Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Alberta Students Walk Out To Protest Expected Gay-Straight Alliance Changes

The Canadian Press, 03 May, 2019 08:13 PM

    CALGARY — Students across Alberta walked out of their classes today to protest expected changes to the province's rules for gay-straight alliances.

     

    The school clubs are meant to be a safe space for LGBTQ students, and prevent bullying and harassment.


    Throngs of teenagers spilled out onto the sidewalk outside Western Canada High School in Calgary, where they chanted and held colourful signs.


    Cars and trucks along a busy thoroughfare near downtown honked and a cluster of adults stood nearby cheering and holding signs in support.


    Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said during the election campaign his United Conservative government would replace the NDP-drafted education law with older unproclaimed legislation.


    That would have the effect of undoing several GSA provisions, including a ban on schools informing parents if their children join such a club.


    "Teachers are people that we're supposed to trust and they're people that we should be comfortable telling about everything that we're going through," said Aimee, a Grade 10 student who organized the walkout.


    She declined to give her last name because she was concerned about online harassment.


    "I think that if teachers are the ones telling parents, then that is the most impersonal way to come out. Not only is it not safe for everyone, but it also should be up to the individual themselves to decide when."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hold The Bacon: More Quebec Sugar Shacks Offering Vegetarian, Vegan Options

    Hold The Bacon: More Quebec Sugar Shacks Offering Vegetarian, Vegan Options
    As the sugaring-off season begins, thousands of Quebecers will head to a cabane a sucre, or sugar shack, for a traditional heavy meal drenched in sweet syrup.  

    Hold The Bacon: More Quebec Sugar Shacks Offering Vegetarian, Vegan Options

    Former Conservative Candidate Charged With Campaign Theft From 2015 Election

    A failed Conservative candidate from the 2015 federal election has been charged with stealing more than $5,000 from campaign coffers.  

    Former Conservative Candidate Charged With Campaign Theft From 2015 Election

    Quake Hits Alberta, But In Different Geologic Region Than One Linked To Fracking

    Quake Hits Alberta, But In Different Geologic Region Than One Linked To Fracking
    A second earthquake in less than a week shook central Alberta on Sunday, although a seismologist notes it occurred in a different geologic region than a quake last week that's been linked to fracking.

    Quake Hits Alberta, But In Different Geologic Region Than One Linked To Fracking

    B.C.'s Plans To Expand Civil Forfeiture Program Called Unconstitutional

    B.C.'s Plans To Expand Civil Forfeiture Program Called Unconstitutional
    Eight years have passed since David Lloydsmith learned British Columbia's Civil Forfeiture Office wanted to seize his modest two-bedroom bungalow, but he says the panic and anger that gripped him that day have not gone away.  

    B.C.'s Plans To Expand Civil Forfeiture Program Called Unconstitutional

    SNC-Lavalin Loses Court Bid For Special Agreement To Avoid Criminal Prosecution

    SNC-Lavalin Loses Court Bid For Special Agreement To Avoid Criminal Prosecution
    OTTAWA — SNC-Lavalin has a lost a court bid to overturn the public prosecutor's refusal to negotiate an agreement that would see the company avoid a criminal trial.

    SNC-Lavalin Loses Court Bid For Special Agreement To Avoid Criminal Prosecution

    Trudeau Apologizes For Government's Past Mistreatment Of Inuit With TB

    Trudeau delivered an apology to the Inuit on behalf of the federal government — words that prompted many in the room to openly weep.

    Trudeau Apologizes For Government's Past Mistreatment Of Inuit With TB