Church St merchants axe Fetish Fair
TORONTO NEWS / 'Fetish Fair as we know it ended last year': BIA
Andrea Houston / Toronto / Saturday, March 24, 2012
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Summer in the Church and Wellesley Village is about to get a little less kinky now that members of the local business association have decided they will no longer host the Church St Fetish Fair.

David Wootton, manager of the Church Wellesley Village Business Improvement Area (BIA), said the board has unanimously decided to instead host several family-friendly "partnership" events throughout the summer that will attract a wider range of people to the Village. If there are to be any street closures, it will be for events involving the area merchants, he says, like a sidewalk sale or patio extensions. The Fetish Fair, which ran for seven years, stopped drawing the crowds it used to, he says.

"Fetish Fair as we know it ended last year," Wootton tells Xtra. "Our concern this year is keeping doors open because, as you know, more and more businesses are leaving the street. We don't want to see the Village die. We figure our job here is to ensure that we do as much as we can to bring in traffic and return traffic into the area . . . Man can not live on queer dollars alone."
In protest against the Church and Wellesley BIA's decision to rebrand Fetish Fair, members of the leather community held a flashmob march up the street in 2011.
(Andrea Houston)


The BIA is making tough decisions because merchants are treading water financially. "Yes, Loblaws has been a huge disruption . . . It's a challenge with this BIA, working with its members, whether they are LGBT-positive or not. There is an assumption that we just serve to the LGBT community, but we have an obligation to ensure we remain a destination for queer people. So we have to play that balance really well."

Wootton is not closing the door to future partnerships with Toronto Leather Pride or other community organizations that may decide to pick up the torch and host a similar fetish event on Church St.

Jack Pearce, president of Toronto Leather Pride, has seen the writing on the wall for a while, and the confirmation of Fetish Fair's cancellation was not at all surprising. He says his goal is to eventually take the reins and add a street-fair element to Toronto Leather Pride Weekend at Zipperz, which takes place Aug 9 to 11.

"Fetish Fair died two years ago," he says. "In a way, we have already replaced Fetish Fair. What we saw last year was not Fetish Fair."

In 2011, the BIA decided to rebrand the Fetish Fair into the Church St Village Fair: Leather to Lace. Not every business owner approved of the change. At the BIA's annual general meeting in November, Stephen Roy, of Flash, took issue with the BIA's attempt to entice families to the fair. As part of its changes, the BIA rented “adult toys,” including a Ferris wheel, a mechanical bull and large inflatable games. At the time, the BIA told Xtra it wanted the event to be “all-inclusive, all ages and all walks of life.”

“If families are so important, do a separate event for families," Roy says. “Families are a huge minority in our community. Those inflatable things they rented were ridiculous. The bottom line is fetish is part of our culture. Give us one day. It’s our community.”
Leather folks and families enjoyed the day together in 2011.
(Andrea Houston)


To protest the BIA's sanitization of Fetish Fair, Pearce led a protest march along Church St that afternoon.

This year, Pearce says, all fetish events will be kept strictly on the patio at Zipperz. "That's just a cost-effective decision for us. Down the road, maybe even next year, we may expand things."

The Fetish Fair cost the BIA $53,000, a quarter of its budget, Wootton says. Other BIA events throughout the year, such as Halloweek, will continue.

Wootton rejects any idea that the cancellation of Fetish Fair is further evidence of the gentrification of the Village, once Toronto's mecca of sexual freedom and queer liberation.

"This is about getting people back into the Village," he says. "We need the LGBTQ community, which lives all over the city, to come back to the Village and support our businesses. You like the aesthetic of the gay community? We need you to come back and support the businesses."
Bouncy castles, a Ferris wheel and other "adult games" replaced some of the kink in 2011.
(Andrea Houston)


Toronto's gaybourhood is not alone, he says. Queer villages around the world are changing. "As queer people branch out into the straight community with more and more acceptance, gay, lesbian and queer people in general can live wherever they want. So we are watching to see how that develops organically over the next couple years, especially as we prepare the Village for WorldPride 2014."

Wootton says the BIA has put the focus on neighbourhood beautification, business development and local programming. "We need people to come back. The queer community is simply not utilizing the Village the way they were 10 to 15 years ago, and that's natural because things change."

"It's just not the same Village it was 20 years ago, with a gay man flocking down to the ghetto because it was the only place he could have dinner with his date or hold hands or buy a dildo or hit a bathhouse."

 


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Clarification
Toronto Leather Pride Weekend will be held from Thursday, August 09 to Sunday, August 12, 2012, which will include Leather Ball 18, the Mr. Leatherman Toronto, Bootblack Toronto and Mr. Rubber Toronto Competitions at the Phoenix Concert Theatre, the TLP Educational Series, which will be held at the 519 Church Street Community Centre on Saturday and Sunday and much more. The Toronto Leather Pride Day Party will be held on Sunday August 12, 2012 the patio of Zipperz/Cellbock - 72 Carlton Street - 2pm - 11pm. including the new TLP Fetish Mart. For more details please see the website at www.torontoleatherpride.ca
Jack Pearce, Toronto Ontario
03/25/12 8:09 AM EST
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heterofetish buh bye
Yawn. Thank hetero suburban swingle-kinkers that is over. Who wants to watch hetero "queers" act like being into silly costumes is meaningful to anyone but them and their mothers. NEXT!
allergic to boring, Toronto Ontario
03/25/12 8:15 AM EST
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Nonsense
What a steaming crock of sh#t!!! The Church Street Fetish Fair attracted tens of thousands of people to the village. Last year the LGBT UNfriendly businesses in the village listened to someone who was also largely responsible for the last and utterly disastrous Nuit Blanche installation and tried to turn the Fetish Fair into a Family Event...as if people would suddently decide to bring their small children to a party in the Gaybourhood...where very few families actually live...and THAT is why nobody came and the Villiage BIA lost money. WHY THE F#@K ARE THEY LISTENING TO THIS PERSON???? The Church Wellesley Village is declining because the LGBT community is not supporting it...true...but how about dealing with the cause and not the symptom? The village is losing community support because of decisions like this one by businesses and individuals who would rather not be dealing with the Queer Community...which makes one wonder why they set up shop on Church Street in the first place. They are much like those idiots who buy homes next to the airport and then bitch about the noise...as if they didn't notice the 747s flying overhead when they looked at the house before buying it. There are hundreds of thousands of queers in Toronto...so there is no shortage of queer $$$. The emergence of queer events and spaces in other parts of the city are clear evidence of this. Perhaps the BIA might try not listening to individuals who have axes to grind, and instead look at the community as a whole.
Paul, Toronto ON
03/25/12 10:06 AM EST
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Fetish Fair and FFN were not financially viable
I understand that the FFN leather event (formerly known as Folsom Fair North) was also discontinued for financial reasons (even though it seemed to be well-attended). The problem is that if attendees at an event don't spend money on the organizers' offerings, the event is not profitable for the organizers and will be discontinued.
Bill, Toronto ON
03/25/12 11:58 AM EST
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Hey Paul
"...which makes one wonder why they set up shop on Church Street in the first place?" Ok Paul, now say it out loud..., and repeat. Ah...there you go. You got it!
Fibrio, Toronto Ontario
03/25/12 1:20 PM EST
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Bill (re: FFN)
What began as Folsom Fair North (and then became FFN)was not discontinued for financial reasons. As I understand things (I was not directly involved, so my information is not first-hand) the organizers had internal and community disputes which forced them to stop producing the event. FFN was a privately run event, not a community or municipal event like the Fetish Fair. The Church-Wellesley BIA receives municipal funding, part of which was used to put on the Fetish Fair.
Paul, Toronto ON
03/25/12 4:10 PM EST
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Church ST a -PEDESTRIAN ONLY MALL- all summer
Why is no one listening to the idea to: CLOSE THE VILLAGE TO CARS FOR -THE WHOLE SUMMER- PEDESTRIANS ONLY. Close off CHURCH STREET From Wellesley to Alexander, from MAY to OCTOBER full time, every day, 24/7/30. DECLARE Church St. a MALL FOR THE WHOLE SUMMER. They did it in Montreal and it worked well for years. Beautify CHURCH St. MALL with plants and trees in planters and benches in the street, and a small stage for prepared performances on weekends, of song and dance or spoken word and impromptu performances any time, organized by whoever wants to. The stores and restaurants can extend into the street. Make it a sheltered space, like an LGBT theme park, that people can come to any time, day or night. Bring back LGBT “STREET CULTURE.” Within that space there can be parades and festivals, and performances. LGBT life is not only about bars and commercial establishments. LGBT life is about community and shared space, where all people can come together --for free-- without time limit. Once people come there, they may be inspired to spend money at commercial establishments as well. MAKE CHURCH STREET A CLOSED OFF -PEDESTRIAN ONLY MALL- FOR THE WHOLE SUMMER.
Joe, Tor ON
03/25/12 4:53 PM EST
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Church St Closures
Having dealt with the Village BIA for several years, I can tell you with some certainty that some merchants in the village are against most reasons for closing off Church Street to vehicular traffic. They seem to think that if people can't drive up to their businesses and park right by the door, then people will go to other streets where they can. A few years ago the BIA did, in fact, close off the village on several Sundays during that summer; but then gave up for one reason or another.
Paul, Toronto ON
03/25/12 5:57 PM EST
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RE: Church St Closures > CHURCH ST. MALL
RE: Church St Closures: The reason the BIA claim not close Church St often is because it costs $12,000 per closure. Sporadic closing of the street is not a sure place to go for people. If there were a sure sanctuary to go to anytime they wanted to 24/7/30, such as a closed off Church St. made into a park-like enclosure, then more people would come and even spend their money. A small stage could be set up and programmed with small scale entertainment, and the stores and restaurants could expand into the street, and benches provided and greenery spread around to make it into a real LGBT theme park, A sheltered space where peole could hang out any time and especially after restaurants and bars, or instead of bars. It would become a tourist attraction for LGBT people from afar and from the suburbs. Where are the people with vision?
Joe, Tor ON
03/25/12 6:27 PM EST
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We need mre queer events in Toronto besides Pride
It would be nice to see the squabbling in the Traditional gay village stop. Why don't a group of enterprising queer business types incorporate (non profit)the Fetish Fair and move it somewhere else, maybe different month (July perhaps). At once time Word on the Street, was on West Queer West, now its at Queen's Park and bigger and better than ever. I am glad to see Gay Toronto with a variety of Queer events in the Summer and not all Church St. At one time there was just Pride in June and nothing else to look forward too, for the rest of the summer. Now we have; The (Queer) Trigger Festival happens around Queen and McCall, early June. Toronto Queer Arts Festival (Parkdale & Brockton Village) in August 10-18, 2012. Pride in late June/early July all over the city. Toronto Leather Pride and Queer Family Fair in Church St Village in mid August. The way I look at things; tourists are in the city all summer long, especially in August; they will be looking for something different than, PRIDE
Michael F. Pare, Toronto On
03/26/12 12:31 AM EST
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More Events on Church Street
Michael F. Pare has been trying to distract focus from The LGBT Village at Church/Wellesly for some time now, for whatever desperate reasons he has...(I don't need a response) I've been on a few excursions of the so called, nonexistant West Village. They were all miniscule and very boring with pseudo intellectual type students. Yawn... My interests lie precisely with REBUILDING the main LGBT VILLAGE at CHURCH + WELLESLEY because I have lived here for more than 20 years. This neighbourhood is my home. I LOVE IT HERE. Although after the street people moved in a few years ago and threatened our safety and security and caused the closing of the Second Cup, the Village has started to get run down. There are business closings, crackheads, drugdealers and the quality of food in the restaurants nosedived. The economy has hit us hard as well, as more people are staying home trying to save money and not coming here to spend their money. So I'm not squabbling, I'm suggesting something very concrete to help revitalize our beloved LGBT Village. CLOSE THE VILLAGE TO CARS FOR -THE WHOLE SUMMER- PEDESTRIANS ONLY. Close off CHURCH STREET From Wellesley to Alexander, from MAY to OCTOBER full time, every day, 24/7/30. DECLARE Church St. a MALL FOR THE WHOLE SUMMER. For those who are afraid of losing business because of no cars, one can notice more details about businesses while walking than while driving. A closed off street for pedestrians only, would bring back street life and street culture to our Church Street Village. Then we would have many formal and informal events possible anytime right here in The Village.
Joe, Tor ON
03/26/12 2:22 AM EST
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Blame the Event organizer, not the community
IMHO - ignoring a community by creating an event which is specifically targeted at people (who, incidentally, virtually never come to this neighbourhood except at Pride and Hallowe'en) OUTSIDE of that same community and then blaming the community you abandoned for the failure of said event constitutes "idiocy".
Argo, Toronto ON
03/26/12 10:40 AM EST
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Astounding, queer students not welcome
I'm astounded to read Joe's vision of Gay Toronto Village (and here I am talking about the whole city) where boring pseudo intellectual type queer students are not welcome. Will the real Joe please stand up and stop hiding behind a pen name. What's he/she/they afraid of....?
Michael F. Pare, Toronto On
03/26/12 8:29 PM EST
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How much money does the BIA get from the City?
Paul raises an interesting point about how the Church-Wellesley BIA receives municipal funding. Yet, how much taxpayer money does the BIA actually receive from the City of Toronto? I couldn't find the answer on the BIA website or the City of Toronto website. I understand that: (1) a BIA is legally a creation of City Council, rather than a private business; (2) a BIA requires City Council approvals for various actions; and (3) the board of management of a BIA is legally a City board and an agent of the City. See http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/bylaws/2011/law0960.pdf As a public entity, I find it disturbing that the Church-Wellesley BIA does not post audited annual financial statements on its website (which would show sources of revenue and how they were spent). The absence of financial statement disclosure on the BIA website is a real blow to public accountability and transparency.
Bill, Toronto ON
03/26/12 10:18 PM EST
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Been there, Tried that
I seem to recall that a cars-free Church Street "pedestrian mall" was attempted on Sundays a few summers ago - and it was so desolate weekend-after-weekend you coulda' fired a cannon up the middle and not hit a living soul. It was an experiment that didn't really work. But maybe poster Joe's "Church Street Mall" might be an interesting idea to consider. For all all of you who insist on declaring that queerdom has spread far beyond Church/Wellesley, and to just accept it, I pose this: Whatever happened to a sense of history, a sense of "home base", a sense of "epicenter"? Why do we have a statue of Alexander Wood erected at Church and Alexander?? You want straights and families and babies and businesses with no vested queer interests crowding 'mos and dykes out?? THE CWBIA should be ashamed of itself.
Ken, Toronto Ontario
03/27/12 3:43 PM EST
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Communities change, deal with it
Take a look at Toronto's history. What group called Kensington/Spadina home years ago? It wasn't always Chinatown, it used to be home to the Jewish community. And did anyone think Yorkville of the 60s would become the Yorkville of now? Little India? The Beach? Neighbourhoods morph all the time. Everything changes and those who can't change with the times are bound to bitch and complain. Yes, maintaining queer history in the village is important. Yes, maintaining a presence is important. But how long has the queer community been a part of Church/Wellesley? 40 years? 50 years? Does this give the right that it should remain a queer-only destination forever more? Queer folks are spreading across the city. And to think that straight folks haven't been in the gaybourhood all along is foolish. Queer folks are also marrying, having kids and bringing them to Church Street. Demographics are ever-changing and the BIA needs to deal with this. Personally, I don't agree with cancelling the FetishFair, but it was never much of a success. It would be better off as a park event, perhaps during the evening.
JP, Pickering ON
03/28/12 11:45 AM EST
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Look to other cities as an example.
I've been fortunate enough to live and work all across this great country. Originally I'm from Edmonton. What I think needs to happen is that the people of Toronto and also Vancouver and Montreal need to look at other Canadian cities as an example of how to create a GLBT community without the use of a ''gay ghetto''. In my opinion the best example would be Edmonton. Edmonton has never had a ''ghetto'' but the community was built and maintained by several gay bars scattered through out the down town core, straight owned but gay friendly business and various non-profit organizations through out the city. Even without a ''ghetto'' people all still know each other and recognize each other. Also, Edmonton's community is over 40 years old. It's not a new phenomena resulting from the digital age. My point is that it is very possible to have a fully thriving and integrated GLBT community without a ghetto and that the BIA and it's Vancouver and Montreal counterparts better figure out how to do that fast or they will be left behind.
Mike, lived all over currently MB
03/28/12 12:10 PM EST
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@ Mike...currently MB
I find the term "ghetto" not only pejorative but seriously DATED to boot. It conjures up ideas of underclass, marginalization, suppression (egregious housing rents and beer and dining prices are hardly "ghetto"-class). What you call "ghetto" I call "neighbourhood" or "community". If the geographically scattered, wide-flung notion of queer interaction/visibility appeals to you, fine. And if that's how they've learned to do things in "Deadmonton" (as a leatherman acquaintance of mine who lives there refers to it), good for them. Myself, I'd like to hang on to a bit of downtown turf where the sidewalks are visibly-proportionally-sexually-socially-politically-undeniably QUEER. Is this too much to ask for? Is this now unrealistic?
Ken, Toronto Ontario
03/28/12 1:50 PM EST
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How Not To Run An Event
If you just read the quotes from Jack Wooton of the Church BIA above, it becomes very clear what the problem is: The BIA wants to attract queers to Church and Wellsley, but they've decided that the best way to do that is to tone down or remove anything that makes queer identity unique or exciting. If the goal is to create an event that appeals to 'everyone' how is Church Street different than any other space in the city? What makes Church Street a destination when it uses the same tricks as Dundas Square? Or Square One out in Mississauga? A toothless, edges-filed-off version of queer life is attractive to no one at all.
Chris, Toronto Ontario
03/28/12 2:04 PM EST
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@ Ken
Sadly, Ken I think that it may be unrealistic. As you noted the ''Gay Ghetto'' is not really a ''ghetto'' anymore. The high rents and outrageous food and entertainment prices are out of reach for many young GLBT who are just starting out on their own and many of them do not feel that they need the gayboorhood as a haven to express their GLBT identity. The older generation may view the neighborhood and it's fascinating history in a very special way. It's almost like it's tied to the identity of being GLBT it was a small haven that gave people the ability to be themselves but nostalgia doesn't pay the bills and as with any business if you cannot attract new young customers that also buy things then you'll eventually sink. As another poster said, ''neighborhoods change all the time''. Either the BIA and all of the GLBT people/potential customers change with the times in order to survive not just as ''gay'' businesses but as community or they will fade away and be replaced with something touristy and contrived. The latter is very sad and the former will not have the same kind of identifiability or attitude but the former will still preserve the community in some way. Better than nothing right?
Mike, Lived all over MB
03/28/12 9:21 PM EST
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Church St Tourist Industry revitalizes The Village
@Mike "Better than nothing right?" NO! The Church/Wellesley BIA is a very conservative group, trying to not offend anyone. They don't want to offend straight people who also live in this area. They especially don't want to offend straight conservatives at City Hall because the BIA is City of Toronto initiative. In the process they alienate LGBT people by watering down OUR culture and turning everything vanilla for family consumption. The BIA IS TURNING THE LGBT VILLAGE STRAIGHT !! There will soon be nothing left for LGBT people here. People turn away from overpriced bad quality food here, because there is better quality for the same price elsewhere. There is more passionate and better quality entertainment elsewhere. All we have left here are a few Gay bars porn shops and the 519. People want to come here not only to rekindle their LGBT identity but also to have fun and to be free. Rekindling the LGBT Village idea is bigger than the Fetish Fair. We need to bring back the people who have been alienated to survive. We need a sheltered space for fun and freedom, ALL SUMMER 24/7/30, such as a PEDESTRIANS ONLY -Church St. MALL- with seating, greenery, street entertainment. Also we should see The Village in terms of local and international TOURIST who would SPEND MONEY here and invigorate the businesses here. We have a unique situation of Church St where people would come for vacations because they have nothing like it at home, but not in its present dismal state. The BIA does not seem to appreciate this vision. It has to be initiated by residents of The Village whether they own a business or not. The CHURCH St. MALL could be the answer to ensuring the survival of The LGBT Village.
Joe, Tor ON
03/30/12 3:12 AM EST
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Fetish fair pictures on the BIA's website
If you look at the slideshow images on the home page of the Church-Wellesley BIA's website, you will see a number of pictures from past fetish fairs. If the BIA really wants to re-brand as being family-friendly, I assume they will be removing the fetish fair pictures from their website. See http://www.churchwellesleyvillage.ca/
Sean, Toronto ON
03/30/12 8:54 AM EST
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