Longtime sex workers advocate Jamie Lee Hamilton dead at 64 - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 10:37 PM | Calgary | -8.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Longtime sex workers advocate Jamie Lee Hamilton dead at 64

Jamie Lee Hamilton, a longtime advocate for Vancouver's sex worker and transgender communities, died early Monday morning. She was 64.

Activist one of the first to raise alarms over disappearances of sex workers in Downtown Eastside

Jamie Lee Hamilton was a leading voice in the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. (Jamie Lee Hamilton/Twitter)

Jamie Lee Hamilton, a longtime advocate for Vancouver's sex worker and transgender communities, died in the city early Monday morning. She was 64.

David C. Jones, a local actor and director, said Hamilton died at1:36 am with close friends at her bedside at Cottage Hospice. Shemoved into the care facility in East Vancouver's Burrard View Parkon Dec. 9, a fewmonths after learning she had colon cancer.

"She was an important woman," Jones told CBC News. "She was infuriating, but so steadfast and so passionately supportive of people who needed support."

On Saturday, two days before her death, Hamilton's friends and family, includingNon-Partisan Association Coun. Colleen Hardwick, gathered at her bedside to witnessher baptism. At her request, they sang Amazing Grace.

Entering sex work as a teenager,Hamilton went on to become a fierce advocatefor the rights of sex trade workers. In 1996, she famously dumped 67high heels at the steps of Vancouver City Hall to protest the lack of response to the 67women who had gone missing in the Downtown Eastsideuntil that point.

At the time, Hamilton and others raised the prospect of an active serial killer in the community, years before police discovered Port Coquitlampig farmer Robert Pickton had killed scores ofwomen fromthe Downtown Eastside.

Hamilton later became a key voice in the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

"She was always ahead of the rest of us on any issue," said homeless advocate and longtime friend Judy Graves. "She fought for everyone."

Graves credits this perspective to the painful adversity Hamilton faced throughout her life, first as an Indigenous child in social housing, then as a sex worker and transsexual person. Though the pair sometimes found themselvesat loggerheads, Graves said they could always learnfrom each other. "[But] I think I learned more.

"The city has lost its most fierce advocate," she added.

Several times throughout her public life, Hamiltonunsuccessfully attempted the crossover from activist to politician, including in 1996 when shebecame the first transgender person to seek public office in Canada in a failed bid for city council.

In the hours since the announcement of her death, tributes from activists and politicians across Vancouver have poured in.

Despitepublic acclaim, Hamilton never veered far fromcontroversy.

Notably, in 1997, sheopened Grandma's House on Pandora Street, a safe house where, Hamilton said, sex workers in the Downtown Eastside couldgrab a mealand see street nurses. However, three years later,the policeshut down the operation, claiming it was being used as a "common bawdy house."

"She frustrated people, but she also activated people," said Jones. "She deservesto be remembered for that."