Politics

Canada invests $100M in 'historic' action plan for 2SLGBT communities

The federal government unveiled Sunday details of an action plan to support 2SLGBT communities with a $100 million investment over five years, a commitment promised in this year's budget.

Majority of money will help fund community organizations over 5-year term

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Women, Gender Equality and Youth Minister Marci Ien unveil details of the government's action plan to support 2SLGBT communities, in Ottawa, on Sunday. (Patrick Doyle/The Canadian Press)

The federal government unveiled what it described as a historic first on Sunday as it announced a five-year, $100-million plan to support 2SLGBT communities across the country.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau unveiled the strategy, dubbed "Canada's first Federal 2SLGBTQI+ Action Plan," at a news conference on Sunday ahead of the Pride parade in Ottawa — the first in-person march after a two-year hiatus due to COVID-19.

Trudeau touted the plan as the first such federal initiative of its kind, and said it demonstrates the government's commitment to fighting discrimination and supporting diversity.

"This will guide our ongoing work to fight discrimination, break down barriers, to advance rights and to build a future where everyone in Canada is truly free to be who they are and love whom they love," Trudeau said on Sunday.

People march in Montreal's Pride parade in 2021. The federal action plan announcement came the same day as Ottawa's scheduled Pride parade. (Peter McCabe/The Canadian Press)

Trudeau said 75 per cent of the funding will go toward community organizations focused on diversity and inclusion because that's "where the real work of support comes from."

"The strength and resilience of your communities should inspire everyone," he said.

The federal government previously announced in this year's budget that it would earmark $100 million to benefit 2SLGBT people. The action plan included details of where the money would go.

More than $5 million of the funding will go toward the launch of a public awareness campaign, while $7.7 million has been earmarked for data collection and community led policy research to support federal action on 2SLGBT issues.

Further action on conversion therapy possible

Debbie Owusu-Akyeeah, executive director of the Canadian Centre for Gender & Sexual Diversity, said the strategy was "long awaited and overdue," adding more supports are needed including in schools.

She said Canada has lagged behind many other countries, such as the U.K., Ireland and the Netherlands, which already have government action plans.

She said figures from Statistics Canada have shown a sharp rise in hate crimes toward people from the 2SLGBT communities.

Justice Minister David Lametti, Tourism Minister Randy Boissonnault and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau cross the floor to shake hands with then-Conservative leader Erin O'Toole following a vote on legislation banning the practice of conversion therapy in Canada. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Trudeau signalled the government would look at "further protections and support" for people who survived conversion therapy, which he called "a cruel and dangerous practice" and which was criminalized earlier this year in Canada.

The federal government is facing calls to tighten the ban to cover practices designed to try to change someone's sexual orientation or gender identity offered online from abroad, including the United States.

Wisdom2Action executive director Fae Johnstone, who attended the launch, said there was a need to invest in mental-health counselling for people traumatized by the discredited practice.

"Tens of thousands of people were subjected to it and it's still happening today," Johnstone said.

The federal government also signalled that it will look at further legislative changes as part of its action plan. It plans to launch a public consultation on whether to make it illegal to perform cosmetic surgery on intersex children's genitals until they are mature enough to give consent.

The strategy proposes to adopt and encourage the use of the 2SLGBTQI+ acronym, "which is more inclusive and places the experiences of Indigenous 2SLGBTQI+ communities at the foreground as the first 2SLGBTQI+ peoples in North America."

The acronym stands for two-spirit, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, and additional sexually and gender diverse people.

More direct support needed, groups told government

Marci Ien, minister of women and gender equality, welcomed the action plan alongside Trudeau, saying the funds are for "all of those people who are fighting to be heard and accepted."

"This is for the people who were discarded by their family and friends after they came out, to everybody trying to live their truth in rural communities where they feel isolated. This is for the Black queer people who are fighting every day to justify their place in this country, and the trans women who are afraid sometimes to walk home alone in the dark, this is for you," Ien said.

She said the strategy was created following several years of consultation and research with members of the 2SLGBT communities.

Ottawa received more than 25,000 responses in 2020-2021 to a national online survey on how to better serve diverse communities, Ien said.

"The resounding answer was that they needed more direct support ... to offer programs to continue educating the wider public because, again, we can't legislate kindness," Ien said.

Effort to get military records continues

The plan pledges to invest up to $10 million per year in 2SLGBT projects abroad.

Trudeau said Canada had welcomed thousands of people from 2SLGBT communities fleeing discrimination abroad and warned of "rights moving backwards in many parts of the world — some closer than we would like to admit."

 WATCH | Police say attack on Vancouver man during Pride week motivated by hate: 

Ottawa unveils plan to support 2SLGBT communities

2 years ago
Duration 2:01
The federal government has announced $100 million dollars over five years to help 2SLGBT communities across the country. The announcement was made the same day police in Vancouver released video showing the assault of a man following Pride events earlier in the summer.

Michelle Douglas, who won a landmark legal challenge against the Canadian Armed Forces over discrimination against 2SLGBTQ service members, said there was still much work to do to stamp out such practices.

Douglas, a former member of the military police who was honourably discharged in 1989 as part of a "purge" of members of the 2SLGBT community, said she also wanted all the records relating to policies toward 2SLGBT personnel released.

"We have about 10,000 pages and we know there are more," she said.

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