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Kitchener-Waterloo

Community feedback, education needed on Queen Victoria statue, says report

City of Kitchener staff recommends council launch a community feedback process and education campaign after the Queen Victoria statue in Kitchener was defaced four times since last July.

Statue in Victoria Park splattered with red paint 4 times since last July

The Queen Victoria statue at Victoria parkhas been vandalized at least four times since last July. (Carmen Groleau/CBC)

Since last July, the Queen Victoria statue in Kitchener has been splattered with red paint at least four times. The most recent incident was reported on May 25, following the Victoria Day weekend.

On all occasions, the City of Kitchener ordered staff to clean off the statue.

The city says it's unclear who's responsible for the incidents or the exact motive, but similar statues across Canada have been targetedfor their connections with colonialism and its impacts on Indigenous and racialized communities.

Now, City of Kitchenerstaff are recommending politicians take action to address the local incidents.

In a reportgoing before committee next Wednesday, city staff are recommending politicians launch a community feedback process that prioritizes Indigenous, Black and racialized people, to learn more about what to do with the statue.

"We acknowledgethat the presence of the statue contributes to the ongoing harm," said Elin Moorlag Silk, interim director of equity, anti-racism andIndigenous initiatives.

The reportalso recommends the city launch a public education campaign related to Queen Victoria, the statue and its impacts.

"Alot of people in society may not know the history. They may not know the harms that colonialism has had on certain communities. And so part of it will just be to sort of draw attention to this history," Silk added.

'A long time coming'

Amy Smoke,one of the co-founders of the Land Back Camp KW, said they hope to see meaningful dialogueand progress come out of the recommendations, whichthey worry may be "preformative."

"It's been a long time coming," Smoke said. "I hope that the public education part of it is absolutely successful."

"I also think that allies and white settler Canadians need to be stepping up to the plate and advocating alongside us."

Smoke's personal opinion is that the statue should be removed.

Timeline

If the recommendations are approved, staff would begin research on the education campaign as early as July and the feedback process could begin in October. A report back to council is expected in the spring of 2023.

Right now, the city spends$3,000 in annual maintenance fees and pays at least $5,000 in clean up costs each time the statue is vandalized. The recommendations would cost the city up to $30,000 over a period of up to 12 months.

Last September, ahead of the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, the city installed a sign at the base of the statue that signaled to the community "that work was underway towards equity and reconciliation in the realm of public art," the report said.