Los Angeles Times

City clarifies its events calendar

Huntington Beach says it will mark Black History Month and other observance­s.

- By Matt Szabo Szabo writes for Times Community News.

Beach officials said Friday that the city will recognize Black History Month, Women’s History Month and other cultural observance­s in 2024, despite the City Council seemingly voting to the contrary earlier.

The council passed an item 4 to 3 last week to institute a 12-month calendar that will see each month dedicated to a specific theme. The language of the agenda item stated that any previous monthly themes or celebratio­ns approved by earlier City Councils would be repealed and superseded.

Councilman Casey McKeon, the author of the item, indicated during the meeting that the city would not celebrate Black History Month in 2024, though it could be brought back to the calendar in future years. This came in response to a direct question from Councilman Dan Kalmick.

But Huntington Beach Public Affairs Manager Jennifer Carey called that a “miscommuni­cation” on Friday. She released the calendar for the first quarter of 2024, which included the approved themes of “Founders’ Legacy — Celebratin­g Huntington Beach’s Origins” for January, “We Love Our Libraries — Huntington Beach’s commitment to books, reading and learning” for February and “California’s History — Before statehood to now, and what it means to be a Charter City” for March.

However, Black History Month and Women’s History Month are also listed for February and March, respective­ly.

“The existing acknowledg­ments, tributes, holidays, cultural heritage months that we have already been acknowledg­ing will still be acknowledg­ed,” Carey said. “It’s just that the content that will be continuous­ly distribute­d throughout the month will be replus lated to that overarchin­g, celebrator­y theme. I think there was, and understand­ably so, confusion in regard to the item. [It was discussed] that we have this one celebratio­n and that’s it, and that’s simply not the case.”

Carey said there will be a cohesive effort that her office would oversee in collaborat­ion with a resident committee that will be establishe­d to decide themes for 2025 and future years.

McKeon said Friday that his agenda item was “misinterpr­eted in a way,” adding that it was a pilot program that will be fine-tuned.

“When I kept saying nothing precludes [Black History Month] from happening in the future, what I was referring to was the overarchin­g theme of the month,” McKeon said. “It doesn’t mean that we can’t acknowledg­e Black history and those other themes within the month, but the overarchin­g, celebrator­y theme of the month needs to be in the calendar. I’m trying to condense this down.

“I think there’s like 30Huntingt­on monthly themes that different department­s have. So the genesis of this was to make it more meaningful and thoughtful, with all of the department­s on the same page.”

But Kalmick wasn’t buying the claim that the dialogue from the dais was simply misunderst­ood.

“How could it have been a miscommuni­cation?” Kalmick said Friday. “The video’s clear, the action agenda is clear. We explicitly asked, ‘Are we going to be celebratin­g this anymore?’ and they said, ‘No.’ So I don’t know how staff is managing that .... We asked [McKeon] four different ways, ‘Does this mean we’re not going to celebrate this?’

“You can’t just say, ‘No, we’re not going to do that’ without bringing it back to a vote of the council. If Casey thought it was something different, that’s not the staff direction and the understand­ing I had. They’re going to have to bring it back [to the City Council], or it’s illegal.”

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