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Northport separates pride flags and veterans banners in compromise

Northport separates pride flags and veterans banners in compromise

After a complaint led the village to take down pride flags in Northport Park during pride month, officials reached a compromise that hangs the pride flags and the veterans banners separately. Half of the veterans banners were moved to a smaller fence and some pride flags were restored, drawing mixed reactions from organizers and the American Legion.

Fewer pride flags are flying in Northport Park this June after the village took some of them down. According to organizers, the move followed a complaint, and the result has been a visibly reduced display during what is normally a month of celebration for the local LGBTQ community. The decision has turned a quiet village park into the focus of a growing dispute.

Jeff Cusick of Northport Pride Fest said the village removed about half of the flags after the complaint came in. He described the outcome as a setback for the group's central aim, saying their whole point of existing is to show the community that they are there and that people are welcome. For the organizers, the reduced display sent the opposite message during pride month.

Part of what changed in the park this year was the addition of banners honoring veterans. According to Northport's mayor, the American Legion complained about having to share the space, a grievance that set the stage for the village's decision to take some of the pride flags down while officials looked for a way forward.

The pride flags were removed last Thursday, with the village describing the step as temporary and tied to reaching a compromise. The LGBTQ community, however, has pushed back, calling for all of the flags to be put back up for the remainder of pride month rather than left down while the two sides try to settle their differences.

For the organizers, the timing and framing of the change matter. Their belief, as they put it, is that the veterans expanded their program in the park with the purpose of using patriotism to support discrimination. They see the removal of the pride flags not as a neutral space dispute but as part of an effort to push their display aside.

The disagreement has reached a boiling point in the village. According to the mayor, someone upset that pride flags were sharing the same lamppost as the veteran flags walked into the police station and threatened to take matters into their own hands, an escalation that has raised the stakes around what began as a question of how to share a public park.

In the days that followed, the village moved toward a compromise that ultimately separated the two displays. The pride flags in the park were first taken down entirely, and then, as both sides sought a fair solution, the village removed about half of the veterans banners and moved them to a smaller fence before putting some of the LGBTQ flags back up. The outcome left the pride flags and the veterans banners hung apart from one another rather than sharing the same poles.

Reaction to the arrangement was mixed. The American Legion commander was described as happy with the current solution, while organizers from Northport Pride Fest said that, in their view, no one truly won in the compromise. They stressed that visibility in the community remains important, particularly for young LGBT residents, even as the separation of the displays offered a way out of a standoff that had escalated to threats earlier in the week.

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