Mayor calls homosexuals “queers” and tells students that homosexuality is a disease

This article really got to me because I lived in Troy, Michigan for a few months during the summer of 2010. It’s a really nice suburb of Detroit, so it bothers me that such a hateful (and apparently not very smart…) woman could be the mayor of such a promising town.

Just to provide some background information: Mayor Janice Daniels got herself in a bit of hot water in early December after a homophobic Facebook status of hers was found. In June she posted:

“I think I am going to throw away my ‘I love New York’ carrying bag now that queers can get married there”
 
How nice. She wasn’t mayor at the time of the posting, but come on. If you plan on running for mayor in the next couple months, do you think posting that insensitive status on your Facebook page is a smart thing to do??
 
Well, she “apologized” for the comment in December, and she met with the Gay-Straight Alliance from Troy High School earlier this month to discuss holding a forum on bullying and suicide prevention. Unfortunately, the meeting didn’t go that well…
 

More remarks about homosexuality embroil Troy mayor

Troy Mayor Janice Daniels, lambasted at a City Council meeting last month for calling gay people “queers” on her Facebook page, is embroiled in another controversy about gay people — this time involving students from Troy High School.

While discussing plans for a forum on bullying and suicide, Daniels told students she wanted to invite “a panel of psychologists who would testify that homosexuality is a mental disease,” said Skye Curtis, 17, a senior and co-president of the Gay-Straight Alliance at the school.

Daniels denied making the comment.

“What I said was, there’s a higher incidence of (overall) disease in the homosexual community,” Daniels said. She said she taped the meeting and had reviewed her statements after the meeting. She declined to play the tape for the Free Press.

I believe in full disclosure,” Daniels said, adding that: “I would like to reach out to this girl and her parents about how this can be resolved.”

Curtis and fellow senior Zach Kilgore, also 17, attended Monday’s meeting at the mayor’s invitation, Kilgore said. The teens said they had hoped to invite the mayor to a student forum on bullying prevention and teen suicide.

After the mayor’s comment, Curtis said, “we brought up the fact that, if we’re trying to have an event about suicide prevention, we shouldn’t really be telling kids they have a mental disease. I don’t want my freshmen hearing that.”

Curtis and Kilgore said they decided that they would hold the event without Daniels’ participation.

“We decided it would be dangerous to have her around kids who are already upset and worried about who they are,” Kilgore said.

In 1973, the American Psychiatric Association declassified homosexuality as a mental disorder, and the American Psychological Association Council of Representatives followed in 1975, according to the organizations’ websites.

Monday’s meeting between Daniels and the students, held at the Troy Community Center, was the second of the mayor’s open meetings for residents. Daniels was elected Nov. 8.

After the hubbub about the mayor’s gay slur on her Facebook page, “We thought we could resolve things with her outside of the public eye,” Curtis said.

At the Troy City Council meeting Dec. 5, which ran well past midnight, scores of visitors excoriated Daniels for the Facebook slur. Many at the meeting urged her to resign.

Daniels also has been under fire for opposing a bus-rail transit center that was to be paid for with federal funding and that Gov. Rick Snyder supports.

What a great idea — tell struggling high school kids, who are being bullied because of their sexuality, that they have a disease. That will help with bullying and suicide prevention. Also, if you believe in full disclosure, let everyone see the tape of the meeting for themselves. What do you have to hide?

I really hope this woman wises up for the city’s sake, but I highly doubt that she will…

Something tells me that this guy is going to lose the race…

Alleged sign stealer to stay in Covington mayor’s race

By Joel Provano

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bobby Sigman, the Covington mayoral candidate who was arrested and charged with stealing his opponent’s campaign signs, now say he’s staying in the race.

He said earlier this week that he was quitting the race, telling Channel 2 Action news he was “tired of seeing my supporters raked over the coals for nothing.”

Sigman denied having done anything with criminal intent, “although I made some bad decisions.”

Covington police set up a videotaped sting after receiving a complaint that mayoral candidate Ronnie Johnston’s signs were being stolen.

The 70-year-old Sigman said the video showing him picking up a pile of signs “were signs I found on the right-of-way, and I planned to return them” to Johnston. “I did not steal any of his signs,” Sigman said.

Sigman was arrested Oct. 12 and charged with making false statements within a political subdivision, theft by taking and criminal trespass, all misdemeanors. He is free on $3,500 bond while awaiting trial.

Sigman told the Newton Citizen that when he said he was withdrawing, “I meant I was withdrawing from the campaign, not the office.”

The newspaper also quoted Sigman as saying, “I’m going to lose. I know it. It’s not going to be a big deal.”