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SIR - Three of your recent correspondents, Mr Grant,
Mr Shadbolt and Cllr Cranfield-Adams, have made serious and damaging
allegations in respect of our charity Positively Healthy, which
requires an immediate and definitive response in order to prevent
these being accepted by your readers as factually accurate.
As Mr Grant and Mr Shadbolt (Letters, March 12 and
19) clearly have a problem not only with homosexuality but with
democracy, their concerns are best directed to the legislators who
have made the laws protecting these minorities they so strenuously
object to, than against the borough's gay and lesbian population,
or our charity, as we do not have the power to enact or strike out
legislation at their behest.
It is extremely worrying that Mr Grant and Mr Shadbolt
are abusing and inflaming a sensitive situation in order to make
party political gain, in the case of Mr Shadbolt to set out his
stall as our prospective UKIP candidate and, in the case of Mr Grant,
for a potential future government under Michael Howard, one which
he seems to think will share his homophobic agenda.
It may interest and will sadden Mr Grant to read the
letter of congratulations I have received from the prospective Conservative
parliamentary candidate for Richmond Park, Marco Forgione, in respect
of "the excellent work that you undertake in our community".
At the last general election, Mr Shadbolt's UKIP drew
348 votes, 0.7 per cent of the overall total, a figure sure to collapse
further with such a prejudiced and reactionary candidate standing.
My complaint against Cllr Arbour, leader of the council,
to the Standards Board for England, now includes the fact that at
the full meeting of the council on March 2, he formally and officially
refused to dissociate the council from Cllr Dance's original homophobic
comments and therefore, by allying the council with her comments,
laid open the entire council to charges of institutionalised homophobia,
which is precisely the allegation I will have made at the council's
cabinet meeting on March 23.
Its is vitally important that your readers and correspondents
understand precisely my stand on the matter, as it has been wildly
spun out of control by bizarre Kafka-esque correspondents to this
newspaper. When Mrs Dance, Mr Arbour and Mr Cranfield-Adams express
their opinions, I fully accept this as their right, but when Cllr
Dance, Cllr Arbour and Cllr Cranfield-Adams express their opinions
they are no longer acting in a personal capacity but speaking on
behalf of and with the full imprimatur of Richmond council and therefore
are subject to administrative and procedural constraints which I
must therefore insist they adhere to.
They must specifically respect council guidelines
and policy, as well as the law of the land, protecting minorities
from slander, defamation and libel.
The cabinet meeting on March 23 was to adopt the Corporate
Equality and Diversity Policy and Strategy, under whose restrictions
and safeguards none of the three councillors can make the comments
they did without serious repercussions.
As this meeting follows the deadline for this letter
being published the outcome cannot be reported here, but will, no
doubt, following the meeting.
I was surprised and disgusted at Cllr Cranfield-Adams'
claim (Letters, March 12) that there was a campaign against Cllr
Dance notorious for its "spite and vindictiveness" conducted
by "some from the gay community in Richmond" who "want
to see her hung, drawn and quartered". I can assure your readers
that there is no such campaign as all activities have been conducted
in full public view, mainly in the letters pages of the Richmond
& Twickenham Times, and there has been no covert campaign hostile
to Cllr Dance outside the fevered imaginings of Cllr Cranfield-Adams.
When he writes that Cllr Dance resigned as a trustee
from Richmond Council for Voluntary Service (RCVS) and that this
was "something that a member organisation of RCVS was seeking",
may I make it clear that we were not involved in this decision and
made no representation to the board of RCVS at any time in respect
of Cllr Dance.
In conclusion, when Mr Grant accuses our charity of
"trying to wheedle £5,000 out of the takings (council
tax)" he is distorting our straightforward and uncontroversial
grant application to Grants Direct, one which involved no "wheedling"
but due consideration by the grants funding panel.
As to his suggestion that Positively Healthy, the
world's longest-established gay men's Aids charity, which has survived
the closure of more than 50 per cent of UK Aids agencies, is my
"little fiefdom", it sounds a fascinating and tempting
proposition but the problem with it is that one simply cannot get
the serfs these days.
Cass Mann, CEO, Positively Healthy, Princes Street,
Richmond
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