Egale Canada
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Egale Canada is a Canadian charity founded in 1986 by Les McAfee to advance equality for Canadian lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBTQ) people and their families, across Canada.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref>
The organization's current executive director is former Toronto politician Helen Kennedy. Past executive directors have included Gilles Marchildon, John Fisher and Kaj Hasselriis.<ref name=":0" /> Helen Kennedy is the first woman to head the organization.
Egale is Canada's equivalent of the US' Human Rights Campaign and the UK's Stonewall.
History
Founded in 1986 by political activist Les McAfee, Egale Canada was incorporated as a federal not-for-profit organization in 1995, with a focus on education, advocacy, litigation and expert consultation.<ref name="egale.ca">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":0" />
The organization was initially named "Equality for Gays and Lesbians Everywhere". As they extended their efforts to include bisexual and transgender issues, they felt that the acronym was not inclusive enough, and therefore changed the name from the acronym E.G.A.L.E. to simply "Egale" (égale being the French word for "equal") in 2001.<ref name=":0" /> Egale Canada's partner organization, Egale Canada Human Rights Trust (ECHRT), was founded in 1995 as a charity dedicated to advancing LGBT human rights through education, research and community engagement.<ref name="egale.ca"/>
Focus areas
Egale Canada's work falls under four pillars: Research, Education, Awareness and Legal Advocacy.<ref name=aboutself /> Template:GR-C
Research
Inclusive Schools
In 2007 Egale commissioned a survey of 3,700 high school students from across Canada in order to gain data on the situation of LGBT students in Canadian schools and gain insight into the level of homophobia and transphobia in schools. The final report, entitled Every Class in Every School, was released in 2011.[8] A decade later in 2021, Egale released a follow-up report -Still In Every Class In Every School.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Healthcare and Seniors
The early 2020s saw Egale release several research studies surrounding the experiences of 2SLGBTQI people in healthcare, mental healthcare, dementia, long-term care, retirement and more. These reports include:
- Healthcare access experiences and needs among LBQ women, trans, and nonbinary people in Canada: A research report <ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Aging and Living Well Among LGBTQI Older Adults in Canada: Findings from a National Study <ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Queering Mental Health Supports in Canada: A Research Report <ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Fostering Dialogues: An arts-based action research project imagining futures of community-based care with homecare personal support workers and LGBTQ older adults <ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Coming Out and Coming In to Living with Dementia: Enhancing Support for 2SLGBTQI People Living with Dementia and their Primary Unpaid Carers <ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Employment
Egale's 2023 report Working for Change: Understanding the Employment Experiences of Two Spirit, Trans, and Nonbinary People in Canada, examines the challenges Two Spirit, trans, and nonbinary People individuals face in employment, underemployment, and unemployment. The report explores workplace experiences, barriers to employment, and instances of discrimination and bias. While the findings reveal that there is still much progress to be made to achieve employment equity for 2STNB people, we also found that some participants encountered supportive and inclusive workplaces—offering hope for the future.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Education
Egale Canada specialize in three areas of education, training and learning: inclusive schools, training teachers and educators on creating schools more inclusive for 2SLGBTQI students;<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> workplace inclusion, training corporate teams on creating inclusive places of employment;<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and international, working with partners around the world to deliver inclusion education.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Awareness
Awareness Campaigns
Egale launches multiple awareness campaigns every year that touch on various topics involving the LGBTQ community. In recent years these campaigns have included LGBT occasions of significance such as Trans Day of Visibility, Pride Season, Intersex Awareness Week and more.
They also create campaigns around specific topics such as their 2024 award-winning campaign<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Help Us Remain which focused on raising awareness about the experiences of LGBT people living with dementia.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Legal Advocacy
Human Rights and Anti-2SLGBTQI Hate
Egale successfully lobbied the federal government to add "sexual orientation" to the Canadian Human Rights Act to protect lesbians, gays and bisexuals from discrimination; lent support to many provincial and territorial efforts to have equal rights enshrined in legislation across the country; lobbied the Government to introduce more severe penalties for those convicted of gay-bashing and other hate crimes; supported the addition of "sexual orientation" to the grounds covered by hate propaganda legislation; intervened in the Nixon case to support the rights of transgender people.
Intersex Genital Mutilation
In Canada, it is currently legal to perform genital "normalizing" surgery on intersex infants and children who are too young to understand or provide consent. These surgeries are invasive, unnecessary, and irreversible, representing a profound violation of the bodily autonomy and dignity of intersex individuals.
In 2021, Egale, alongside intersex scholars and activists Morgan Holmes and Janik Bastien-Charlebois, filed an application with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice to challenge the constitutionality of Criminal Code exemptions that allow intersex genital mutilation to remain legal. This case is known as Egale et al. v. Canada.
2SLGBTQI Youth
Promoting safe and inclusive school environments for 2SLGBTQI students is one of Egale’s core initiatives, achieved through the creation of resources and educational materials. However, this work is hindered when laws and policies prevent school staff from upholding gender-diverse students' rights to equality, safety, privacy, and self-determination. Some notable cases that Egale has been involved in include: CCLA v. New Brunswick, UR Pride v. Government of Saskatchewan et al., York Region District School Board v. Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario, and A.B. v. C.D.
Relationship Recognition
Egale successfully lobbied for the introduction and passage of Bill C-23, which amended 68 federal statutes to provide same-sex couples with the same legal status as that of opposite-sex married couples. They also supported union activities and lobbied the federal government in support of equal employment benefits to those in same-sex relationships; coordinated coalitions of equality groups in cases on same-sex pension benefits and equal funeral leave for same-sex families.
Additionally, they have on two occasions challenged the legal definition of the word "spouse." The first instance was when the group intervened before the Supreme Court of Canada to challenge the opposite-sex definition of "spouse" in the Old Age Security Act (Egan v. Canada). Although the challenge was unsuccessful, it did set a unanimous precedent by which sexual orientation was henceforth entered into the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms as a grounds for protection from discrimination. The second challenge was successful, and revised the opposite-sex definition of "spouse" in Ontario's Family Law Act (M. v. H.) so that the right to common-law marriage extended to same-sex couples.
They also helped convince Statistics Canada to include same-sex families in the nationwide census, and worked with LEGIT to advance equal immigration rights for gays and lesbians.
Representation, Visibility and Media
Egale intervened to support efforts to have LGBT pride officially proclaimed in many cities; supported community initiatives in response to the Calgary bathhouse raids; decried the heavy-handed censorship practices of Canada Customs and helped Little Sisters Bookstore win their court case. Egale has also supported freedom of speech for people with anti-gay points of view, including Albertan pastor Stephen Boissoin, who was found guilty by the Alberta Human Rights Commission of exposing gays to hatred.[6] Part of the ruling was financial compensation paid to Egale as requested by the complainant Darren Lund (who is not homosexual), but Egale refused to accept the money.[7]
Open letter to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CTRC)
In 2023, Egale published an open letter<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> to the CTRC calling for the removal of the conservative news channel Fox News from the list of non-Canadian programming authorized for distribution in Canada, following Fox News host Tucker Carlson's comments after a mass shooting in Nashville that "the trans movement is targeting Christians, including with violence."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Funding
Egale's operations and activities have been funded by a range of government agencies, corporations, non-profit organizations and individual donors. Notable funders include:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Notable Employees (Past and Present)
- Helen Kennedy, Executive Director
- Kaj Hasselriis, Executive Director
- Gilles Marchildon, Executive Director
- Tamara Kronis, Director of Advocacy
Controversies
Immigration issue
Egale blamed the Conservative government for allegedly failing to help gay immigrants from countries that have anti-gay laws, such as Iran, Iraq, Malaysia, Jordan, Mexico and Nicaragua.<ref>Conservatives Failing Gay and Lesbian Immigrants</ref> As of 2017, 72 countries still criminalize LGBTQ activity.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Bill C-2
In 2005, the organization was criticized by some of Canada's gay press for failing to submit a brief, after indicating an intention to do so, to the Canadian House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights regarding the potential impact on LGBT communities of Bill C-2, a controversial piece of legislation that revised the age of sexual consent. Xtra! asserted that Egale was devoting so much time and effort to advocacy around same-sex marriage that it was missing the boat on other important issues.<ref name=c2>Gareth Kirkby, "Egale blows it on speaking out about dangers of Bill C-2" Template:Webarchive. Xtra!, July 14, 2005.</ref>
Leadership Award
In 2009, Egale Canada presented Jaime Watt, a political strategist in the government of former Premier of Ontario Mike Harris, with its inaugural Leadership Award in honour of his role in supporting the provincial law that granted common-law marriage rights to same-sex couples.<ref>Mitchel Raphael, "Mitchel Raphael on biker MPs". Maclean's, June 18, 2009.</ref> The decision was denounced by some LGBT activists because of Watt's role in some other government policies that had been unpopular within the gay community.<ref>Krishna Rau, "Gay leaders denounce Egale award to Jaime Watt" Template:Webarchive. Xtra!, June 4, 2009.</ref><ref>Andrew Brett, "Egale's gay gaffe: Common Sense Revolutionary Jaime Watt cops Egale's top gay award and has activists stunned". Now, June 18, 2009. Retrieved June 19, 2021.</ref>
See also
References
Further reading
Archival holdings
- Égale Canada - Canadian Political Parties and Political Interest Groups - Web Archive created by the University of Toronto Libraries
External links
Template:LGBTQ Template:LGBT topics in Canada Template:LGBTQ culture in Toronto Template:Authority control