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When a New Mexico advisory committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights visited Farmington in 2004 to assess the city's progress 30 years after the canyon murders, several speakers at a forum complained that harassment of Indians by white youth continues. In the current case, defendants William Hatch of Fruitland and Paul Beebe and Jesse Sanford, both of Farmington, have pleaded not guilty. Their court-appointed lawyers have declined comment. They have also been charged with state crimes. Yazzie and Mayor Tommy Roberts said despite the history of problems, there is evidence of substantial progress in Farmington, including the recent agreement between city and tribal leaders. The consensus after the ceremony was that people who discriminate in Farmington
-- both Anglo and Navajo -- are in the minority. "There are thousands of interactions every day between people of different cultures in Farmington," Roberts said. "Most of those occur without any problems." Roberts said the city has made decisive efforts to address and improve race relations in Farmington, a center for oil and natural gas production and commerce that draws shoppers from southwestern Colorado and across the Navajo lands of New Mexico, Arizona and Utah. In recent years, Farmington has hired more Navajo police officers, opened an Indian center to showcase cultural heritage, supported an alcohol treatment center and established a community relations commission that looks into Navajo complaints. But Roberts said it's not realistic to expect the community to fully eliminate bias and prejudice, and he said it's unfortunate that periodic racial incidents are likely. "There will always be people who just don't get it," Roberts said. "They're not going to change their attitudes and at some point they'll carry out their beliefs in a way we all find real troubling. But what we do have now is a greater understanding of culture in our community, and I think that understanding runs both ways."
[Associated
Press;
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