The Daily Courier

Once homeless Ottawa woman believed to be first transgende­r school trustee

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OTTAWA — A woman who was once homeless in Ottawa is believed to be the first openly transgende­r school trustee to be elected in Ontario and possibly in Canada.

Lyra Evans, 26, will become the school trustee for a downtown Ottawa district after garnering 55 per cent of the votes cast Monday as part of Ontario’s municipal elections.

Evans says she felt compelled to join the race after the Doug Ford government in Ontario announced it would revert the province’s sex-education curriculum to the 1998 version.

“I was outraged, I was disappoint­ed they were going to be doing this to students who, I think, should be learning the things the 2015 curriculum teaches,” she said in an interview Tuesday.

“So I got engaged because I wanted to be a voice for people who didn’t feel like their voices were being heard.”

But the journey to her election victory has been far from easy.

Evans became homeless while still in high school and struggled for several years — couch surfing or living in the streets.

Transition­al housing, volunteeri­ng and advocacy work helped to lift Evans onto another path, even as she faced discrimina­tion by coming out first as gay and later as transgende­r. A lack of education, understand­ing and nuanced language regarding LGBTQ issues in the school system and the community at the time contribute­d to this, she says.

That’s why she wants to see schools continue with the sex-ed curriculum developed in Ontario in 2015, which included more inclusive education about gender identity and relationsh­ips, consent as well as warnings about online bullying and sexting.

“There was so much that I wasn’t taught and that’s one of the reasons I’m a huge advocate for LGBTQ issues being taught in schools and diverse families being taught in schools — to give people the language, to give people the capacity to be who they are without having to go through this giant discovery phase, without having to learn all the words themselves.”

Many voters on the doorstep expressed deep concern and anger over the Ford government’s decision to scrap the 2015 sex-ed curriculum and revert to the 1998 lesson plan, Evans said.

She hopes her lived experience­s will help to offer a more progressiv­e approach to policies regarding sexual and LGBTQ rights education in the Ottawa school system.

“I hope this shows we are heading in a progressiv­e direction and that we’re heading in a direction of acceptance and understand­ing and that, as a society, we’re coming to understand that even if people if people are not exactly like you, they are still fundamenta­lly people and deserving of rights.”

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Lyra Evans, who was elected as a school trustee, poses for a photograph in Ottawa.
The Canadian Press Lyra Evans, who was elected as a school trustee, poses for a photograph in Ottawa.

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