Whire Supremacists in Boynton Beach, Florida "honored" their first and only Black woman in the fire department by unveiling a mural in wihch she's depicted as White. Boynton Beach typifies the genre of maladroit maladministration here in Flori-DUH, where sexist, ractist and homophobic attitudes persist in too many local governments.
From The New York Times:
Florida City Sued Over Mural Depicting First Black Female Firefighter as White
Latosha Clemons, who rose to the rank of deputy fire chief in Boynton Beach, Fla., said the mural’s misrepresentation of her had caused her mental and emotional harm.
The city had never had a Black woman as a firefighter before Latosha Clemons, but last year when she glimpsed a publicly commissioned mural depicting her, she said, she didn’t recognize herself: She was white.
The mural, created as a window covering for a new fire station in Boynton Beach, Fla., as part of a public art initiative sponsored by the city, had changed the skin color of Ms. Clemons and that of a former fire chief who is also Black. The image of Ms. Clemons, taken from a photograph of her with two white female firefighters, had been substantially altered.
Now, Ms. Clemons, 48, who rose to the rank of deputy chief of the Boynton Beach Fire Rescue Department before retiring in 2020, is suing the city for defamation, libel and negligence. The city has denied the allegations, and it apologized last year for the depiction of Ms. Clemons and the former fire chief in the mural, which was immediately removed.
In the lawsuit, filed in April in Circuit Court in Palm Beach County, Ms. Clemons said that the mural’s misrepresentation of her had caused her mental and emotional harm and had damaged her reputation.
“The unveiling of the mural was humiliating, painful and demoralizing,” Ms. Clemons said in a statement issued by her lawyer on Monday. “After providing the city of Boynton Beach with a lifetime of professional fire service, to be whitewashed and not memorialized for who I am will forever live with me. As the first and only Black woman in the department, I deserved the respect I earned on a daily basis serving the citizens of Boynton Beach and deserved to be recognized for who I am: a Black woman.”
In an email on Monday, James A. Cherof, a lawyer for the city of Boynton Beach, said that he could not comment on pending litigation, but referred to a Sept. 21 court filing in which the city disputed Ms. Clemons’s allegations.
In the filing, Boynton Beach officials contended that the city employees who were responsible for altering the design for the mural had failed to adhere to the design approved by the City’s Art Commission and were acting outside of the scope of their employment without the city’s knowledge or consent. Boynton Beach, which has a population of about 78,000, is in Palm Beach County and is about 33 miles north of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
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