Justin Massey speaks before the Anaheim City Council in Anaheim on Tuesday, May 23, 2017 about reasons the city should be flying the gay pride flag in in Friendship Plaza to celebrate Gay Pride Month. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

ANAHEIM The rainbow-colored pride flag will not be hoisted on one of the city’s three flag poles in front of City Hall.

Instead, it will hang on the front side of the building.

The Anaheim City Council on Tuesday night, June 6, unanimously voted against flying the rainbow-colored flag representing the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer community on one of the flagpoles occupied by the city, California and U.S. flags.

The council instead chose to follow city staffers’ direction and will display the 15-by-20-foot pride flag in front or the side of the seven-story building. The flag is now draped inside a courtyard and will be moved to its new spot within the next couple of days.

The Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodal Center – commonly called ARTIC – will light up at night with the colors of the rainbow when the Angels are not in town through June, Gay Pride Month.

Additionally, Councilman Jose Moreno said he plans to put the issue on a city agenda to further examine Anaheim’s law that the city cannot fly the pride flag with the city, state and U.S. flags on those flag poles.

“I’m drawing the line with flying the flag in front of City Hall,” said Mayor Tom Tait, who was against flying or displaying any kind of flag except the three allowed in front of City Hall. “I do not believe that any other flags should fly in front with the governmental flags.”

The vote comes a couple of weeks after the City Council deadlocked on the issue.

Though the previous council approved flying the pride flag in front of City Hall last year, a week after a gunman killed 49 people and injured more than 50 at Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando, city staffers later learned that the move went against the City Charter.

Mayor Tait and council members Lucille Kring and Denise Barnes expressed concerns about setting a precedent. Since the issue came up, Kring said she has received correspondence from other groups wanting to fly their flags.

“Some have suggested to put all the flags up,” Kring said. “This is not the United Nations.”

Councilwoman Kris Murray, who wanted to fly the pride flag again, said the council should have honored the promise they made a year ago to the LGBTQ community.

“It is a symbolic gesture of unity,” Murray said. “We have an opportunity to say, Gay is normal, it’s right, it’s proud, it’s not something you choose, it’s who you are.’

“And to put a flag up one month a year to just symbolically support this community to me … is a symbolic gesture I would like us to hold faith to and keep our promise,” she said.

More than two dozen members of the LGBTQ community came out to voice support for flying the flag. Just like last year, they decorated the Council Chambers with large photos of all 49 shooting victims in rainbow-colored frames.The gay pride flag hangs just outside the entrance to Anaheim City Hall in Anaheim on May 23. The LGBTQ community is angry that the city is not flying the flag in Friendship Plaza. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

A visitors looks at the some of the 49 victims killed last year at Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando. LGBTQ community organizers brought all 49 to the City Council meeting to show the reason why flying the pride flag is important for the city to do. (Photo by Joseph Pimentel, Orange County Register/SCNG)

But most were left disappointed with the council’s decision.

“It’s going backwards,” said Justin Massey, 24, a field organizer for Equality California, a statewide LGBTQ group. “This goes against everything that Anaheim labels itself as the city of kindness.”

Laura Kanter, director of policy and advocacy at the LGBT Center Orange County, said she was disappointed.

She said the pride flag represents dignity and equality of LGBTQ people. But some people still don’t get it.

“At the end of the day, they should just raise the darn flag and move on,” she said. “We have serious work to do. They did it last year and nothing horrible happened.”