The Province

Gay rights showdown

Faith-based schools, parents challenge Alberta law

- LAUREN KRUGEL

MEDICINE HAT, Alta. — A big crowd showed up Wednesday for the first court challenge to an Alberta law barring schools from telling parents if their children join a gaystraigh­t alliance.

A Court of Queen’s Bench justice in Medicine Hat heard an applicatio­n from faith-based schools and parents to halt the legislatio­n until there’s a ruling on its constituti­onality.

The 50-seat courtroom filled up almost immediatel­y, leaving more than 100 people waiting outside. Many of those attending wore buttons that read: “Include parents.”

Leading the challenge was the Justice Centre for Constituti­onal Freedoms, which argues that keeping parents out of the loop violates charter rights, including freedom of religion and expression.

The group calls gay-straight alliances “ideologica­l sexual clubs” that make graphic informatio­n on gay sex available.

The Alberta government and others have argued schools shouldn’t inform parents if their children join the peer groups because there is the potential to out them to guardians who may not be accepting.

The hearing began with the Calgary Sexual Health Centre being granted intervener status after it argued that members of the LGBTQ community are often excluded from such cases and the centre’s goal is to “give voice to this often voiceless group of students.”

The hearing is being closely watched by LGBTQ advocates.

Kristopher Wells, an assistant professor in the University of Alberta’s faculty of education, said he’s troubled that some of the same arguments made Wednesday were the same as those he heard when samesex marriage was legalized.

Wells said the possibilit­y of the challenge being successful is not his primary concern.

“I’m more worried about the rhetoric and the damage it does to LGBTQ youth when they have to hear these kinds of ridiculous, outdated stereotype­s.”

The legal challenge was filed in April in response to the ban passed by Premier Rachel Notley’s government late last year.

Gay-straight alliances are peer support networks organized by students to help gay kids feel welcome and to prevent bullying or abuse.

The challenge says parents are alarmed at the “climate of secrecy” the legislatio­n has created.

“The impugned sections of the School Act have stripped parents of the ability to know fully where their children are, who they are involved with, and what they may be encouraged to think or do,” it says.

Two of the parents who signed the complaint say their autistic teenage daughter joined a gay-straight alliance and was convinced to dress and act like a boy at school. The challenge says the girl became suicidal before her parents learned of “confusing influences” at school.

Justice Centre president John Carpay said teachers and principals should be able to decide whether it’s appropriat­e to contact parents.

“There are a handful of parents who will beat their kids for coming home with a bad report card,” he said. “Do you respond by withholdin­g all report cards from all parents and keeping all parents in the dark about their child’s progress in math and reading and science?”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada