Clearwater merchants upset over anti-Scientology protests



CLEARWATER — About three dozen downtown business owners are upset with a group of anti-Scientology protesters and want the City Council to do something about them.

But city leaders Tuesday said there’s little they can do.

“Suspending the First Amendment is something we shouldn’t spend a whole lot of time on,” Councilman Paul Gibson said.

The loosely organized group Anonymous has held several recent demonstrations against the Church of Scientology. Many Cleveland Street businesses say the masked protesters and the constant chanting have begun to take a toll.

They say the monthly demonstrations are turning away customers and ruining the overall ambiance of a downtown that city leaders have spent years trying to revitalize. And, they say, the protesters are scaring away people.

A petition signed by 34 merchants and two residents asked the council for “assistance in this matter.”

The petition said the local Anonymous group, mostly college students, have a right to peacefully protest, “but they are in no way peaceful.”

“Their actions have prevented customers from coming into our stores,” said the petition, which was submitted Friday to City Hall. “These people are making it difficult for us to attract customers downtown.”

On Tuesday, the City Council spent less than two minutes discussing the issue. The members agreed to send a letter to the businesses, saying they would not address the issue.

“I’m glad the City Council recognized our rights as Americans to gather to speak our opinions and protest,” said Joshua Nussbaum, 19, a student in Hillsborough County and local Anonymous organizer. “They did what was right . . . and we will continue to do what we think is right.”

The majority of the business owners who signed the petition are Scientologists, which led some in Anonymous to question whether the church had a hand in the petition. But Church of Scientology spokeswoman Pat Harney and a number of business owners who spoke with the Times on Monday denied it.

The merchants said they were concerned the protesters would harm the downtown that Clearwater is trying to rebuild.

“You can hear them screaming, hear cars honking and people who come here for a massage just want to relax,” said Gen Cournoyer, owner of Botanica Day Spa, 123 N Fort Harrison Ave.

“You’re entitled to free speech,” said Cournoyer, a 26-year-old church member, “but we’re trying to make a living and it can affect the people who work here. Plus it’s an eyesore. They look punkish.”

But the dissatisfaction isn’t limited to businesses owned by Scientologists.

Debbie King manages Trickels Jewelers and is not a Scientologist. She didn’t sign the petition but wishes the protesters would go away. “People don’t want to come downtown when that’s going on,” King said.

She added that the masks Anonymous members don to shield their identities also scare children.

Angela Gioffre, who owns an Italian clothing store and helped organize the petition, said she will talk to other merchants to see if they can meet with city leaders.

“We have to find a solution,” she said.

Others, though, don’t see the protests as a big deal.

“When they’re out there, they do whatever they do, but they haven’t scared our customers,” said Manola Louvon, 30, whose father owns Chiang Mai, a Thai restaurant at 415 Cleveland St.

Local leaders have invested millions into revitalizing the downtown’s core, particularly its main east-west thoroughfare — Cleveland Street — where most of the affected businesses are located.

And while council members say they want to lure more businesses downtown and help keep the ones there happy, they say the demonstrators haven’t done anything illegal.

Anonymous organizer Nussbaum said “our problem is with the management and leadership of the church,” and questioned how the marches could harm local shops.

“We’ve never said anything to the employees or customers — we’ve always been polite,” he said adding that members are frequent patrons of many of the businesses.

He also pointed out that no Anonymous member has been arrested or cited during the demonstrations. But he said he would be willing to meet with business owners.

The group, which marched in downtown for the fourth time last Saturday, has a core of about 80 members, he said. The next march will be June 14 when they’ll dress like pirates, calling the demonstration “Sea Arrrgh,” a poke at Sea Org, a religious order in the church.

Source

(Listed if other than Religion News Blog, or if not shown above)
Mike Donila, St. Petersburg Times, May 14, 2008, http://www.tampabay.com

Religion News Blog posted this on Wednesday May 14, 2008.
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