Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jan 2008 Source: Lima News (OH) Copyright: 2008 Freedom Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.limanews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/990 Author: Heather Rutz Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Tarika+Wilson (Tarika Wilson) COUNCIL TENSIONS RISING LIMA -- Following the fatal shooting of a 26-year-old mother by police, tensions are obviously running high in the city. That includes City Council. Sixth Ward Councilman Derry Glenn on Wednesday suggested the need for a retreat after 5th Ward Councilman Tommy Pitts left the group's meeting Tuesday night after he lost a committee chairmanship. Glenn was quick to say he believes the council has communication problems, not problems based on race. Glenn said Nixon should have talked to Pitts about the committee change. "I see division. Everybody has their own agendas and it needs to stop," Glenn said. "Folks put us in office to do a job for them. That will slow you down on getting your job done as a city councilman." Pitts lost his position as Safety Services Committee chairman when council President John Nixon recommended a change and the council approved it Tuesday. Pitts said he would not accept his new chairmanship of the Human Resources Committee. Pitts declined on Wednesday to talk further about why he left or elaborate on comments he made during the council meeting Tuesday about being stripped of the post because he's addressed concerns of the black community. Pitts said if city officials had listened to concerns he was airing, the Friday shooting could have been prevented. He also spoke of an investigation of him that city officials were aware of. In the past year, Pitts has held public meetings on racial profiling, and accused the court system of doling harsher penalties to blacks than whites for drug crimes while his two sons were facing drug charges. His sons' attorney, Ken Rexford, studied two years worth of local drug sentences and produced statistics that blacks are sentenced to nearly twice as long in prison as whites on drug charges. He also had private conversations with another councilor and excluded a member of the Safety Services Committee on a committee matter in September. Nixon stood by the reasons he gave Tuesday for the change, saying he believes Pitts' interest about city hiring practices and increasing diversity of the city's employees would be beneficial on Human Resources. Nixon also declined to talk about what happened Tuesday night, saying he believes now, because of heightened sensitivities of many in the city, including officials, makes it a time for measured words. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake