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  • Group gets grant, but not an apology

    Burbank Leader, CA
    April 28, 2007

    Group gets grant, but not an apology

    Committee chair reads a statement that calls reference to society's
    name unfortunate, awards it $7,500 in funds.

    By Chris Wiebe

    CITY HALL - A bulk of the nonprofit groups that applied for Community
    Development Block Grant funds came away from Tuesday's City Council
    meeting reasonably happy, but not the Armenian Relief Society.

    The chairman of the Community Development Goals Committee read
    a prepared statement Tuesday calling comments that some felt were
    anti-Armenian in nature that were expressed during a committee meeting
    "unfortunate" - but not offering an apology.

    The committee, tasked with making recommendations to the council
    regarding dispensation of block grant funds, took heat this month over
    allegations that during a meeting, some committee members suggested
    that the Armenian Relief Society would be more likely to receive
    funding if the organization removed "Armenian" from its name.

    The Armenian Relief Society provides assistance to immigrants and
    refugees to the United States and was one of more than a dozen local
    agencies requesting public funds Tuesday.

    Responding to the allegations for the first time in a public forum,
    committee chairman Kirk Bowren read a letter to the council on behalf
    of the committee.

    "Questions and comments were made in reference to the connotation
    of the Armenian Relief Society name, but only in the context of the
    universality of services and whether or not the name alone would
    tend to limit its clientele and attract only given segments of the
    community," he said. "No condition or other funding prerequisite was
    intended or meant by any question or comment."

    But the statement did not satisfy some Armenian community members in
    attendance Tuesday, who noted that the committee's recommendations
    included reduced funding for the relief society this year.

    "I did hear the chairperson of that committee speak and I appreciate
    those comments," said Shant Minas, a Burbank resident who was speaking
    on behalf of the Armenian National Committee Burbank Chapter. "However,
    it did sound like he was trying to paint what was said at some of
    those meetings - some of those slighting comments and sentiments -
    in a different light and make it sound like we were taking words out
    of context."

    Some committee members had voiced reservations about handing
    over public funds to an organization that identifies itself with a
    particular ethnicity or religion - a sentiment maintained by Councilman
    Dave Golonski.

    "I would recommend ... reducing the funding for the Armenian Relief
    Society to zero," Golonski said, before the council decided on this
    year's funding amounts. "And I fully respect and understand the work
    that the Armenian Relief Society does. But I can't support public
    funding for them because I don't believe that they are as inclusive
    as they need to be to justify the public funding.... I think that
    when we go down the path of funding ethic-centric relief groups,
    if we do it for one, we're going to have to do it for all."

    The goals committee recommended a $5,000 disbursement for the relief
    society this year, but the council sided with the recommendation of
    the city's executive staff, awarding the nonprofit $7,500.

    "I concur with the executive staff recommendation on the Armenian
    Relief Society, when we recognize that somewhere in the vicinity
    of 20% of our population has some Armenian relationship or descent,
    or is part of the Armenian community," Councilman Jef Vander Borght
    said. "This is a portion of the Burbank community that needs to have
    funds allocated and they are performing services that go directly to
    provide help for those members who live in Burbank and are residents of
    Burbank.... They're primarily of Armenian descent, but it is certainly
    not an exclusionary entity and I believe that it's a service that
    has got to be provided."

    Armenian Relief Society officials have maintained that a significant
    portion of the organization's clients are non-Armenian and that the
    organization provides assistance in several languages, including
    Russian, French, Farsi and Arabic.

    Of the $202,606 in block grant funding available for public service
    agencies this year, the Burbank Unified School District received the
    most money, with $48,000, which was on par with last year's figure.

    The Family Services Agency, which provides social services to
    low-income families, was awarded $32,500, slightly more than the
    $30,000 the organization received in 2006.

    The Boys and Girls' Club of Burbank received $20,000, down from
    $23,168 from last year.

    "The city has been very generous to us over the years," said Shanna
    Warren, executive director of the Burbank Boy and Girls Club. "It's
    a little bit less than we got last year, but I understand that that
    sometimes happens. And the funding that we got will be used for our
    after-school programs at Miller and Emerson elementary, as well as our
    deaf and hard-of-hearing program, which serves kids from Washington
    [Elementary School], Muir [Middle School] and Burbank High."

    The Burbank Temporary Aid Center received $32,106, about $4,000 more
    than the organization received last year.

    The Salvation Army received $13,500, about $3,000 less than last year.

    BCR A place to grow, formerly the Burbank Center for the Retarded,
    received $9,000, the same amount that the non-profit received in 2006;
    the Burbank YMCA also received the same grant funding as in 2006,
    with $10,000.

    The Library Department's literacy program received $3,000 and the
    Burbank Noon Lions was given $2,000, both of which were identical to
    the organizations' grant funding in 2006.

    CHRIS WIEBE covers City Hall and the courts. He may be reached at
    (818) 637-3242 or by e-mail at chris.wiebelatimes.com.
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