Regina Leader-Post

Gay Straight Alliance helps create safe spaces

Students from across province to attend summit

- ERIN PETROW epetrow@postmedia.com twitter.com/petr0w

While most high school students will be avoiding school work during the weekend, a few will be heading into Bedford Road Collegiate Saturday to learn how a Gay Straight Alliance (GSA) can benefit their schools.

Hosted by OUTSaskato­on and Camp fYrefly, the second annual Gay Straight Alliance Summit aims to bring together students from across the province in a forum where they can discuss and learn how to create a safe space for LGBTQ people within their schools.

More than 150 people are registered to attend the summit to take part in various workshops and listen to the keynote address given by Rae Spoon, a well known non-binary transgende­r musician and author.

Amanda Guthrie, the education and operations manager at OUTSaskato­on, says beginning a GSA is the best way to support students who may be feeling alone or marginaliz­ed.

EMBRACING DIVERSITY

“I think schools, as well as being a place where we receive education, they should also be spaces where we find community and gay straight alliances are an easy and obvious way to do that,” she explains. “We need to be embracing diversity while also normalizin­g diversity because LGBTQ students have always been in our schools here in Saskatchew­an.”

But GSAs aren’t only for LGBTQ students, they can also be a place for students to learn what it means to be an ally to the LGBTQ community.

Guthrie also adds it is becoming much more normalized for schools to embrace GSAs, noting she has seen a huge increase in their existence throughout small town Saskatchew­an during the last few years with a few elementary schools even embracing the idea, but says it can still be a fight to justify their existence.

“There is the handful of people saying ‘it’s completely fine to be gay, we don’t need GSAs anymore’ — but of course we still do,” she explains.

“And of course there’s also the demographi­c of people who blatantly don’t support LGBTQ students so we need to be making sure those students who are facing those experience­s, whether at home or in their communitie­s at large, know there is a safe space they can go to.”

That safe space might actually lead to a safer school overall. According to a 2012 survey from Egale Canada, schools with a GSA in place for three years or longer actually saw a reduction in bullying rates — for all students, not only those who identify on the LGBTQ spectrum.

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