B.C. mayor asked to resign over Facebook post condemned as racist - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. mayor asked to resign over Facebook post condemned as racist

Pouce Coupe Mayor Lorraine Michetti has apologized and vowed to take a First Nations awareness program in her community.

Pouce Coupe Mayor Lorraine Michetti has apologized, vows to take First Nations awareness program

From left to right: Pouce Coupe Coun. Barb Smith, Coun. Donna White, Mayor Lorraine Michetti, Coun. Marlene Hebert and Coun. Ken Drover. Councillors asked Michetti to resign after she published a Facebook post that many people condemned as racist. (PouceCoupe.ca)

The mayor ofPouce Coupe, a small town in northeastern B.C., has been removed from most of her duties and has been asked to resign in response to a Facebook post she published earlier this week.

On Wednesday, Mayor Lorraine Michettiwrote"Don't want Pipeline's? [sic]They want to protect our land. Yeah ok" on her Facebook page, along with photos of homes with garbage-strewn lawns.

Regional officials quickly decried the post, which many felt was an insensitive, inappropriate and racist reference to Indigenous land defenders.

"I wish to clearly state that we find the sentiment in the post deeply troubling," said the chair of the Peace River Regional District, Brad Sperling, in a written statementon Friday.

"Our anti-racism policy clearly and firmly commits the PRRD to conducting its business in an anti-discriminatory and anti-racist manner and environment."

A Facebook post from Pouce Coupe Mayor Lorraine Michetti was quickly denounced as racist by several officials in the Peace River Regional District. (Facebook)

Michetti is a member of the regional district's board of directors.

'No place for racism'

The nearby District of Taylor also issued a statement condemning Michetti's Facebook post.

"There is no place for racism, and the hateful comments it generates,"wrote Mayor Rob Fraser on behalf of the district.

"The First Peoples of the Peace are our friends and neighbours."

In an interview with CBC News, Michetti deniedthe post had any reference to Indigenous people. Instead, she saidit was areference to anti-pipeline protesters more generally.

"I feel really bad for doing what I did," Michetti said. "It was a spur of the moment thing."

Michetti said the post was taken out of context.

The mayor says she has been bullied and harassed as a result of the post, which she says was made on her personal Facebook page and she removed after it was published.

"I'm an everyday person, too, and people make mistakes. And I made a mistake," she said.

"I'm not a polished politician. I live in a community that has roughly 735 in it. I've lived here for 36years."

In a written statement, Michetti said she will take an awareness and learning program taught by a First Nations member of her community.

Emergency council meeting

Municipal councillors in Pouce Coupe held an emergency meeting on Saturday to discuss Michetti's post.

Coun. Ken Drover said the mayor wasn't there, "although she was given notice and had every opportunity to attend."

Council voted to remove her from all committee and board duties. They also asked her to resign, as there is no legal means for the mayor to be removed from council.

In a written statement, Pouce Coupe councillors said the mayor's comments violated the council's code of conduct, which "demands the highest level of integrity and ethical conduct from its members."

Michetti said she intends to speak with a lawyer on Monday.

"I don't know what I'm going to do. I'm not sure. I'm going to take some time and actually think about it," she said.