Imperial Valley Press

Gay parade permit sparks major debate in Mississipp­i

- BY JEFF AMY

STARKVILLE, Miss. — At first, the plan to hold a gay-pride parade here didn’t seem like such a big deal. Such festivals aren’t that unusual even in the traditiona­lly conservati­ve Deep South, and Starkville, “Mississipp­i’s College Town,” made a name for itself as the first community in the state to pass a resolution denouncing discrimina­tion against people for sexual orientatio­n.

But when organizers applied for a permit, they ran into a roadblock: A majority of Starkville’s aldermen voted it down, transformi­ng what had been envisioned as a relatively small-scale event into a constituti­onal confrontat­ion over free speech and equal rights.

A successful gay-rights lawyer representi­ng the event planners says there is no question she’ll sue. The aldermen aren’t explaining their decision earlier this week to vote down the permit, but at least one indicated he was acting on behalf of what the larger community wanted.

“I was elected to represent the constituen­ts and the majority of the constituen­ts from my ward have been supportive of this,” Alderman Ben Carver was quoted by The Commercial Dispatch as saying in a story published Friday.

Alderman Roy Perkins was not as forthcomin­g.

“All I can tell you is I have no comment. Two words: No comment,” Perkins told The Associated Press on Thursday. Perkins was the one who moved to reject the applicatio­n, and alderman approved his proposal on a 4-3 vote.

Like Perkins, two other aldermen who voted against the permit declined to comment to the AP.

Parade organizers have hired Roberta Kaplan, a well-known attorney who won a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case in 2013 that extended spousal benefits to same-sex couples.

“We absolutely intend to sue,” Kaplan said. “We think that grounds are extremely strong. We intend to do so extremely promptly.”

Kaplan is no stranger to Mississipp­i. She has litigated other gay-rights cases in the state, including a challenge, thus far unsuccessf­ul, to a law that lets some government workers and business people cite religious objections to refuse services to LGBT people.

Opposition to the parade wasn’t entirely unexpected in Starkville, a town that is in many ways still caught between the old South and the new.

A city of 25,000 about 110 miles northeast of the state capital of Jackson, Starkville is mainly known as the home of Mississipp­i State University. Southeaste­rn Conference football rivals for years poked fun at the town as a distant, dull backwater. They dubbed it StarkVegas, the joke being that it was the polar opposite of Las Vegas. But Starkville grew and changed. Now a four-star restaurant shares Main Street with the plate lunches of the Starkville Cafe, and a mosque settled in among the Baptist churches.

The engine of Starkville’s transforma­tion is Mississipp­i State. The school’s focus on agricultur­e and engineerin­g is seemingly unthreaten­ing to Mississipp­i’s conservati­ve values, but it brings in plenty of people with new ideas. Among those is Bailey McDaniel, a senior criminolog­y major at the university and the organizer of Starkville Pride weekend.

“I was trying to plan a pride parade before I left so a community that I had been a part of for four years could have a celebratio­n,” said the 22-year-old McDaniel, who grew up in Corinth in Mississipp­i’s northeast corner and plans to attend law school. She identifies as lesbian.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ROGELIO V. SOLIS ?? Bailey McDaniel, 22, an organizer with Starkville Pride, an LGBT support group is photograph­ed Thursday in Starkville, Miss. Starkville aldermen voted 4-3 to deny the event permit Tuesday. None of the aldermen who voted against the permit have...
AP PHOTO/ROGELIO V. SOLIS Bailey McDaniel, 22, an organizer with Starkville Pride, an LGBT support group is photograph­ed Thursday in Starkville, Miss. Starkville aldermen voted 4-3 to deny the event permit Tuesday. None of the aldermen who voted against the permit have...

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