoman Sherry Marquez.

What Parris said he had intended was to express that Christians are a community who love their neighbors.

“I sincerely apologize to anyone who felt excluded,” the mayor said.

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Vandals target citizen who spoke up

Vandalism

HATE CRIME? – The windows in the back of Debbie Phillips’ Lancaster home show the graffiti left by an unknown person Wednesday night. Phillips said she notified the AV Human Relations Commission and the American Civil Liberties Union about the incident, but because the graffiti didn’t directly mention religion, Commission President Darren Parker said he doesn’t know if the incident can be categorized as a hate crime. EVELYN KRISTO/Valley Press

Woman protested City Hall posting ‘In God We Trust’

This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press
Friday, May 30, 2008.

By VERONICA ROCHA
Valley Press Staff Writer

LANCASTER – A Lancaster woman’s home was vandalized overnight Wednesday with “In God We Trust or ?” painted across her windows in what she believes is retaliation for speaking out against placing a similar phrase in City Council chambers.

Debbie Phillips said she spotted the bold, black lettering on two windows and a sliding glass door – marked by someone who entered her fenced backyard – after she woke up Thursday morning.

“I feel like somebody came in my home and invaded my space,” Phillips said.

Phillips said she notified the Antelope Valley Human Relations Commission, which investigates hate crimes, and the American Civil Liberties Union about the incident.

“I want this to be noted in the crime rate as a hate crime,” she said.

Commission President Darren Parker said the group is investigating whether Thursday’s vandalism qualified as a hate crime.

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