Medicine Hat News

Edmonton police officers won’t be wearing uniforms for Pride parade

- COLETTE DERWORIZ

EDMONTON Police officers will march in this year’s Edmonton Pride festival, but not in their uniforms.

The Edmonton Pride Festival Society said it restricted police vehicles from participat­ing, as well as lights and sirens in the 2017 parade after a similar move in Toronto.

“Many pride organizati­ons in other communitie­s started talking with their marginaliz­ed members, trying to do more to include them in the conversati­on around Pride,” the society said in a news release. “In many communitie­s, because police enforcemen­t agencies were seen to make marginaliz­ed people feel unsafe, police were asked (or told) to step back and not be involved in Pride celebratio­ns.”

In 2017, Supt. Brad Doucette said the Edmonton Police Service had more work to do if the community wasn’t comfortabl­e with a police presence.

The service later met with the festival society to discuss what could be done to build bridges.

As a result, both city police and Alberta RCMP have decided to walk in civilian clothing in this year’s parade.

“We can highlight the individual­s that are beyond the badge — the people who actually make up the Edmonton Police Service,” said Doucette. “We are individual­s. We are parents, we’re grandparen­ts, we’re siblings, we’re allies with the LGBTQ, we’re oftentimes parents of, or are members of the community itself and that gets lost with the uniform.”

He said each of the 50 or so officers who participat­e will wear an individual­ized T-shirt.

“We’re not putting any parameters about what any individual are going to put on their shirt,” he said. “We have people from the LGBTQ community in our service, so you may see people put that on there — that they’re gay, that they’re lesbian, that they’re married to a man or that they are the mother of a gay youth.”

RCMP officers from the Edmonton area will also attend the parade out of uniform.

“Participan­ts will be wearing RCMP Pride Tshirts, as proud employees of the RCMP, in support of the LGBTQ2S+ community,” said Staff Sgt. Jeremie Landry of the RCMP.

Clayton Hitchcock, who’s the community engagement committee chair for the Edmonton Pride Festival Society, said they are hopeful the initiative by the Edmonton Police Service and RCMP will help marginaliz­ed members of the community feel safer.

“The members and officers who attend the parade and festival volunteer to be there,” he said. “They are often allies and members of the LGBTQ2S+ community.

“Better connection­s between them and marginaliz­ed folks will help them bring about change within their organizati­ons.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/MARK BLINCH ?? A man holds a flag on a hockey stick during the Pride parade in Toronto on June 25, 2017. Police will march in this year's Edmonton Pride festival, but not in uniforms.The Edmonton Pride Festival Society says they restricted enforcemen­t vehicles,...
THE CANADIAN PRESS/MARK BLINCH A man holds a flag on a hockey stick during the Pride parade in Toronto on June 25, 2017. Police will march in this year's Edmonton Pride festival, but not in uniforms.The Edmonton Pride Festival Society says they restricted enforcemen­t vehicles,...

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