Windsor Star

It Gets Better, says RCMP video

Gay members tell their story

- JAMES KELLER

VANCOUVER Const. Cheryl Letkeman still remembers the cruel slurs she faced growing up gay in Maple Ridge, B.C., and the fear she experience­d before coming out to her parents.

“It’s usually not the greatest time of anyone’s life,” Letkeman says in a video released this week featuring RCMP members participat­ing in the It Gets Better campaign.

Letkeman, 42, who’s been a police officer for nearly six years, is among 20 officers and civilian members of the RCMP to appear in the nine-minute video, each recalling their own coming-out stories.

For Letkeman, it did get better. She came out to her parents, despite her fears. She joined the RCMP nearly six years ago, working with at-risk youth in Surrey, south of Vancouver.

It was with those youth in mind that she came up with the idea that the national police force needed to join the It Gets Better movement with its own video.

“Dealing with kids, I see the struggles that they have,” Letkeman said in an interview Tuesday.

“I think it’s incredibly important for the youth to have positive role models to look up to when they feel like things aren’t going to get any better.”

The It Gets Better project was started two years ago by American sex columnist Dan Savage in response to several high-profile suicides involving teens who were bullied for being gay.

The campaign encourages users to record videos telling their own stories. So far, more than 50,000 videos have been uploaded.

Police officers in Austin, Texas, and San Francisco have released their own It Gets Better videos, as have members of the British Transport Police, but so far the RCMP appears to be the only Canadian police force to participat­e.

Letkeman said when she brought the idea to her superiors, they were immediatel­y supportive.

She canvassed RCMP units throughout the Vancouver region asking for volunteers, and the 20 who responded gathered over three days this past summer to tell their stories.

Many of the officers talk about bullying in school or the moment they came out to their families.

“They were really supportive,” a homicide investigat­or originally from St. John’s, N.L., tells the camera.

“Mom was only disappoint­ed that it took me so long to have been honest with her, and dad was the same, and he actually said that he hoped he’d never said anything that made me feel like I couldn’t have come out earlier.”

 ?? YouTube ?? The nine-minute RCMP video It Gets Better is posted on YouTube. The emotional video by gay and lesbian RCMP officers and civilian employees has been released with a message to young people
that life does get better.
YouTube The nine-minute RCMP video It Gets Better is posted on YouTube. The emotional video by gay and lesbian RCMP officers and civilian employees has been released with a message to young people that life does get better.

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