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Saskatchewan

Calls for change to Regina city council meetings after hours-long conversion therapy ban debate

After an hours-long online meeting focused on the subject of conversion therapy, which was attended by several out-of-town delegations, some Regina councillors and residents say changes are needed to city council's meeting policies.

Some councillors, advocates say limits needed on out-of-town delegations during online meetings

Sign of Regina City Hall
After hours of debate, council voted unanimously on Wednesday to bring forward a bylaw on a potential conversion therapy ban for a vote in July. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

At the end of the an hours-long city council meeting focused on a proposal to ban conversion therapy in Regina,Coun.Dan LeBlanc concludeddebate with an apology to the city's LGBTQ community.

"I'm sorry that you're not part of this city council that's deciding fundamental rights about you," he said. "And apologies that these are the sorts of indignities that you have to suffer, without you here."

The Wednesday meeting focused on acity administrationreport around the widelydiscredited practice of conversion therapy, and a proposal that the city create a bylaw to ban the practice.

After hours of debate,council voted unanimously to bring forward a proposed bylaw for a vote in July.

In an interview with CBC, LeBlanc said the debategave hate a platform, and opened a debate about therights ofLGBTQ people. That'sdeeply disturbing, LeBlanc said,and LGBTQ voices need to be heard in the future.

Aspokesperson for Queen City for All says that kind of experience can be traumatizing.

"It brings up every instance of transphobia or homophobia or discrimination we've ever felt or faced," said Kent Peterson, a queer man living in Regina. "It reminds us that we are not safe here."

A man wearing glasses
Kent Peterson is a spokesperson for Queen City for All and a queer man living in Regina. (Submitted by Kent Peterson )

Peterson said conversion therapy happensin the shadows inRegina and hurts local people.

A number of special interest groups spoke atWednesday'sonline meeting, tryingto sway councillors with harmful rhetoric, he said.

"I feel for the trans members of my community who, for their own self-preservation, don't feel like it's safe for them to present their story," he said. "City council has to do better."

Regina lawyer Barton Soroka, who addressed council at Wednesday's meeting, said the fact Regina city council meetings are being heldvirtually because of the COVID-19 pandemic can leadto misinformation being shared.

Delegations told council a ban on conversion therapy would interfere with parental or religious rights and be taken to court. Soroka said it's rare that legislation isn't challenged in court by some groups and that judges would interpret the bill.

"That's how the system works," Soroka said. "Do I think that it's going to be challenged? Absolutely. Do I think that that means it's bad legislation? Absolutely not."

'Suddenly everyone can get in'

Soroka said the virtual meetings putcity council in a tough spot.

"I don't think that they had ever planned to have virtual council when their rules were made, and that means that now suddenly everyone can get in," Soroka said.

People from the Calgary organizationFree to Care and Toronto'sParents as First Educators both of which have spoken out against the federal government's conversion therapy ban as well as delegations fromBritish Columbia and the United States spoke at Wednesday's meetingagainst a conversion therapy ban.

The overwhelming number of delegations from Regina were in favour of a ban.

Peterson said only affected local people should be able to address council, and out-of-province special interest groups should be allowed only to makewritten submissions.

"I think that would make the overall process less harmful to queer and trans people, and it would make it more efficient and timely so that we can get to passing the bylaw," Peterson said.

Regina Mayor Sandra Masters says council will look at ways to 'manage more appropriately the input into Regina city council decisions.' (Matthew Howard/CBC)

In a news conference, Mayor Sandra Masters said she and councillors have much to learn on this issue and council will discuss procedural options.

"What I suspect is that we'll be looking at some mechanism to perhaps I don't want to say limit free speech or presentation to council, but to perhaps manage more appropriately the input into Reginacity council decisions," Masters told reporters.

LeBlanc said he's conerned aboutwell-organized, well-financed right-wing groups focusing their attention onRegina for a brief moment in time, in an effort to derail and wear down councillors.

"I would certainly support a change to our procedure bylaw that says nobody from outside of Regina, or certainly outside of Saskatchewan, gets to talk unless we specifically ask them to," he said. "I'm not especially interested in hearing from what everybody from Ontario to B.C. thinks of this."

Coun. Andrew Stevens said he doesn't want to get into the business of restricting who can and cannot speak, but that he wouldn't be able toendure another meeting like Wednesday's, which began at 1 p.m. and ran well into the night.

"To be clear, there was a traveling roadshow that came to Regina over last night, and they take this discussion across Canada," he said. "That's a concern."

Stevens said council will discuss how to handle delegations not only based on location but also their content.

He said council meetings should not be an open platform for people to talk about their opinions on sexuality and gender transitioning, and off-topic conversations should be shut down.