Tuesday, October 13, 2009

The Toronto Star's Church St exodus is a bizarre logical leap

One of The Toronto Star’s top local stories this morning bears the headline “Exodus sees Church St losing its gay village identity.”

 

 

In the piece Star reporter Denise Balkissoon latches onto the closure of Church St queer joints Zelda’s last month and Crews Tango in June as evidence that the neighbourhood is disappearing and gay and lesbian people are wandering away like economic refugees.

To support her hypothesis she quotes six productive, well-rounded queer people who say reasonably that they don’t spend all their time in gay bars in the Church Wellesley neighbourhood, that life is and ought to be bigger than that.

But Balkissoon and The Star leave their story equation conspicuously incomplete.

This year The Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives celebrated the opening of its brand new home, a dedicated building in the Church and Wellesley neighbourhood. The 519 Church St Community Centre celebrated a fancy new addition. The Church St Fetish Fair, Halloweek and Toronto Pride celebrations drew record crowds. The International Gay and Lesbian Tourism Association held a huge trade show in Maple Leaf Gardens. Scores of gay and lesbian athletes represented Toronto at the World Outgames in Copenhagen.

Pride Toronto is gunning for World Pride in 2014 and stands a good chance of getting it. Woody’s celebrated its 20th anniversary. Xtra celebrated its 25th anniversary. Fab is celebrating its 15th anniversay. Pink Triangle Press, which publishes Xtra and fab, completed an office renovation and continued to grow its worldwide audience of gay and lesbian people.

Visit Church St any night of the week, especially on weekends, to see thousands of queer people from all walks of life enjoying themselves.

All the above, and whatever else I’ve inadvertently left out, is missing from Balkissoon’s story.

Gentrification is a real phenomenon, in no way peculiar to Toronto. It is more expensive to live here than it used to be. This is true of urban centres around the world and various neighbourhoods across Toronto. But change is inevitable. The Church Wellesley neighbourhood is and always has been in a state of flux. Businesses, people and institutions naturally come and go over time. It is the way of things everywhere.

But Balkissoon’s logical leap from an analysis of gentrification to the illusory decline of what remains a vibrant part of Toronto’s queer cultural fabric is a blind one at best. Perhaps the writer and editor in The Star story are simply projecting their own hopes.

Honestly, one resto-patio-drag bar moves a few blocks and The Star invokes “exodus,” a Bible reference, on a headline to a story that describes the end of a neighbourhood.

It must be a very slow news day.

 

Matt Mills is associate publisher and editorial director of Xtra and fab. Check out his analysis piece on gentrification, The new queer metropolis, here

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Comments

Tuesday, October 13, 2009 10:58 PM

wow, nothing says fun like an afternoon going through the CLGArchives! Or braving obnoxious crowds at fetish fair! Not to mention the party people that would be a toursim trade show.

It goes beyond Zelda's and Crew's/Tango...the gay community has been moving upward and outward for years now. Who needs to live on a few blocks of one street when they are plenty of other more vibrant and welcoming areas to enjoy?

jump n wave ca


Wednesday, October 14, 2009 5:31 AM

To those who say they do not need a gay village and state that society is so accepting:
- do you dance with your partner at a str8 bar?
- do you hold hands or kiss your partner in a str8 bar or regular restaurant?
- do you hold hand with your partner on the way in or out of a str8 bar or regular restaurant?
- do your flirt in a str8 bar or regular restaurant?
- can a group of gay men safely hang together at a str8 bar without having fag hags around?
- can a group of gay men gab and laugh loudly at a str8 bar without being harassed or being subjected to insults?

I had a business meeting at a Tim Hortons last week. Three of us discussed glbt programing in a very dry manner and not one but two people spewed crude insults at us.

Diversity is still not really welcomed at str8 or 'mixed' bars or restaurants

Marc ca


Thursday, October 15, 2009 7:23 PM

"Halloweek and Toronto Pride celebrations drew record crowds" --- Yeah crowds of straight people!!

Pam ca


Thursday, October 15, 2009 8:19 PM

The gay community is being gradually priced out of Church St by rising rents and land values. This is just real-estate economics 101. Zelda's was apparently paying $28,000/month and the landlord wanted to raise this to $36,000/month and they could not afford it so they left. Demand for space in this area far exceeds the supply so small gay-owned businesses cannot move in or get started while existing ones gradually get priced out. The gay community is like any ethnic community in that many of its more gender-variant members prefer to reside in close proximity to each other and to preferentially deal with gay-owned businesses which will treat them sympathetically. The solution is simply to migrate to a new gay village elsewhere. For example, long ago the Jewish community migrated from the Ward (north of City Hall) to Spadina Ave and then to College St and then north along Bathurst. Italian immigrants replaced them on College St which became known as Little Italy but they have long since moved out and now it is basically an upscale restaurant and cafe district. Chinese people also moved out of the old Ward in the 1970s to Dundas and Spadina as Jewish people moved out and many Chinese have migrated to suburban Chinese malls elsewhere. Younger gay people have been migrating to Queen West for years but that is not really a gay village and it serves mainly straight young 20-something trendies who are mostly gay-positive. The best place for a new gay village would be Gerrard St East between Coxwell and Broadview. There are plenty of vacant store fronts available at cheap rents and especially in the India Bazaar at Coxwell where Indian merchants are following their customers out to the suburbs and leaving behind plenty of vacant shop-fronts. The remaining Indian merchants might not be especially gay-positive but they are definitely not into gay-bashing either
and they will provide service with a smile to gay customers with money to spend. Gerrard East is also very easy to reach from the old gay village via the Carlton/506 streetcar and the nearby neighborhoods (Riverdale, Leslieville, Beaches) are already quite popular with gay couples. Obviously this area will not be attractive to gay bars like Zelda’s and so on but small gay-owned businesses selling more conventional family-oriented goods and services will certainly find this an attractive and very affordable venue. Likewise ethnic gay people who want to start specialized ethnic-oriented gay businesses such as ethnic cafes would also find this a very good venue. Any gay real-estate agent who wants to make a bundle of easy money could get listings on all that vacant property and advertise it in Xtra and encourage gay business people either to migrate to Gerrard East or to start new businesses there.

Yours Truly


Thursday, October 15, 2009 8:58 PM

Let us also not forget Pegasus On Church the bar popular with both gay men, lesbians and straight people now celebrating it's sixteenth and best year on Church Street

Michael Dorman ca



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