91原创 residents and police are teaming up to help create local safe spaces for LGBTQ residents.
Local parents Stacey Wakelin and Brad Dirks are pushing for the Safe Place program to be implemented in 91原创, and they鈥檙e already finding a receptive audience with local RCMP.
If widely adopted, Safe Place would mean local businesses and civic facilities could put up a rainbow decal on their doors or windows.
Any LGBTQ person would know that building is a safe location if they are feeling threatened, harassed, or bullied.
鈥淚t tells people the facility鈥 is supportive or inclusive, but it also is a dialogue starter,鈥 said Wakelin.
She hopes it will get people talking about inclusivity in 91原创.
Dirks is driven by the fact that he鈥檚 the father of a transgender teenage son.
鈥淚 would love for them to feel they can walk around their community and feel safe,鈥 said Dirks.
鈥淭here鈥檚 education behind it,鈥 Wakelin noted. The staff at locations marked with a Safe Place decal are to have some training on what to do if someone needs help. Local police will also be ready to respond if they get a call from a Safe Place location.
鈥淲ith this program, we need to have the support of the police,鈥 said Wakelin.
Dirks and Wakelin have secured the aid of the 91原创 RCMP, and help from the originator of the program in Canada, Vancouver Police officer Dale Quiring.
The E Division of the RCMP 鈥 which covers all of B.C. 鈥 is now on board, and rainbow decals are available.
And the local RCMP is also stepping in, with Const. Heather McLaren as the liaison for the Safe Place program.
But Dirks and Wakelin also credit the help they got from Quiring as key.
鈥淲ithout this man, we wouldn鈥檛 even have the program to even consider bringing it to 91原创,鈥 Dirks said.
Quiring said the program, which was inspired by one in Seattle, has been a success since its 2016 implementation in Vancouver. It was the first such program in Canada.
There are 380 businesses signed up as Safe Places in Vancouver.
The decals for 91原创 Safe Places will be almost identical, but for RCMP logos instead of VPD on the top.
The next step for the campaigners for Safe Places is getting local government and businesses onside.
Wakelin and Dirks will be speaking to 91原创 Township council the afternoon of March 5, and hope to speak to the City council as well.
They鈥檙e also planning to reach out to groups like the Downtown 91原创 Business Association, the Greater 91原创 Chamber of Commerce, and other groups of store owners.
Then they hope to see the effort spread to Abbotsford and Chilliwack 鈥 Quiring has already spoken to Abbotsford Police officials.
Wakelin and Dirks both became vocal about LGBTQ rights last year, when a locally-based group dubbed Culture Guard began criticizing the SOGI curriculum in B.C. schools.
SOGI stands for Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity. It鈥檚 a set of tools teachers can use to answer questions about those topics for students at different grade levels.
Through a group called B.C. Families for Inclusivity, Wakelin and Dirks organized rallies and communicated with local school trustees and politicians.