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DIGITAL EDITION
Confederate flag controversy shook up Homestead PDF Print E-mail
Written by ELGIN JONES   
confederate-flag_web.jpgHOMESTEAD – The year-long controversy over the display of the Confederate battle flag at publicly sanctioned events in Homestead divided the city.

Some say the issue also led to the ouster on Tuesday of four incumbent politicians who took no action on cries from some residents to ban the flag from the Veterans Day parade.

Now, the contentious flag fight may be over.

At their very first official meeting on Thursday, Nov. 4, the new slate of Homestead city council members voted unanimously to approve a permit application for the Veterans of Foreign Wars organization to hold the Veterans Day Parade on Nov. 11.

The approval came after VFW parade organizers told commissioners that they barred Confederate States groups and their flags from the event.

“They [the former commissioners] could have done this a year ago, and maybe they would still be in office,” said Rosemary Fuller, who was one of the people who led the effort for the flag ban.

The development came days before the annual Veterans Day parade, and a day after the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) group announced that the Confederate battle flag had been banned from the event. The parade approval also came two days after an unprecedented voter revolt against most city hall incumbents.

Political observers say the long-simmering feud over the Confederate flag issue contributed to the ouster of Mayor Lynda Bell and three council members: Tim Nelson, Melvin McCormick and Nazy Sierra, in Tuesday's election.

Voters preferred former Council Member Steve Bateman over Bell as the mayor.

The Rev. Jimmie L. Williams III defeated McCormick. Newcomers Stephen Shelley and Elvis Maldonado also joined the dais, in place of Nelson and Sierra, respectively.
Councilwoman Judy Waldman, a frequent Bell critic, openly expressed opposition to the Confederate flag and sought city action to address it. She was the only incumbent to win re-election. She crushed her opponent, Angel Garrote, and is now the city’s vice mayor because, among the council members, she received the most votes for the post.
Officials with the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) group, which is organizing the Nov. 11 parade, could not be reached for comment about the flag ban. The decision likely brings to an end the controversy which garnered the attention of the U.S. Department of Justice, which sought to resolve the matter through mediation, and the threat of an economic boycott from the Miami-Dade branch of the NAACP.

"The NAACP commends the Veterans of Foreign Wars for their principled stance to hold a parade that truly honors Veterans of the United States military,’’ Brad Brown, first vice president of the Miami-Dade NAACP, wrote in an email to the newspaper on Thursday. “Veterans concerns are at the forefront of NAACP issues today and our Miami-Dade Branch's Veteran's Affairs Committee is working to make sure all veterans get the information and assistance they so well deserve. We are pleased to be able to concentrate on issues such as those without the distraction of having to address insults such as the public supported flying of the Confederate Flag.”

To some, the Confederate flag is a symbol of southern pride; to others, it is a reminder of slavery, lynching and racial mistreatment.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans issued the following statement on Wednesday:

“On Monday, November 2, 2009, the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV), the oldest veterans group established in 1896 was notified by the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) post commander Joseph Stahl, that we would not be allowed to enter the Homestead Veteran’s Day parade,’’ Gregory Kalof, commander of the Miami-Dade based Sons of Confederate Veterans camp 471, wrote in a press release sent to the South Florida Times Wednesday morning. “He stated that there were still strong feelings against the participation of the SCV but did not specify if it were the participants, organizers, or outside organizations.’’

The flag controversy in Homestead first erupted after black citizens, including Rosemary Fuller and Pat Mellerson, objected to seeing Confederate soldiers with their battle flags marching in last year’s parade.

“I am a child of the civil rights movement. My parents and grandparents suffered through a lot of discrimination and abuse during those times and that flag was a direct reminder of those things,” Mellerson said. “It’s offensive and represents brutality and oppression to so many people.”

The groups opposing the flag called on the Military Affairs Committee of the Greater Homestead/Florida City Chamber of Commerce, which originally organized the event, and the city of Homestead, which provided in-kind support, to bar Confederate States groups and their memorabilia from future parades.

Homestead elected officials reacted by explaining that the city was not the parade organizer, and therefore had no authority to ban any organizations from the parade.

The chamber initially could not reach any compromise on the issue. But after months of wrangling and pressure from the NAACP and officials in neighboring Florida City, the Military Affairs Committee decided in September to cancel the parade altogether.

The local post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Homestead took up the mantel, and applied for permits to organize this year’s parade.

Mellerson said the issue may now be resolved.

“The flag should be in a museum, in their homes, or on their personal cars,” Mellerson said. “I love parades. They are good for the community and I will have no problem attending.”

In the press release about the flag ban, Kalof tied the fate of the Confederate flag's display at the parade to that of Bell and the three other incumbents who lost their seats.
Observers on both sides of the issue say they believe the election was a referendum on the flag controversy.

“In our opinion, their standard of what has become a politically correct stance against the Confederate Battle Flag and all those that would support it are nothing short of political blackmail,’’ Kaloff wrote in his SCV press release. “The NAACP doesn’t have a record of Veteran’s support but instead only promotes its own agenda of erasing all aspects of Southern heritage. It has contrived a crisis for political ends: to remove Mayor Lynda Bell and council members from the Homestead City government. It seems very clear now that their threats have produced the desired results. For shame, for shame, on the voters and residents of Homestead by not voting or submitting to the sham that has been placed over the City.’’

Fuller, who lives just outside the city’s limits in unincorporated Miami-Dade County, agreed that the flag controversy is what galvanized voters. But she, said, other issues were also at play.

“This was never about Lynda Bell, and it wasn’t politically motivated. She [Lynda Bell] said that. Our focus was always on keeping those offensive flags and symbols from this community event,” she said. “They [council members] just blew it, and the voters spoke on Tuesday. If you go back and look at the council meetings, you will see where people who opposed the flag were demeaned and insulted.”

Fuller continued: “This is a good community and the people were just fed up, and it’s a refreshing day, and I do plan on going to the parade if they are banned.”

Kaloff said his Confederate organization would not challenge the VFW’s decision.

“We may attend the parade only as spectators. I'm not sure if it's too late to get into another parade but we are exploring that possibility,” he wrote in an email sent to the newspaper on Thursday, Nov 4.

When asked if the Sons of Confederate Veterans is considering any legal challenges to the ban, he responded, “No, there will be no legal steps taken against the VFW. We are a non-affiliated, non-political organization and would never sue another veteran’s organization just because of an error in human judgment.”

The Veterans Day parade in Homestead is a 47-year tradition that will now move forward.

“It looks as if it’s over, but we will still be watching,” Fuller said of the flag fight. “But this should be a lesson for everyone, particularly our elected officials, who should have respected everyone’s views.”


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Comments (7)Add Comment
0
...
written by Katya, November 11, 2009
Congratulations to the citizens of Homestead for electing new officials who have more common sense than the old bunch. These so-called confederate veterans sons are just a bunch of trouble-makers who want to cause trouble in other people's communities...were any Homestead people even members of this strange group?
0
US Law
written by TnRebel, November 08, 2009
US Law giving Confederates full rights
Confederate veterans were afforded status equal to that of
United States veterans by an act approved by the Congress
of the United States of America on May 23, 1958, and signed
into law by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, in accordance
with Public Law 85-425, thereby amending the Veterans'
Benefit Act of 1957

Federal Statutes

US Law that defines status of Confederate Veterans

Public Law 85-425 adopted May 23, 1958 as H.R. 358

AN ACT

To increase the monthly rates of pension payable to widows
and former widows of deceased veterans of the Spanish-American
War, Civil War, Indian War, and Mexican War, and provide
pensions to widows of veterans who served in the military or
naval forces of the Confederate States of America during the
Civil War...

CONFEDERATE FORCES VETERANS

Sec. 410. The Administrator shall pay to each person who
served in the military or naval forces of the Confederate
States of America during the Civil War a monthly pension
in the same amounts and subject to the same conditions as
would have been applicable to such... if such forces had
been service in the military or naval service of the
United States.

Sec. 2. This act shall be effective from the first day of
the second calendar month following its enactment.

Approved May 23, 1958.
0
Black Hate wins again
written by Jimmy L. Shirley Jr., November 08, 2009
So!!!!!!!!!!!
The tanned klan will, as surely as I am writing this, claim victory in this and they will spread the word that the locals can be intimidated. This they have been doing for years while our liberties have been more and more restricted. Taking the high road is a sure path to the closet, because that is where we will have to meet someday, at this present pace. Because no one will be in our corner, we will be forced to hide our pride, or risk arrest and going to jail.
Thuggery rules. Just like the westerns where the outlaws take over the town and, though outnumbered by the decent citisens, they are loathe to do what is necessary to drive the thugs away. Because it required doing exactly what the thugs did.
So what if it is not the Southern way? So what? Does anyone really think the tanned klan bottomfeeders will abide our license tag? All it takes in just one prominent member of their filthy organisation to say the word and even our so-called friends in Tallaha*see will run tail tucked for cover from us. That was all it took for Atlanta to remove our beloved banner from a monument a few years ago.
I say we attend as spectators, carrying small Noble Banners of the South, but stand together as a group. I think this way, 1) we can gauge the people's sympathy and 2) we can answer questions if asked.
I say we stand in the face of hatred, ignorance and stupidity, not "orderly withdraw from a fight". Stonewall Jackson preferred the Black Flag method of fighting. This I prefer to the feather.

Sincerely and Angrily Offered,
Jimmy L. Shirley Jr.

"The silence from our pulpits regarding the moral collapse of American society from within is not very different from the silence that ech*ed from the pulpits in Germany toward n**i policies".
Former Hitler Youth Hilmar von Campe
0
Florida Law
written by TnRebel, November 08, 2009
Charges may be forth coming (2)

The 2009 Florida Statutes Confederate Flag
1. Title XVIII
PUBLIC LANDS AND PROPERTYChapter 256
FLAGSView Entire Chapter
256.051 Improper use or mutilation of state or Confederate flag or emblem prohibited.--
(1) It shall be unlawful for any person, firm, or corporation to copy, print, publish, or otherwise use the flag or state emblem of Florida, or the flag or emblem of the Confederate States, or any flag or emblem used by the Confederate States or the military or naval forces of the Confederate States at any time within the years 1860 to 1865, both inclusive, for the purpose of advertising, selling, or promoting the sale of any article of merchandise whatever within this state.
(2) It shall also be unlawful for any person, firm, or corporation to mutilate, deface, defile, or contemptuously abuse the flag or emblem of Florida or the flag or emblem of the Confederate States by any act whatever.
(3) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent the use of any flag, standard, color, shield, ensign, or other insignia of Florida or of the Confederate States for decorative or patriotic purposes.
History.--ss. 1, 2, 3, ch. 61-375; s. 5, ch. 91-221.

0
One more step into tyranny
written by Cassandra 68, November 08, 2009
In the name of "tolerance" America has become intolerant. In the name of "civility", the VFW (among other groups) have negated rights proceeding from God and guaranteed in the Constitution. In the name of "enlightenment", they have embraced ignorance. To secure the approval of a genuinely racist organization (the NAACP), they have rejected as "racist" the heritage of American citizens, a heritage which the NAACP and its ilk hates and works to destroy through mendacious propaganda. And every day, America takes one more step into the darkness of socialist conformity and its citizens lose more and more of our liberties - all in the name of "diversity" and the approved version of "history". Never mind that most of that version is a lie, as long as no "preferred" group is offended. For those not so "preferred", they can expect to be consigned to oblivion. I guess that the 21st century will see the end of the Founders "Great Experiment". It will die with a politically correct whimper as the sheeple meekly proceed out of the light of reason and liberty into the darkness of conformity and slavery.
0
Obama Honored Confederate Soldiers
written by Rick, November 07, 2009
The VFW proved it has become a weak, politically correct front, not a veterans organization. Even president Obama, who if I remember correctly, is black, paid his respects to Confederate soldiers on Memorial Day. As for the politicians, they handled this poorly. They were nasty towards people, and went on the attack against those who disagreed with them, and should have lost their offices. But that does not make it right to ban a legitimate American military group, and comparing Confederate soldiers to n**is is a shameful tactic used by the NAACP to get funding.
0
What a Sham...
written by Tom, November 06, 2009
“On Monday, November 2, 2009, the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV), the oldest veterans group established in 1896 was notified by the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) post commander Joseph Stahl, that we would not be allowed to enter the Homestead Veteran’s Day parade,’’


...and among the members of the SCV are many Veterans of Foreign Wars.

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