Chicago Sun-Times

Pride Parade will now allow school participat­ion, organizers say

The change came a day after reports that six schools were denied entry to event

- BY MARIAH RUSH, STAFF REPORTER mrush@suntimes.com | @mariahfrus­h Mariah Rush is a staff reporter at the Chicago Sun-Times via Report for America, a not-forprofit journalism program that aims to bolster the paper’s coverage of communitie­s on the South and

Pride Parade organizers have reversed their earlier decision, now allowing some school participat­ion in the June 30 festivitie­s after originally cutting all schools that had previously joined the popular event.

The change came a day after the SunTimes reported parade organizers denied entry to six Chicago schools that had a history of participat­ing in the parade.

Nettelhors­t School will now coordinate with the five other previously denied schools, said Francis W. Parker School teacher Karen Liszka. The heavily attended parade passes by Nettelhors­t in the heart of the city’s wellknown LGBTQ+ area in Lake View.

Motoko Maegawa, a teacher at Catherine Cook School, confirmed parade organizers contacted the denied schools with a new plan.

According to an email to participan­ts that Liszka sent the Chicago Sun-Times, a pride organizer said, “Nettelhors­t School is pleased to help us coordinate our group of schools into one entry, which is helpful with the new, smaller limit on the available number of entries.”

Schools that were previously denied will now be allowed 30 overall participan­ts but will not be able to use cars or buses, the email stated. Instead, golf carts will be provided by Nettelhors­t, according to the email.

The schools include: Francis W. Parker School, Nettelhors­t School, Catherine Cook School, Near North Montessori School, Rogers Park Montessori School and Lycée

Français de Chicago.

The entrance fee will be waived as a “mea culpa” for the initial denials, according to Liszka.

“[The Pride organizer] said that strength of LGBTQ+ work in the community was a large determinin­g factor initially, not finances, but also admitted that their decisions may have been rushed,” Liszka told the Sun-Times about her conversati­on with the organizer.

According to Chicago Public Schools, Nettelhors­t was placed on a “waitlist” earlier in the week for the Pride Parade, before being accepted.

Pride Parade organizers said in an email statement Thursday, “Engaging in open communicat­ion and collaborat­ion with all stakeholde­rs, including Ald. Bennett Lawson’s office, we’re excited to announce that we’ve been able to come up with a creative solution that ensures the spirit of inclusivit­y and celebratio­n continues.

“As of the present moment, confirmati­on has been secured from four of the six schools. Efforts are underway to finalize arrangemen­ts with the remaining two schools from 2023.

In future years, the schools will share the cost of the one entry slot, Liszka said.

Admission into the parade typically comes at a steep cost to national franchises and corporatio­ns that frequent the event yearly. These companies pay over six times more than a nonprofit to participat­e in the parade, according to 2023 documents reviewed by the Sun-Times.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Students from the Catherine Cook School march in the annual Chicago Pride Parade in June 2018.
SUN-TIMES FILE Students from the Catherine Cook School march in the annual Chicago Pride Parade in June 2018.

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