The Standard (St. Catharines)

Alberta NDP takes aim at Jason Kenney in new law on gay-straight alliances

- DEAN BENNETT

EDMONTON — Alberta’s education minister says he plans to change the law to prevent conservati­ve leadership candidate Jason Kenney from outing gay children.

David Eggen says the province has been working for years on gaystraigh­t alliances in schools and he says he won’t let that process be undermined.

“This whole idea (of ) Jason Kenney outing students that join a GSA, we’ll make that against the law,” Eggen said Thursday. “Students make choices and this is obviously a very significan­t choice around gay-straight alliances.

“It’s sensitive, and what is very insensitiv­e is to suggest that you would out students who chose to join a gay-straight alliance.”

The alliances are peer-support groups set up by students to provide mutual support and prevent bullying of LGBTQ students. Advocates say outing kids before they are ready puts them at risk of family ostracism or worse. They also argue the move would effectivel­y kill the alliances because kids won’t feel safe.

Kenney, a former federal Conservati­ve cabinet minister who is running for the leadership of Alberta’s new United Conservati­ve Party, has faced criticism for saying it’s best in some cases to tell parents their kids have joined a gay-straight alliance. He has said school officials are in the best position to make the decision.

“I’m not going to comment on legislatio­n that I haven’t seen,” Kenney told reporters after a party leadership debate Thursday night.

“They (the NDP) are just looking for opportunit­ies to deflect from their failed economic record, and I’m not going to play along with their game.”

Eggen said the province will also bring in changes compelling every school that receives public money establish codes of conduct against discrimina­tion, adopt policies to protect LGBTQ students, and affirm the existing legal right for students to set up a gay-straight alliance if they wish.

He said many schools have been working with the province already to set up these rules, but said 20 of them, mostly private schools, are resisting.

Private schools get 70 per cent of funding from the government, the highest such ratio in Canada, Eggen said.

“If you are receiving public money then the law should apply to those schools just the same as any other school,” he said, noting he has the power to pull accreditat­ion and funding for non-compliance.

Kenney won the leadership of the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves in March and is now one of four candidates vying to become the leader of the United Conservati­ve Party, created when the PCs and the Wildrose party voted in July to merge.

PC member Richard Starke refused to join the party after the merger, citing in part his disagreeme­nt with Kenney’s stance on the alliances.

In a speech to party members last weekend, Premier Rachel Notley blasted Kenney’s plan.

“It’s super-cruel, it’s super-extreme and it’s super backwards,” said Notley. “I will not ever, ever, ever let them out gay kids.”

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Alberta Minister of Education David Eggen arrives for a cabinet meeting in Calgary, Alta. in 2015. Alberta’s education minister says he plans to change the law to prevent conservati­ve leadership candidate Jason Kenney from outing gay children. David...
JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS Alberta Minister of Education David Eggen arrives for a cabinet meeting in Calgary, Alta. in 2015. Alberta’s education minister says he plans to change the law to prevent conservati­ve leadership candidate Jason Kenney from outing gay children. David...

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