Latest News Roundup - September 2010
Tuesday, September 28, 2010

"It's a good day," sex workers say in wake of Ontario court decision

"How will I celebrate? I'm going to spank some asses," said a jubilant Terri-Jean Bedford at a press conference on Sept 28.

Bedford, with Amy Lebovitch and Valerie Scott, challenged three of Canada’s sex laws; the result — an Ontario Superior Court decision striking laws that forbid soliciting, keeping a bawdy house and living off the avails of prostitution — is a stinging rebuke of the criminalization of sex work.

"You can only imagine how pleased and elated we are today," Scott told a room at The 519 packed with media and sex workers.

Bedford, Scott and lawyer Alan Young were clearly surprised by the decision, which only affects sex workers in Ontario, and which comes with a freeze of 30 days before taking effect.

"This is one of the first times in the last 25 years that rationality has triumphed over hypocrisy," said Young. "Justice [Susan] Himel proved that after 25 years, the charter still has teeth."

Across the country, plaintiffs in a similar BC case still making its way through the court system applauded the Ontario decision.

"The court has finally heard what sex workers and their allies have been screaming about for years," says Susan Davis of BC's Coalition for Experiential Communities. "These laws have placed sex workers outside society's sphere of concern. This is a historic day." 

The biggest change is that sex workers will be free to work indoors and in groups, without triggering Canada's bawdyhouse laws, says Young. It also means hookers will be able to hire drivers, bouncers and bodyguards to keep themselves safer.

It could protect the country's bathhouses, which have suffered through police harrassment, usually using the periodic enforcement of the bawdyhouse law.

"It prevents a return to the bathhouse raids of the 1970s; that can’t happen again under this regime," said Young after the press conference. However, "because of the political mobilization of the gay community, their spaces for quasi-public sexuality have been largely immunized from the police, and every intrusion has resulted in a withdrawal of charges."

Bathhouses have been raided repeatedly in Canada, most recently in Hamilton (2004) and Calgary (2002).

The mood in the room was electric. After the speeches ended, representatives from Maggie's House, a support centre for Toronto sex workers broke into a cheer of "Hey, ho, let's go."

"It is a good day for this country," said Bedford.

The Globe and Mail has more on what happens next:

The ruling means that the law can no longer be enforced in Ontario. If the decision were to be upheld on appeal, it would topple the use of the prostitution provisions across the country.

In the short term, however, the Ontario Crown is expected to seek a stay of execution that would permit police to temporarily continue enforcing the law.

Xtra's federal politics reporter Dale Smith was on the Hill today and he got reaction from MPs. The Harper government is "seriously considering" an appeal

More from an Oct 2009 Xtra report:

Valerie Scott, executive director of Sex Professionals of Canada, and fellow sex work activists Terri-Jean Bedford and Amy Lebovitch filed the case in 2007, challenging that several sections of the Criminal Code related to sex work violate the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Although it is legal to sell sex in Canada, many of the activities related to the sale of sex are considered criminal offences.

Specifically, SPOC's case takes issue with Section 213(1)(c), which makes it illegal to communicate for the purposes of prostitution; Section 210, which makes it illegal to run a common bawdy house; and Section 212(1)(j), which makes it illegal to live off the avails of prostitution.

These laws, says Scott, put sex workers at risk because it makes it illegal to take safety precautions, including hiring security staff and working in groups.

Sex Professionals of Canada's executive director Valerie Scott. (Marcus McCann photo)

A message posted on the SPOC website last night:

If this Court rules in our favour, it's all but certain that the Attorneys General of Canada and Ontario will appeal. If the ruling is against us, we will appeal, assuming we can raise the funds.  (Please see donation info at the bottom of this page.)

At that point, we go to Appeal Court, aka, the Supreme Court of Ontario where we request leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.

This is a battle well worth fighting. Our safety and, for some of us, our very lives depend on it.

Read more:

 


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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Russian president fires anti-gay Moscow mayor

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has fired Moscow's mayor, Yury Luzhkov, who banned Pride parades and labelled the events "satanic." 

Yury Luzhkov (photo by A Savin)

The New York Times reports that Medvedev sacked Luzhkov in the wake of an escalating feud. While the mayor "endured sustained criticism for reigning like an autocrat, muzzling dissent and allowing blatant corruption to flourish," it seems that Luzhkov's criticism of the Russian president was the final straw.

Moscow Pride organizer Nikolai Alexeyev, who was recently kidnapped and pressured to withdraw a complaint against Luzhkov at the European Court of Human Rights, says he has no plans to drop the case.

"My only regret is that he will not be around to face the music over Strasbourg," Alexeyev told the Moscow News. "I hope that the new mayor will be a more European mayor and will understand that Moscow has to become a real European city and will have to accept the features of a European city, because Luzhkov really broke his teeth on the issue of international parades and he broke Moscow’s international reputation on this issue."

And the question remains: will Luzhkov's successor be any more gay-friendly?

Read more:


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Monday, September 27, 2010

Swoon: Actor-singer Jay Brannan tours Canada this fall

Jay Brannan, well known for his catchy songs and that three-way sex scene in Shortbus, is touring Canada this fall.


The deets (ticket and venue info can be found on Brannan's Facebook Page): 

Nov 21 - Toronto
Nov 22 - Montreal
Nov 23 - Vancouver
Nov 25 - Calgary
Nov 26 - Edmonton

Check out Brannan's "Housewife" music video: 

Xtra chatted with Brannan in 2008. An excerpt from that interview

"I don't think that the movie [Shortbus] or my music is changing the world or anything, but I do think that it's a small way in which I can contribute. I think that if we present things like sexuality in music and film, among other things that are sort of taboo in American culture, eventually we're going to have to get used to it." 

Read more:

 
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Friday, September 24, 2010

EPISODE RECAP: What happened at the Pride Toronto AGM?

It was a surreal evening at the annual general meeting (AGM) of Pride Toronto (PT) on Sept 23.

Police on bicycles lingered outside Church Street Public School in Toronto’s gay village for five hours, while inside a tightly controlled semi-public meeting saw the delivery of unaudited financial information, the election of one new director and every motion put to the floor by members ruled out of order by the chair.

And no, they didn’t let Chad speak.

It was a rocky start, as attendees were separated into two groups. Two bouncers asked those who didn’t have voting status to wait in the hall while members took their seats.

Meanwhile, at least five people complained that their names were omitted from the official membership list, including former PT treasurer Ross Chapman and performer (and Xtra columnist) Ryan G Hinds.

After the board decided not to deal with their complaints before the meeting, folks tried to get them added to the voting list by moving a motion from the floor. It was ruled out of order.

Francis Yap was initially given a vote, but was confronted by PT interim co-chair Margaret Ngai before the meeting; after a lengthy exchange, PT volunteers removed the wristband that represented membership status from Yap.

Also before the meeting, someone distributed flyers that said “Let Chad Speak,” referring to Chad Simon, a board member appointed just a month before the AGM who had initially promised to address the membership.

Former PT staffer Lisa Duke moved a motion to add “any other business” to the agenda, but it was ruled out of order by Genevieve D’Iorio. D’Iorio was aided by the frequent interventions of PT’s lawyer, who identified herself as Susan Manwaring of Miller Thomson LLP.

During the update from the co-chairs, D’Iorio burst into tears and briefly left the room.

The financial information, if accurate, shows huge losses. PT presented a deficit of $400,000. Executive director Tracey Sandilands said that $200,000 of losses were due to sponsors who pulled out of the festival at the last moment — but when pressed, the PT board refused to identify them. Sandilands also said that $700,000 was cut from the budget just weeks before the event to prevent even greater losses.

PT's cash in the bank as of July 31 was $-70,000.

After taking a handful of questions about the AGM, the chair attempted to move on, even though several hands were still in the air. Jane Farrow moved a motion to extend the amount of time for questions on the financials but was ruled out of order by D’Iorio.

Anna Willats moved a motion demanding — based on the financials — the resignation of the board. That motion was ruled out of order.

After brief Q and As with the candidates, Francisco Alvarez was voted male co-chair and straight former Ward 27 candidate Evan Dean was added to the board.

Several members asked why they weren’t electing more board members, since the bylaws say that up to 12 people can serve. PT’s lawyer defended the 10-member cap.

A scrutineer of the election admitted that Sandilands, board member Mark Singh and volunteer coordinator Emily Gibson controlled 25 percent of the vote via proxies.

After the meeting, the board met briefly and elected another director, Roy Mitchell, who had placed second in the vote.



This is a developing story.

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Members of Hawkes committee announced on eve of Pride Toronto AGM

Roughly three months after the concept was first broached, Pride Toronto (PT) has announced the names of the members of its Community Advisory Panel.

The list of nine -- not seven, as previously reported -- includes several lawyers, a member of the Ontario Human Rights Commission and a staffer at the Toronto Police Service.

As we've reported previously:

The panel came about as part of PT’s June resolution to rescind its censorious ban on the phrase “Israeli apartheid” in this year’s Pride parade. Made up of “LGBTTIQQ2SA leaders and friends,” the panel is to “consult with the community” and make recommendations “regarding Pride Toronto’s ongoing working relationship with the broader LGBTTIQQ2SA communities.”

519 Church Street Community Centre executive director Maura Lawless consulted with an unnamed group of community organization executive directors in compiling the list of would-be panellists. Hawkes says he also consulted with MPP Glen Murray, mayoral candidate George Smitherman and Ward 27 city Councillor Kyle Rae.

Here's the final list: Brent Hawkes (chair), Doug Elliott, Michael Went, Lorraine Weinrib, Angela Robertson, Nicki Ward, Andre Goh, Kavita Joshi and Raja Khouri. Their full bios are available here. 

 
(Photo of Michael Went, centre) 

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