'Proud City' campaign asks Ottawa's inclusive spaces to show off - Action News
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Ottawa

'Proud City' campaign asks Ottawa's inclusive spaces to show off

A new campaign is setting up LGBT-friendly businesses and community spaces with 'Proud City' stickers to let people know where they can go to feel safe and supported.

Organizers say window or door stickers let LGBT people know where they won't be judged

An example of a Proud City window sticker, which lets spaces in the Ottawa area that are welcoming and inclusive to the LGBTQ community showcase it. The campaign is launching in the days before Pride month in the capital. (Andrew Foote/CBC)

A new campaign is setting up LGBT-friendly businesses and community spaces in the Ottawa area with "Proud City"stickers to let people know where they can go to feel safe and supported.

The Ottawa-basedCanadian Centre for Gender and Sexual Diversity is organizing the campaign, which puts a sticker or poster with a rainbow logo in the shape of the City of Ottawa on a door or window of an interested space, which is then listed on its website.

Nearly 60 shops, restaurants, political offices and a church havesigned upas of Sunday afternoon.

The centresaid many businesses around the area of Bank and Somerset streets put up flags in August for Pride, but this is a way to organize in a way that helps locals, tourists and businesses across the region.

"The idea of being able to tell people where they can find safe spaces as well as celebrating the businesses that are willing to say they're inclusive and welcoming to the LGBTQ population is a great thing,"said Valerie Warmerdam, a coordinator with the centre.

Lets spaces show what they already do

The manager of the Canopy and Cielshops on Richmond Road in Westboro said she had no reason to say no to the campaign when she was recently approached.

"It's something we've always been supportive of and [the] visibility is also key," said MaryAnne Petrella.

"To have something in the window that people can see and understand they can come into our shop and be treated with respect and to know they're in a supportive space is really important to us."

MaryAnne Petrella manages Ciel and Canopy in Westboro. She's awaiting the arrival of their Proud City stickers, which will go on their front window along with their usual Pride-themed display. (Andrew Foote/CBC)

The campaign has also been introducing people to the training the centre does about how to be a welcoming, safe space for people of all gender identities, Warmerdam said.

"It looks like people not judging. It's people just letting people be who they are," she said.

"When you walk into a business you don't want to be asked why you look different to them, you don't want to be told your kind isn't welcomed here. It's not a fun thing to happen and it happens to plenty of people."

Businesses and organizations who are interested can go to the centre's websitefor more information or get a free ticketto the campaign's launch party at the Lansdowne ParkWhole Foods from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Wednesday.

Ottawa's Capital Pride festival runs from Aug. 21 to 27.