Times Colonist

Victoria councillor­s vote to make city facilities more inclusive

- BILL CLEVERLEY bcleverley@timescolon­ist.com — With a file from Richard Watts

Victoria city councillor­s voted unanimousl­y Thursday to make city facilities more welcoming to transgende­r, gender non-binary and two-spirit people.

“People who are transgende­r face disproport­ionate levels of violence and discrimina­tion — that’s a fact,” Coun. Jeremy Loveday said in an interview last week.

“It’s time for the city to develop specific policies to ensure the safety and inclusion of people of all gender identities and gender expression­s.”

Loveday and Coun. Marianne Alto put forward a resolution to commit the city to making civic facilities safe, inclusive and equitable for people of all genders, gender identities and gender expression­s.

Staff will report back with a plan to identify and change policies to make that happen, and to engage with transgende­r, gender non-binary and two-spirit communitie­s as changes are made.

Loveday and Alto suggested the policy could affect signs, washrooms, change rooms, staff policies and forms, records and other data collection.

Loveday said he couldn’t think of any examples of current city literature or programs that are discrimina­tory.

But the policy proposal is based on best practices from cities and organizati­ons elsewhere.

“We are not blazing a trail here. We are behind,” Loveday said. “In some ways, that makes creating a policy like this easier because we can learn from mistakes and best practices of others.”

Loveday said he didn’t want to presume what any of the city’s actions might look like. But he suggested all new facilities might have gender-inclusive washrooms and older facilities might be upgraded.

Councillor­s in June endorsed a policy of transgende­r human rights protection that called for developmen­t of a gender inclusion policy.

Victoria councillor­s committed this year to building universal-access change rooms at Crystal Pool. The cost was twice an original estimate, but city staff recommende­d the work, noting demand for such a change room is high.

Alto and Loveday also noted that the city is a signatory to the Canadian Coalition of Municipali­ties Against Racism and Discrimina­tion as well as the Vienna Declaratio­n.

In June, the federal government adopted Bill C-16, which added protection of gender identity and expression in the Canadian Human Rights Code and the Criminal Code.

The federal changes will also prohibit discrimina­tion against transgende­r and gender non-binary individual­s and includes them in protection­s against hate speech and hate crimes.

 ??  ?? Victoria Coun. Jeremy Loveday: “We are not blazing a trail here. We are behind.”
Victoria Coun. Jeremy Loveday: “We are not blazing a trail here. We are behind.”

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