Council gives Nichols one last chance
- Share via
June Casagrande
Councilman Dick Nichols told a room jammed with residents, reporters
and TV cameras Tuesday night that he is not a bigot and that he
believes the furor over his race-related comments is the result of a
conspiracy of his fellow City Council members, the Daily Pilot and
the Newport Beach Firefighters Assn.
“I am not a racist,” Nichols said, noting that he has worked with
and supervised Mexicans at different times during his professional
career. “If you think you can label me a Mexican hater, the evidence
just won’t support that.”
Nichols also said that Mayor Steve Bromberg could not prove that
Nichols had made a racially insensitive comment during a phone
conversation between them, but Nichols did not deny that he made the
comment.
“You said I have made the comment that all Mexicans perform this
traffic scam,” Nichols said to Bromberg. “I believe you have no data
to support that. ... Did you tape record it?”
“Of course not,” Bromberg replied.
“It’s basically your word against mine,” Nichols said.
“I don’t hear you denying it,” Councilman Gary Adams added.
Bromberg had reported that, during a phone conversation, Nichols
had tried to explain an earlier comment about phony car accidents by
saying “it’s the Mexicans that do these phony accident rings and rip
off the white people in [Corona del Mar].”
The comment was just one of four instances documented in the staff
report before council members as they considered what actions to take
against Nichols. A fifth instance has been alleged in a letter from
the Newport Beach Firefighters Assn. stating that Nichols had made
racially objectionable comments during an interview to decide whether
the association would support Nichols’ candidacy.
Near the end of the night, as 1 a.m. approached, council members
voted to support some scaled-back punishments of Nichols.
Voting 5 to 2, with Nichols and Councilman John Heffernan voting
no, and Councilman Gary Proctor absent because he had to leave early,
the majority voted on a resolution that says that if Nichols cannot
abide by the oath of office council members take, then he should
resign.
“Every one of us took an oath to support the state Constitution
and the federal Constitution,” said Adams, who had requested
revisions to the resolution. “We are obligated to make policy
decisions without consideration for race, religion, creed ... . By
Mr. Nichols comments, it appears that that’s not the way he goes
about making policy decisions.”
The furor had erupted after a telephone interview on Corona del
Mar State Beach improvements in which Nichols said that Mexican
people occupy the grassy areas all day.
Heffernan said that he voted no because he felt that such a formal
rebuke could damage Nichols’ ability to be effective in office,
thereby denying his constituents fair representation.
The council decided not to strip Nichols of his committee
appointments.
“Though in my mind, he is certainly prejudiced, I don’t think
those prejudices would affect those committees,” Councilman Tod
Ridgeway said.
Some council members also apologized to the Latino community on
Nichols’ behalf.
“Because you’re not going to apologize, I would like to issue that
apology,” Adams said to Nichols.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.