The Niagara Falls Review

Calgary Pride: Police can participat­e in parade, but not in uniform

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LAUREN KRUGEL

THE CANADIAN PRESS

Calgary Pride says it’s encouragin­g police officers to take part in its annual parade in September — under some conditions.

The group says police can participat­e as long as it’s without uniforms, firearms, vehicles or institutio­nal representa­tion such as floats.

“We acknowledg­e the historical oppression and institutio­nalized racism faced by queer/trans people of colour and Indigenous persons, and the potentiall­y negative associatio­n with weapons, uniforms, and other symbols of law enforcemen­t,” Calgary Pride said in a news release Wednesday.

“We also recognize the oppression of the gender and sexually diverse community at large, the discrimina­tion faced by members of law enforcemen­t who identify as part of the (gender and sexually diverse) community and the challenges they may have encountere­d as a self-identified (gender and sexually diverse) community member in the workplace.”

Calgary Pride says it also wants top brass at the Calgary Police Service, including Chief Roger Chaffin, to have formal diversity and inclusion training.

As in past years, the group says police will provide security at the Sept. 3 parade, which attracts more than 60,000 spectators.

“We believe banning Calgary Police Services, and other law enforcemen­t agencies from participat­ing in Calgary’s Pride activities deters from engaging in meaningful discussion­s on how law enforcemen­t agencies can best support Calgary’s gender and sexually diverse community,” Calgary Pride’s release said.

“We welcome the participat­ion of Calgary Police Services, and other law enforcemen­t agencies in a manner that demonstrat­es allyship and understand­ing.”

The group said the conditions have been communicat­ed in detail to senior managers at the Calgary Police Service.

Law enforcemen­t involvemen­t in Pride events has stirred controvers­y in recent years.

In January, Pride Toronto organizers agreed to a list of demands from the city’s chapter of Black Lives Matter. They included a ban on uniformed officers and police floats in the parade.

The issue first came to widespread public attention during last year’s parade, when members of the anti-racism group staged a sit-in that halted the march until Pride organizers agreed to a list of conditions.

Black Lives Matter has argued that allowing uniformed officers at the parade could discourage marginaliz­ed communitie­s from attending.

VA N C O U V E R — B r i t i s h Columbia’s informatio­n and privacy commission­er has ordered a Surrey-based vigilante group to stop posting personal informatio­n about two men the group alleges are linked to child luring.

Acting informatio­n and privacy commission­er Drew McArthur says in his ruling that Surrey Creep Catcher violated B.C.’s Personal Informatio­n Protection Act by gathering and posting informatio­n about the men.

McArthur investigat­ed complaints from two people and says the group used deceptive or misleading practices when it communicat­ed with them and made video recordings of their meetings.

Surrey Creep Catcher defended itself saying that it wasn’t violating laws because it was acting for journalist­ic purposes, a claim McArthur rejected in his decision.

McArthur says the group made no effort to provide an accurate and fair descriptio­n of the facts, and he has given the group 30 days to remove videos and personal details of the men from its social media sites.

“In short, the organizati­on’s true purpose in collecting, using and disclosing personal informatio­n is to ‘name and shame’ those whom it considers to be creeps, rather than offer a journalist­ic perspectiv­e on the issue,” he says in his written decision released Tuesday.

McArthur has also ordered the group to destroy all of its records, video and communicat­ions with the complainan­ts.

Surrey Creep Catcher president Ryan Laforge was not immediatel­y available for an interview, but he told Vancouver radio station CKNW that he will not comply with the ruling.

“No, the whole purpose of what we do is to protect children from these guys,” he says. The Canadian Press

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