Telegram & Gazette

Flag policy

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Fitchburg found itself in the middle of controvers­y when former Mayor Stephen DiNatale attended the raising of a Nuclear Family flag on a municipall­y owned pole in Riverfront Park in December 2022. The black-and-white banner touting nuclear families is associated with an anti-gay and antiLGBTQ+ stance. At the ceremony, he reportedly claimed the raising of the flag was a matter of equality, as the city had flown a Pride flag earlier in the year.

Community grumblings ensued and the city lowered the banner.

In response, the City Council sought to create a flag policy, a move that was derailed when the former mayor unilateral­ly enacted his own policy, according to a municipal spokesman. That policy limited the flags flown on municipal poles to government­al banners – the U.S. flag, the Massachuse­tts state flag and the local municipal flag.

Limit to just government­al or allow all

Just last month, Spencer instituted its own written policy governing which flags are allowed on municipall­y controlled flagpoles. Municipal or public poles include those on municipal property, on school property and those located in parks and other public places.

Spencer opted to limit flags to government­al banners – the national flag, state flag and municipal flag.

“We looked at different policies and found one that fit our community,” said Town Administra­tor Jeff Bridges.

While Leominster does not have a written policy, it has followed an unwritten code dating back at least 30 years, declining requests to fly any flags other than government­al ones in front of City Hall. The city flies the U.S. flag, the state flag and the POW/MIA flag, similar to the state police policy, said Mayor Dean Mazzarella.

“We said we don’t fly other flags in front of City Hall,” Mazzarella said. “We decided that if we do it for one group, there will be no end to the requests.”

Flags are symbols or emblems of a country or institutio­n and can express a thought, idea, philosophy or political position. Flags become an instrument of speech and are thus protected under the

First Amendment.

Supreme Court rules against Boston in 2022

Boston learned that lesson the hard way through a 2022 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court.

In Shurtleff v. City of Boston, the court found that the city had discrimina­ted against a Christian organizati­on on the basis of religion by denying the group access to a municipall­y controlled flagpole for its banner in 2017. In filing suit against the city, the group claimed Boston lacked a written policy regulating flags and had allowed other groups access to the pole.

The Supreme Court decision “really woke municipali­ties up to the issues involving flags. Now they represent ideas, positions, stances of groups; that can be polarizing,” Reich said.

Worcester has five flagpoles in front of City Hall. Four fly the U.S. flag, Massachuse­tts flag, Worcester flag and an Indigenous Peoples flag. The fifth pole is dedicated to requests from community members and is rotated based upon requests. The city administra­tion does not choose those flags to display on its own, according to Tom Matthews, a city spokesman.

Worcester recently raised an Israeli flag and then a banner representi­ng Palestine on the same flagpole dedicated to the community. The city’s policy, Matthews said, is to raise cultural flags in a consistent and appropriat­e manner. Approvals are granted on a first-come, first-served basis.

The city, with residents from around the world, is guided in its flag-raising decisions by its Human Rights Policy. Matthews noted the importance of raising and displaying cultural flags as the practice enhances awareness of the city’s diversity and expresses respect to all community members

The city’s policy, along with an applicatio­n to make a request to fly a cultural flag, is available online at www.worcesterm­a.gov/human-rights/culturalfl­ags.

Flags, Matthews said, are typically displayed for a one-day period. To ensure an equitable process, flags are limited to being raised once per calendar year. Flags must be dropped off at the City Manager’s Office, Room 306, no later than two days prior to date requested to be raised and picked up within two days after being displayed.

 ?? ALLAN JUNG/TELEGRAM & GAZETTE ?? The Palestinia­n flag flies at Worcester City Hall in a file photo.
ALLAN JUNG/TELEGRAM & GAZETTE The Palestinia­n flag flies at Worcester City Hall in a file photo.

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