Steve Stanton was
fired as city manager in Largo, Fla., two months
ago after announcing his plans to become Susan Stanton. On
Wednesday, Stanton, wearing a white skirt, pumps, and
makeup, applied for the top job in Sarasota,
a cosmopolitan Florida tourist town, and was turned
down.
The Sarasota city
commissioners picked another one of the five
candidates. Stanton was their third choice.
''It's just too
soon. It's too soon for a transgendered city manager....
I just don't think the world is ready just yet,'' the
48-year-old Stanton said as she made a hasty exit from
City Hall.
Commissioner Ken
Shelin disagreed. Shelin said the determining factor was
the winning candidate's ''quiet leadership.''
Stanton ''made it
into the top three,'' Shelin said. ''She got serious
consideration. She made, clearly, a very strong impression
on all of us. There were favorable comments from all
the commissioners.''
Earlier this
year, the Largo city commission voted 5-2 to fire Stanton
from the $140,000-a-year city manager's job after 14 years
of generally excellent evaluations. Hundreds of people
for and against transgender rights packed the chambers
to voice their opinions, and dozens of police officers
were posted to keep the peace. In the end, commissioners
said it was Stanton's judgment and honesty, not his
impending sex change, that prompted their decision.
Things were much
calmer in Sarasota, about 50 miles south of Largo on
Florida's southwestern coast.
Largo, with a
population of 76,000, is a working-class community in the
Tampa Bay area. Sarasota's 54,000 residents are generally
more affluent, and it has a thriving arts scene.
Sarasota is the
home of New College of Florida, where the 750 students
take classes without grades and design their own curriculum.
The city is also home to the John and Mable Ringling
Museum of Art, which has a collection of Old Masters
bought by the circus tycoon.
Sarasota is also
where Stanton spent much of her secret life as Susan
before going public, spending several weekends a year there
dressed in women's clothing.
''We need to put
a little pepper in the atmosphere,'' said Sarasota
resident Gwen Calloway, 70, who supported Stanton. ''She has
the background. She can start running instead of
walking. She has proved she's accomplished.''
The five
candidates for city manager were interviewed separately at
an open meeting, during which no one spoke against
Stanton. A few police officers watched over the few
citizens who sat through the job interviews.
The commissioners
hesitated to bring up the one topic on nearly
everyone's mind--Stanton's plans to undergo sex-change
surgery someday soon and complete the process started
when Stanton recently began living as a woman.
So Stanton
brought it up.
Stanton said that
having a transsexual city manager would not be as
disruptive as they might think. She said that the
recuperation time for a sex-change operation is
minimal and that, if hired, she would step back from
the national spotlight.
''It's a
legitimate concern, and hopefully I've addressed it,''
Stanton, who has started hormone therapy, said in her
somewhat deep voice before the vote. ''I have taken
the initiative to throw it out and maybe remove it
from the table.''
The five
commissioners ultimately voted to hire Robert Bartolotta,
59, who resigned as city manager of Jupiter in 2004 to
care for his terminally ill wife. She has since died.
Their second choice was Marsha Segal-George, 54, a
deputy chief administrator in Orlando.
Stanton said
before the vote that she did not believe the sex change
would be a factor in the city's decision. And she said many
residents stopped her to express support as she
explored the city in the days leading up to
Wednesday's vote.
''Not a single
person has focused on what I wear, the type of shoes I
have on, or the type of necklace I am wearing. It's just not
an issue,'' Stanton said before the vote.
Stanton, the
father of a teenage son, said the intense media scrutiny
made the Sarasota interview cumbersome. A scrum of cameras
and reporters made her easy to spot at a crowded
Tuesday night reception for the candidates. A
photographer followed her to the threshold of the women's
restroom.
The scrutiny is
''part of the price of admission,'' Stanton said before
the vote.
''The job of a
city manager, while critical, is extremely
uninteresting,'' she added. ''I am pretty confident that
within two or three weeks the media is going to find
something that is a real story. But not this. This is
silly.'' (Phil Davis, AP)
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