The Peterborough Examiner

City settles complaint over use of Indigenous mascots and logos

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — Indigenous-themed mascots, names, imagery and symbols used by non-Indigenous sports teams will be removed from arenas and other facilities in Mississaug­a under a mediated settlement before the province’s human rights tribunal, the complainan­t said on Thursday.

The agreement reached late last month ends a complaint from a resident businesspe­rson, who said he found the use of such names and imagery offensive.

“(The settlement) recognizes Native mascots as a human rights issue,” Bradley Gallant, a business consultant and member of the Qalipu First Nation, said in an interview.

“It’s not tradition. It’s something that you can no longer say you’re doing because it’s honouring us — because the intent of your use of a mascot doesn’t matter; it’s the effect or the harm that the mascot causes.”

Gallant filed the complaint with the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario in 2015 because he said he didn’t want his children to grow up feeling ashamed of their heritage.

He said Mississaug­a, just west of Toronto, should not provide funding to teams with racially insensitiv­e names and logos, like the Mississaug­a Chiefs or Lorne Park Ojibwa.

He said he also wanted the city to remove banners featuring the teams’ names and logos from municipal buildings, arguing they contribute to a harmful and discrimina­tory environmen­t.

In all, his complaint named seven teams in the province with racially insensitiv­e names — five in Mississaug­a. Two of the teams had already changed their names and logos before the settlement.

“It’s a very wide problem, but you attack the issue where you can attack the issue,” Gallant said. “I was just getting tired of every building I walked into in Mississaug­a having a Native mascot. I thought it was time for a change.”

The city, which had argued that the teams were responsibl­e for names and logos, had no immediate comment on the settlement, which was reached Nov. 30.

Gallant has previously said he didn’t see any harm in such names and logos but that his views began to shift in 2014 in light of controvers­y surroundin­g the NFL’s Washington Redskins. He said he grew to see the names and images as a holdover of colonial attitudes and eventually told his daughters, who are both goalies, they could not play in such teams.

In addition to removing the offending materials, Gallant said the city also agreed to enhance its diversity and inclusion training, and to develop a policy related to the use of Indigenous themes and images at its facilities in consultati­on with various First Nations groups.

Gallant called it a “very good start,” saying he wants to be able to go into a mall or an arena without being offended. Use of these names and symbols creates a “poisonous environmen­t” for Indigenous people, he said.

Gallant said a similar deal was reached in September with the Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board, which has also agreed to bar students from wearing or displaying Indigenous mascots at school or at school-related events. In addition, he said the board agreed to amend its dress code.

Ontario’s Human Rights Commission intervened in the case and was a party to the resolution.

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