Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Changing names and accepting apologies

- JOHN GORMLEY

It is puzzling to witness the saga of Gabriel Michael Fisher, arrested last week by Saskatchew­an police and charged with eight child pornograph­y-related offences.

Fisher is the new legal name for Kevin Daniel Hudec, whose long record of child pornograph­y conviction­s and high risk earned him a longterm offender designatio­n, placing him under constant police supervisio­n.

Just over a month ago, Hudec legally changed his name to Gabriel Michael Fisher. At about the same time, the police were closing in on him for alleged online offences from January.

According to eHealth Saskatchew­an, the agency responsibl­e for Vital Statistics, a legal name change can be made within weeks if someone is at least 18 years of age, a Saskatchew­an resident for at least three consecutiv­e months and eligible to remain in Canada. No other questions are asked.

Because Hudec/Fisher is a registered sex offender, the Sex Offender Informatio­n Registrati­on Act requires him to notify the RCMP about his changed name, so presumably the police know when convicted criminals take on a new identity. But members of the community do not know.

The registrar of Vital Statistics may refuse a name change if is not “in the public interest.” Is it in the public interest to have a sex offender still serving a sentence hide under the radar by doing an identity makeover?

We deserve better.

Since its 2015 report, the “calls to action” from Canada’s Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission on residentia­l schools have been largely practical and instructiv­e in reshaping the relationsh­ip with Indigenous people and finding a way forward.

But as the 94 recommenda­tions assume commandmen­t like status, it is worth pointing out that some of them are problemati­c, like the implicatio­ns on law and policy making by imposing the United Nation’s Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous People on every level of government.

Ditto for ordering the CBC’s already bloated state funding to be further boosted. This does little to end the legacy of residentia­l schools.

One recommenda­tion calls on the Pope, as head of the Roman Catholic Church, to issue a detailed apology related to residentia­l schools and to personally deliver the apology in Canada. As Pope Francis declined and the predictabl­e furor ensued, there was a sense of deja vu.

In the early 1990s in Saskatchew­an, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops came to a national meeting on residentia­l schools and issued an unqualifie­d and thorough apology and promised reparation­s for their church’s role in residentia­l schools.

But the bishops are not the Pope. So, in 2009 Pope Benedict met at the Vatican with a delegation of Canadian Indigenous leaders, personally apologized to them and “expressed his sorrow at the anguish caused by the deplorable conduct of some members of the Church and he offered his sympathy and prayerful solidarity.”

At his side, Canada’s Assembly of First Nations Grand Chief Phil Fontaine accepted the apology, calling it the “final piece” in the process and saying that it should “close the book on the issue of church apologies.”

Surely a time comes when instead of demanding repeated apologies, they be accepted and then built on.

And as Rod Stewart rolled through Saskatoon for the first time in a dozen years, I’d admitted to never having seen him in concert. So, the date night was on.

I am married to a Rockin’ Rod super fan. I cannot remember how many times she’s seen him in concert. She can — six, and has travelled to see him in Vegas, even danced on stage with him once.

As we entered SaskTel Centre, me: “Sure are a lot of old people here.” Her: “You fit right in.”

It was a great night, singing every word from every hit from the eighth row on the floor, a terrific 13-piece backup band and chorus — all led by a consummate showman. It was an evening to remember, if a few decades late.

John Gormley is a broadcaste­r, lawyer, author and former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MP whose radio talk show is heard weekdays from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on 650 CKOM Saskatoon and 980 CJME Regina.

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