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Black Lives Matter Sign Spurs Discrimination Complaint

Jerry Kenney

Tenants in a Dayton home have filed a discrimination case against their landlords in a dispute over a Black Lives Matter sign.

In August, roommates Lindsay Ainsworth and Melissa Carrion put up the sign in the front yard of the home they rent in East Dayton.

Landlords Dan and Grace Christiansen of Beavercreek asked the women to remove the sign but told them they could place it in the front window of the home.

Lindsay Ainsworth says they wanted the sign to be more visible than that.

“This neighborhood is 90 percent white, but we live next to a bus stop, we live next to a convenience store so there's a lot of passersby," she says. "It was really important to show the people of color that there’s someone here that supports them as well as encourage other white people to put up their own signs and take their own actions."

On October 1, the women were served with a notice that their month-to-month lease would be terminated and given until November 3 to vacate the premises. They believe they are being asked to leave because of the sign.

Ainsworth and Carrion filed a discrimination complaint with the Dayton Human Relations Council, which offered to mediate, but in a forwarded email, the HRC says the landlords declined mediation. Even though none of the parties involved are African American, the incident is now being investigated as a racial discrimination case because of the subject of the sign in question.

The pair plans to move out this weekend, and has asked friends to join them in a visual demonstration bearing Black Lives Matter signs as they leave.

The landlords haven’t yet responded to requests for comment from WYSO.

 

Jerry began volunteering at WYSO in 1991 and hosting Sunday night's Alpha Rhythms in 1992. He joined the YSO staff in 2007 as Morning Edition Host, then All Things Considered. He's hosted Sunday morning's WYSO Weekend since 2008 and produced several radio dramas and specials . In 2009 Jerry received the Best Feature award from Public Radio News Directors Inc., and was named the 2023 winner of the Ohio Associated Press Media Editors Best Anchor/News Host award. His current, heart-felt projects include the occasional series Bulletin Board Diaries, which focuses on local, old-school advertisers and small business owners. He has also returned as the co-host Alpha Rhythms.
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