Difference between revisions of "Gregory Pettis"

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Cathedral City, California
 
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Elected Mayor Pro-Tempore by the Council 1996-98
 
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== Essay by Gregory Pettis for Out and Elected in the USA ==
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In addition to his duties as a Councilmember, Greg Pettis has served as the executive director of the Palm Springs Youth Center, President of Cathedral City’s Rotary Club and Desert Business Association and board member of United Cerebral Palsy of the Desert and the Coachella Valley Mountains Conservancy. He is running for the State Assembly in 2008.
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== Essay by Gregory Pettis for ''Out and Elected in the USA'' ==
  
  

Revision as of 14:46, 29 May 2008

Gregory Pettis, City of Cathedral Council, California. Photo by Ron Schlittler


Gregory Pettis

Born December 15, 1955

City Council

Cathedral City, California

55,000 constituents

Career Overview

Elected 1994

Reelected 1996

Elected Mayor Pro-Tempore by the Council 1996-98

Reelected 2000, 2004


In addition to his duties as a Councilmember, Greg Pettis has served as the executive director of the Palm Springs Youth Center, President of Cathedral City’s Rotary Club and Desert Business Association and board member of United Cerebral Palsy of the Desert and the Coachella Valley Mountains Conservancy. He is running for the State Assembly in 2008.


Essay by Gregory Pettis for Out and Elected in the USA

Being a member of the City Council of a small resort community in the Southern California desert and it’s first openly gay member has been an enlightening and educational experience for myself, city staff, and the residents I have been elected to serve.


One of my most difficult things has been trying to balance the needs of the greater community with the expectations of the gay community. Cathedral City has had a history of being the valley city with the most sexually oriented businesses. The city has been embarking on a major redevelopment of our community and that has included attempting to clean up those businesses.


Members of our community have taken this as an attack on gay businesses and entered into a strident debate on the anti-gay nature of the city. This has also brought in the religious right into the discussion. This has made it quite difficult for the city and for the two members of the council that are gay.


One of the nicest things to happen to me was within one week of being sworn in. It was the city’s employee holiday party in 1994. I attended with my then-lover, and without thinking about it, we walked into the party holding hands. Immediately the City Clerk and other senior staff descended!


Since that night, our council has passed non-discrimination ordinances, domestic partnership status for our residents and benefits for city staff, appointed gays and lesbians to fully one-third of our public commissions, and in 1998, I was able to welcome a colleague as our second openly gay councilmember.


It’s been a joy!

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This entry is part of the featured exhibit Out and Elected in the USA curated by Ron Schlittler. As it is content created by a named author, editor, or curator, it is not open to editing by the general public. But we strongly encourage you to discuss the content or propose edits on the discussion page, and the author, editor, or curator will make any changes that improve the entry or its content. Thanks.