Council exchange sparks complaint
Deepa Bharath
Following an emotional exchange at a City Council meeting this month,
a resident is complaining that city officials should have intervened
and quieted the debate.
But calling someone a bigot in City Council meetings may be
permitted when it is said in the context of a larger issue or in the
heat of the moment, Mayor Tod Ridgeway said.
The mayor was responding to Balboa Peninsula resident Linda
Orozco’s complaint that Ridgeway should have intervened when Larry
Trahant, the executive director of Narconon, the company that runs a
group home on West Ocean Front, spoke up against Orozco during an
Aug. 10 city council meeting.
Orozco and Trahant butted heads over the issue of laws regulating
the city’s alcohol and drug rehabilitation homes. Orozco is one of a
number of neighbors of the Narconon recovery group home on the
peninsula who say the home plagues nearby residents with noise from
delivery trucks, industrial vacuum cleaners and loud tenants. They
have also complained about cigarette butts and cigarette smoke.
Ridgeway should have stopped Trahant when he called her a bigot,
Orozco said.
“That is not free speech,†she said. “The presiding officer of a
public meeting has the right to stop people when they resort to
name-calling. The mayor simply sat back and allowed this man to go on
and on and just blast away.â€
Trahant refused comment on Thursday.
Trahant or any one else has a right to be angry at council
meetings, Ridgeway said.
“Anger even when directed at someone is protected speech,†he
said. “It may be wrong from a decorum point of view.â€
Still, as mayor, he tries to balance decorum with free speech,
Ridgeway said.
Orozco said at Tuesday’s council meeting that messages referring
to “bloodletting†and “bloody knives†have been posted on a local
watchdog website, freenewport.com.
“These are death threats that have been directed against me,†she
said.
But it’s not his job as an elected official to protect
individuals, Ridgeway said.
“If she believes it’s a serious threat against her, she should
report it to the police, not come to a public forum and grandstand,â€
he said.
Councilman Steve Bromberg said he agrees with the way Ridgeway
acted.
“This is an incredibly emotional issue for everyone,†he said. “I
don’t deny that [Trahant’s] comments were emotional.â€
But the fact that Trahant stood up and said Orozco doesn’t like
recovering drug addicts is not offensive enough for the mayor to
remove Trahant from the council chambers, Bromberg said.
“If I were mayor, I wouldn’t have done anything different,†he
said.
No amount of ranting or threats will stop her from speaking up,
Orozco said.
“I’m not going to stop saying things,†she said. “This is an
important issue for me and my neighborhood, and no one is going to
scare me into silence.â€
* DEEPA BHARATH is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at
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