Commission Votes 7-0 To Draft Ordinance To Prevent Discrimination To Gays, Others In Royal Oak
ROYAL OAK (WWJ) - The Royal Oak City Commission voted unanimously to drafting an ordinance to prevent discrimination based on sexual orientation and a host of other things like height and weight during a meeting Monday night.
The drafting of the ordinance was proposed by City Commissioner Jim Rasor, who also has a law practice in Royal Oak.
"It's a huge victory for diversity and economic development in Royal Oak, " Rasor told WWJ. "We had dozens of business owners, old, young, straight, gay people attending - no one against. "
The proposal passed by a 7-0 vote by the city commission.
"I own a business and I am a job creator, I could walk in tomorrow to one of the young attorney's office and say 'Your heterosexual lifestyle is not compatible with this firm's goals' — He has no remedy under federal or state law for that," Rasor said before the meeting to WWJ.
Voters overwhelmingly rejected a similar proposal in 2001, but Rasor thinks attitudes have changed since then. Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, Birmingham and Ferndale already have a Human Rights Ordinance.
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