Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Fredericton councillors divided on abortion poem

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2020 09:49 PM
  • Fredericton councillors divided on abortion poem

Fredericton city council is considering ending the custom of opening public meetings with a poem after the city's poet laureate read lyrical verses about abortion during a meeting Monday night.

Poet laureate Jenna Lyn Albert triggered the controversy when she read, "Those Who Need to Hear This Won’t Listen," a poem about a personal experience with abortion written by Ottawa-based writer Conyer Clayton.

Some councillors said the poem was overly political and inappropriate, others said it reflected the mood among residents and was timely given the expected closure of one of the province's few abortion providers.

"I'm terribly concerned that we are now politicizing poems," Coun. Dan Keenan said during Monday's meeting. "I completely agree with freedom of speech and the right for people to say what they want to say but that was never the intention for this forum."

Keenan said he felt the council should reconsider whether its meetings should begin with a poem, lamenting how the custom has become a form of "political activism."

Councillors said Monday the city's governance committee will look into whether it should end the custom.

Albert said she picked the poem because she felt it was timely ahead of Clinic 554’s planned closure at the end of the month, which would leave N.B. residents with only three hospital-based options to access abortion services.

"I think it’s always important to use whatever platform that an artist may have to address issues that are really concerning the community," Albert said in an interview Tuesday.

Part of the role of the poet laureate is giving a voice to the LGBT+ community, disabled people and people of colour, who she said aren't always being heard at city hall.

Clayton, the Ottawa-based writer who penned the poem more than a year ago, said she was inspired by the debate over reproductive rights in the United States to to explore the experience of her own abortion.

“I had never written about the subject so directly before,” she said in an interview Tuesday.

“I was just frustrated because the narrative you often year from conservatives is that everyone regrets their abortions and that it’s an extremely traumatic experience for everyone and that may be true for some but that was very much not aligned with my experience,” Clayton said.

Coun. John MacDermid said he disagrees the poet laureate position has become overly politicized.

Reading a poem before council meetings is appropriate, he said in an interview Tuesday, adding that the verses chosen by Albert reflected feelings in the community about the clinic's expected closure.

"The deeper we got into the poem, the more engaged I became and it became very clear to me that it was a poem that was really hitting the mark at an appropriate time," he said. "It’s not always comfortable and that’s what art is about, holding a mirror up to society and asking people to reflect on it."

The poet said she was “blown away” when she learned Albert had read her poem in council and said she sees it as a necessary act within the wider conversation about abortion access.

“It’s not her job to just say some pretty words before a council meeting,” Clayton said, referring to Albert. “Art is there to raise discussion.”

MORE National ARTICLES

WATCH: Dr. Joy Johnson appointed as the 10th President & Vice-Chancellor of Simon Fraser University.

WATCH: Dr. Joy Johnson appointed as the 10th President & Vice-Chancellor of Simon Fraser University.
WATCH: Congratulations to Dr. Joy Johnson appointed as the 10th President & Vice-Chancellor of Simon Fraser University. Dr. Johnson sat down with our host Ish Sharma for an EXCLUSIVE interview to discuss her vision in her new role and how she plans to take the prestigious University to new heights.

WATCH: Dr. Joy Johnson appointed as the 10th President & Vice-Chancellor of Simon Fraser University.

Judge rules against private health care

Judge rules against private health care
Opponents have said a two-tier system would favour patients who are wealthy enough to pay for "queue-jumping" private insurance as well as doctors who could bill both the public and private systems.

Judge rules against private health care

Top court touts role of free expression

Top court touts role of free expression
Strategic lawsuits against public participation — known as SLAPPs — are levied against people or organizations that take a position on an issue, with the aim of limiting their free speech.

Top court touts role of free expression

WATCH: Worst Ever Wild Fires in Oregon & California in the History of USA | WE Charity Quits Canada

WATCH: Worst Ever Wild Fires in Oregon & California in the History of USA | WE Charity Quits Canada
US wildfires destroy homes and force people to flee towns and We charity decides to shut down operations in Canada after the fiasco with the Liberal government.

WATCH: Worst Ever Wild Fires in Oregon & California in the History of USA | WE Charity Quits Canada

Two Alberta Mounties face manslaughter charges

Two Alberta Mounties face manslaughter charges
No one from Alberta Justice has returned a request for comment, but the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team (ASIRT) says it is preparing a statement on the charges.

Two Alberta Mounties face manslaughter charges

Hail, floods in Alberta cause nearly $2B in damages

Hail, floods in Alberta cause nearly $2B in damages
A storm that hit the Calgary, Drumheller, Airdrie and Strathmore areas on July 24 topped $135 million with over 10,000 claims.

Hail, floods in Alberta cause nearly $2B in damages