Times Colonist

Victoria police welcome at Pride parade: organizer

- MIKE DEVLIN mdevlin@timescolon­ist.com

Protesters have interrupte­d recent Pride parades in Edmonton and Toronto, with fractured relationsh­ips between police department­s and the LGBTQ2+ community in those cities sitting at the core of the conflict. But this weekend’s Victoria Pride festivitie­s will not suffer the same fate, according to Victoria Pride Society president David Tillson.

“We are making progress,” he said. “Maybe they are not making progress in Toronto, or have problems in Vancouver, Edmonton and Calgary. But our police are working within our communitie­s. We would like Victoria to be the example, in regards to the participat­ion of the police, and not the exception.”

Victoria had its first Gay Pride Parade in 1994, and has seen the size and scope of what is now Victoria Pride Week grow considerab­ly with each passing year. Tillson, who has been at the helm of Pride-related events for the past 14 years, is once again welcoming Victoria police representa­tives to participat­e in Sunday’s parade at 11 a.m. along Government Street and the subsequent festival at noon in MacDonald Park in James Bay.

He has met with representa­tives from the City of Victoria, the Cool Aid Society, the Rainbow Health Co-operative, the Greater Victoria Diversity Action Committee, the Transgende­r Archives at the University of Victoria, and Two Spirit elder Laurie McDonald in advance of the event, and they “are all on-board for working with the police, and participat­ing in the parade with the police.”

Police representa­tives have been parade participan­ts for the past decade, Tillson said.

“We talk to everybody who works with vulnerable and marginaliz­ed communitie­s within our community, and they are all willing to work with the police and have them present in the parade.”

Though the event is expected to proceed without interrupti­on, Victoria police will be deploying temporary closed circuit cameras to ensure public safety. The enhanced security measures are commonplac­e at other large events in downtown with a large number of attendees, including Canada Day and Car Free YYJ. Organizers are expecting 10,000 parade participan­ts and upward of 25,000 people at the festival.

According to police, temporary cameras will be installed during the next two days in accordance with B.C. and national privacy legislatio­n. They will be removed shortly after the event.

Seven police cruisers and several uniformed officers participat­ed last year, but it was an overwhelmi­ng sight for some in the LGBTQ2+ community, Tillson said. Out of respect, police and support staff who are participat­ing this weekend — which is expected to be about 50 people — will be wearing civilian clothes. Only higher-ranking officers will be in uniform, and will march this weekend with only one vintage patrol car.

“Officers can wear their uniforms if they choose, but we find that they choose not to,” Tillson said.

Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh announced Friday he will march in the Victoria parade and attend the festival, alongside local MPs Randall Garrison, Alistair MacGregor and Murray Rankin.

“Pride month is a time for celebratio­n and solidarity, but it is also an important opportunit­y for reflection and a renewed commitment to activism,” Singh said in a statement. “That is what makes Pride Month such a beautiful and important time of the year — it’s an opportunit­y to recommit ourselves to the advocacy that has helped us progress to this point, together.”

Tillson expects few protests. He hopes those who claim police involvemen­t undermines the greater issues at hand do some research of their own. What they discover will undoubtedl­y surprise them, he said.

“We all have the same end goal. But our little pocket of identity, we’re all on different timelines of acceptance. There’s room for everybody. But if you can’t share the parade we created for us, then maybe it’s not the parade for you.”

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