Eliminating long census 'short-sighted,' queers say
FEDERAL POLITICS / 'The Conservative agenda is to make people invisible again': Siksay
Nathaniel Christopher / Vancouver / Tuesday, August 17, 2010
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Recent changes to the census have sparked concern among members of the gay community.

Last month, the Harper Conservatives announced they would scrap the mandatory long-form questionnaire portion of the 2011 census.

The 61-question census, which was previously sent to one in five Canadian households, will be replaced by a voluntary "National Household Survey," which will be sent to one in three households.

"It screws everybody, including the queer community," says gay NDP MP Bill Siksay. "Jerking around with the census is a colossal mistake and something the Conservatives need to backtrack on immediately."

Siksay believes the census change is intended to curtail the influence of minority populations who depend on census data.

"Everybody knows the importance of the census," he says. "We know the importance of data collected. The Conservative agenda is to make people invisible again, social programs invisible again, minority communities invisible again. This attempt to blunt the usefulness of the census has to be stopped."

On July 25, Queer Ontario released a statement decrying the elimination of the mandatory long-form census as "short-sighted."

"I think the ramifications of this are very serious," says Queer Ontario founder Nick Mulé. "Even though we are not fully recognized on the census at this point in time, this has serious ramifications for our communities in the future in terms of continuing our advocacy work on this front, and also any attempts to glean information from the census are being curtailed."

Mulé feels the census decision may undermine future consultations between Statistics Canada and the queer community.

"I don't know if [the consultations] would be dead," he says. "I think the bureaucracy of Statistics Canada will still meet with the queer communities all across the board, but what I think we're probably anticipating is a far more restricted perspective. This is a major controversy."

Mulé says queer inclusion on the census is important for government programs and policies that address the needs of queer people.

"It's very important to have us recognized as active, taxpaying citizens in this country because we have unique needs that need to be recognized, and when that happens they can better shape policy to address what those needs are."

Peter Frayne, head of media relations for Statistics Canada, confirms there will be no question on sexual orientation on the 2011 census.

"Past qualitative tests on sexual orientation suggest that voluntary surveys are the most appropriate collection method, provided the context and relevance are clear," he explains. "Consequently, sexual orientation is currently asked in the General Social Survey and the Canadian Community Health Survey."

Last November, Dr Verlé Harrop, a senior scientist at the National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health in Halifax, delivered the keynote address at the fifth annual Gay Men's Health Summit in Vancouver. In her speech, she stressed the importance of including queer people in the census.

She expressed shock when she discovered questions about sexual orientation are not already included on the census.

"How could it be that in 2009, gay men, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender peoples are statistically invisible?" she asked at the time. "This is a problem because Statistics Canada is the primary population level data source used by politicians, academics, researchers, policymakers and the healthcare system generally."

The explanation she received from Statistics Canada as to why queers aren't included elicited gasps from conference attendees.

"When I asked my data analyst why Statistics Canada does not collect gender/orientation data, she said, 'We're Canadian; we don't talk about things like that.' When I asked my colleague at Statistics Canada why they don't collect gender data, he said they were concerned that people would be 'disgusted' and end up not filling out the census. When I told my kids about this, they were incredulous. One asked, 'Didn't they grow up with Madonna?'"

While queer individuals may be invisible in the census, same-sex common law relationships have been recorded since 2001 and married couples since 2006.

"We took issue with Statistics Canada," says Mulé. "In some ways they made a move to recognize same-sex couples because of insurance, but on the flip side, they did create a hierarchy. It does privilege people who enter into that institution and further marginalizes those of us who choose not to."

Mulé believes the census should record all queer people, regardless of their relationship status.

"Programs are funded and developed for one type of queer persona: those who decide to get married," he says. "This is part of the problem of incrementally recognizing some members of our community through legislation but not others, so it has an influential effect on all these folks."

The Health Initiative for Men (HIM), a Vancouver organization dedicated to the health and well-being of gay men, would benefit from queer inclusion on the census, says HIM executive director Wayne Robert.

"We know more about what kind of soap you use in the shower than who you shower with," says Robert.

"Private organizations have funding for research," he explains. "For healthcare and social policy, we rely on information produced by the census and other kinds of public surveys. We are not able to do the polling work ourselves.

"It's not like we make decisions in the dark," he notes. "We do research; we are a research and evidence-based organization. But as far as tying that into the national and provincial policy as to where those pieces fit into the larger picture...

"It keeps everyone really unclear [on] our contribution, our needs and our place in Canadian society," Robert says, "and the less information we have, the less effective our decisions can be. As a country we're making decisions."



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Reader Comments


 
Be Counted AGAIN
"While queer individuals may be invisible in the census, same-sex common law relationships have been recorded since 2001 and married couples since 2006." Hopefully from a precedent setting case in Family Law in Calgary which has been going on for over 4 years some support might grow as THE BIG Charter Challenge for Gay Family Rights is knocking on the Governments doorstep with a Family Status Challenge, not recognizing the two gay men with a child WILL NEGATE ENTIRELY this GAY FAMILY unit. This can also immediately not happen for the BEST interests of every Canadian. Especially the Gay Community.WILL OUR GAY CANADIAN FAMILIES, GAY FRIENDLY AND SUPPORTIVE FAMILies, Gay,Bi and straight friends and peers voice our concerns or support now that we see how important it is to celebrate/recreate the energy and national support for gay issues, gay recognition, the entire Canadian Gay Network? We need to be included more, not less especially now in 2010. Are we looking at another Prop 8 reversal? er stall, errr, delay...Stop being complacent and stand up to be counted for something. Be Proud AGAIN! Instead of a Stonewall let's hope the "Future is Here" with a better Forcefield as Stonewalls seem to crumble if not reinforced by the next generation.
dh, calgary ab
08/17/10 7:09 PM EST
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Au contraire
At times, queer people have not seen the census as benign at all, but rather a coercive tool to oppress them. Only recently, now that laws (for the time being) at last favour us is the perspective inverted.
Bruce, Coquitlam BC
08/18/10 3:33 PM EST
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DR! DR!
Dr. Harrop your self proclaimed ignorance in regards to the lack of a question about sexual orientation on the census seems indigenousness, you must never of filled one out. One can only imagine the reaction of Canadians that are threatened with fines or jail time for not wanting to answer the question about sexual orientation and what other sexual information do some people want? Oral sex habits, "cheating", masturbation habits? or how about an anal sex question? It seems that personal privacy is only for some people in this country the rest must bare their souls to the state or face prison. What ever happened to P.E.T's comment that the state has no business in the nation's bedrooms? I won't get an answer on that one from the good doctor. If a political party goes down this road there will be a reaction not unlike the BC anti HST drive.
stadiumguy, Edmonton AB
08/22/10 12:58 PM EST
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Rubbish
The form is still there, just not mandatory, queers and others if they receive the form can still complete it, nothing is stopping them ,minorities should take some responsibility for once, if they want taxpayer money then they should fill out the form, I bet if it was the other way round and Harper was making it mandatory instead of voluntary, you would all be calling him a fascist.
Steve, Toronto Ontario
08/22/10 2:08 PM EST
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