The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
POLICE APOLOGIZE FOR BAR CLOSINGS AT FESTIVAL
Doors shut at Black Gay Pride despite extended hours.
Atlanta Police said the forced early closing of several Midtown gay bars Monday during Black Gay Pride Labor Day weekend festivities was a misread between the department officials and officers on the street.
APD shut down at least four bars and restaurants in the heart of the city’s gay community — 10th Street at Piedmont Avenue — at 12:30 a.m. Monday, even though city policy allows them to stay open two hours later than normal on a Sunday during the Labor Day holiday weekend.
An openly gay member of the Atlanta Police force made the move after becoming concerned that crowds were spilling out onto the streets, causing potential public safety hazards, APD spokesman Carlos Campos said in a statement.
“Closing the bars early was, very simply, an honest mistake based on a communication failure,” Campos said, adding that Zone 5 Commander Major Darin Schierbaum planned to apologize to affected bar owners in person.
“The morning watch supervisors should have been aware of the City Council’s extension of bar hours for the Labor Day weekend, but they were not,” he said. “The department sincerely apologizes to the affected business owners and their patrons.”
Some bar owners and candidates running for mayor accused APD of bias based on race and sexual orientation, saying police don’t have miscommunications during other large gatherings such as St. Patrick’s Day or the larger Atlanta Pride festival.
Former Atlanta City Council President Cathy Woolard, who is running to succeed Kasim Reed as mayor, said in an statement, “Given the fact that no other bars were shut down in this way, it is difficult not to interpret the action as discriminatory against the LGBTQ community. That this incident took place during Atlanta’s 21st annual Black Gay Pride, an event that is extremely significant for our city, only compounds the problematic nature of the decision.”
The area was filled with revelers celebrating Black Gay Pride, which brings thousands of members of the nation’s African-American LGBTQ community to Atlanta. The police proceeded to close the bars despite protests from the establishments’ operators that city policy allowed them to say open.
The incident comes as APD has spent several years mending its relationship with the gay community after a controversial 2009 raid at the Atlanta Eagle, a gay club on Ponce de Leon Avenue. The raid, which included slurs and patrons forced to lay on the floor, cost the city more than $1.5 million in settlements. APD promised to improve officer training and sensitivity regarding the gay community as a result and hired a liaison to foster open communications.
APD Chief Erika Shields said she was disappointed by the morning team on Zone 5 and has moved the commander in that area to another zone.