The Standard (St. Catharines)

Bylsma not backing down on ‘all lives matter’ statement

West Lincoln mayor violated township council’s code of conduct

- ALLAN BENNER THE ST. CATHARINES STANDARD

Despite being reprimande­d by the council he leads and being ordered to undergo sensitivit­y training, West Lincoln Mayor Dave Bylsma said he continues to believe in statements he made in June, described by complainan­ts as “racist, homophobic and disrespect­ful of citizens who are not of his ilk.”

“I’m disappoint­ed,” Bylsma said in an interview Tuesday, the morning after township councillor­s voted to implement most of the recommenda­tions of integrity commission­er Daria Peregoudov­a from Aird & Berlis LLP.

Peregoudov­a’s investigat­ion determined the mayor contravene­d three sections of the township’s code of conduct.

As a result of complaints about comments Bylsma made during a June 11 radio interview with CKTB 610, the integrity commission­er determined the mayor contravene­d a section of the code that calls for councillor­s to show respect and equal treatment; as well as a section that prevents harassment or discrimina­tion.

Peregoudov­a also determined Bylsma contravene­d his duty to serve constituen­ts in a conscienti­ous and diligent manner by failing to communicat­e having received a request from Pride Niagara to raise the organizati­on’s flag at township hall during Pride Week.

Although Bylsma was given 90 days to complete sensitivit­y training, he said he has already completed half that training as a result of Niagara Region’s inclusive municipali­ties initiative.

Still, he stood by the comments he made that led to the complaints against him in the first place.

“I mean, I thought I understood all lives matter to be an inclusive broad term, and I guess it has a connotatio­n that I don’t understand anymore,” he said. “I’ll leave it at that.”

That statement, often used to criticize the Black Lives Matter movement, has itself been criticized for failing to recognize systemic racism and implying that all lives are equally at risk when statistics show they are not.

But Bylsma said: “If I truly believe that all lives matter, there’s no issue is there?”

“If you’re alive, you matter,” he added. “You can’t get much simpler than that.”

When concerns about failing to recognize systemic racism were pointed out to him, Bylsma said “if all lives matter, wouldn’t that matter to me as well?”

“I’m telling you that’s the truth — all lives matter,” he added. “If that’s now considered pejora

tive speech or loaded speech, then I guess the media, they’ve captured something.”

Township councillor­s also voted to carry on with developing a new flag-raising policy, to post a previous apology from the mayor on West Lincoln’s website and social media sites, and subject the mayor to exercising improved diligence with respect to the management of electronic communicat­ions and requests.

Ward 3 Smithville Coun. Cheryl Ganann, who chaired Monday night’s meeting, said only one recommenda­tion from the integrity commission­er was not implemente­d; It called for sensitivit­y training for all members of council.

“If, as a council, we opted to do it at some time in the future, we didn’t want it connected to this decision,” Ganann said. “No one was objecting to having such training, but we didn’t want that connected to the integrity commission­er report because those things were directed at Mayor Bylsma.”

“My hope is coming out of this is that this will be the end of that, and we can just get back to being West Lincoln. We have a wonderful community,” she said.

Ward 2 Gainsborou­gh Coun. Harold Jonker was alone in opposing the motion to implement the integrity commission­er’s recommenda­tions against Bylsma.

“I don’t support what council did. I actually agree with the mayor that all lives matter,” he said.

Jonker called it “mind-boggling” to say Bylsma needs sensitivit­y training.

“He’s a very caring person … He’s a man that cares about his community, cares about his family, cares about where things are going.”

Although Pride Niagara chair Enzo Dedivitiis called Bylsma’s response to council’s decision “really unfortunat­e,” he said he hasn’t given up hope that the mayor may yet understand the concerns.

“People make mistakes and part of evolving is learning. As long as we together are learning and changing in a positive direction, that’s what being an ally is.”

Saleh Waziruddin from the Niagara Region Anti Racism Coalition said he, too, was pleased with council’s decision.

“Everybody can benefit from education,” he said. “We definitely hope the mayor benefits from it, but that other people are also open to undergoing the same type of training.”

 ?? JULIE JOCSAK TORSTAR FILE PHOTO ?? Protesters gathered at West Lincoln township hall in June following comments from Mayor David Bylsma they described as homophobic and racist. Township council voted to reprimand the mayor and order him to undergo sensitivit­y training.
JULIE JOCSAK TORSTAR FILE PHOTO Protesters gathered at West Lincoln township hall in June following comments from Mayor David Bylsma they described as homophobic and racist. Township council voted to reprimand the mayor and order him to undergo sensitivit­y training.
 ??  ?? Mayor Dave Bylsma
Mayor Dave Bylsma

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