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Locality: Toronto, Ontario

Phone: +1 416-979-2783



Address: 519 Church Street M4Y 2C9 Toronto, ON, Canada

Website: queerontario.org/contact

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Queer Ontario 29.06.2021

Queer Ontario Letter to the Ontario Government regarding; policing, sick days & vaccine access. We demand that you: 1. Rescind all newly established policing powers effective across Ontario... 2. Legislate ten days of permanent, employer-paid sick leave 3. Focus closures and vaccine-access measures around evidence of COVID-19 transmission View/Download full statement/letter in the link bellow: https://queerontario.org//QO-Statement-Pandemic-Policing-S

Queer Ontario 18.06.2021

Queer Ontario has signed on to this and we hope you and/or your organization will also. Stopping Ford's Covert Expansion of Policing https://docs.google.com//1FAIpQLSfN5BE98250BQAs-N/viewform

Queer Ontario 02.06.2021

The No Pride in Policing Coalition (NPPC), of which Queer Ontario is a member, has recently released a number of statements regarding some pressing issues affecting the 2SLGBTQ+ communities. Links to these statements are provided below: Statement Against the Expansion of Pandemic Policing... https://docs.google.com//1bcm0vycqmCa3A-O28vb/mobilebasic NPPC and Maggie's Toronto: Statement on Missing Persons Review https://noprideinpolicing.ca/missingpersons/ NPPC Statement on Bill 251 https://noprideinpolicing.ca/bill251/

Queer Ontario 26.05.2021

"SEX WORKER HUMAN RIGHTS GROUPS LAUNCH CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGE"

Queer Ontario 17.05.2021

Happy Trans Day of visibility! To all Trans, Non-binary, intersex folks, representation matters, and we must keep working on advocating for Trans, NB, and intersex folks as Trans visibility is every day. #TransVisibilityDay #Trans

Queer Ontario 17.11.2020

Please take a moment and sign/send this letter to demand answers - Clink on the link to demand Justice for Coco #justiceforcoco #BlackTransLivesMatter Share, sign, demand! #BlackLivesMatter "Take action and demand that the Toronto City Council, Ontario legislature, the Toronto Police Services and the Special Investigations act quickly to provide Coco, her family and her community with the justice she deserves."

Queer Ontario 14.11.2020

Case Number: 2020-2029228. #TPSWHATHAPPENED? @TorontoPolice #TPSWhatHappened @TPS43Div... #TPSWhatHappened SIU Case Number: 20-TCD-284. #TPSWHATHAPPENED? @SIUOntario #TPSWhatHappened

Queer Ontario 13.11.2020

TAKE ACTION: https://www.torontoprisonersrightsproject.org/justice-for-c We are outraged by the news of the death of Coco - a 30-year old Black trans woman. Co...co died in Toronto Police Services custody. TPS and the Special Investigations Unit have yet to provide any information about how she died. To make matters worse, the Toronto Police Services continue to misgender her in their reports. Black trans people face disproportionate targeting by the police and are often harassed and picked up by police for being trans in public. We unite together to demand justice for Coco! Take action using this e-mail tool until we get answers.

Queer Ontario 09.11.2020

Queer Ontario Letter Opposing Christian College Accreditation https://queerontario.org/queer-ontario-letter-opposing-chr/ #education #DougFord #OnPoli #LGBTQ #QueerOntario #Bill213 #CharlesMcVety #Islamophobia #Homophobia Hon. Ross Romano Ministry of Colleges and Universities ...Continue reading

Queer Ontario 21.10.2020

COVID-19 & Queers Crisis & Opportunity Since mid-March the province of Ontario has been severely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. This included a state of emergency being declared for Ontario by Premier Ford. Although all Ontarians are being affected by the pandemic, we are experiencing the effects differently. The lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual, transgender, 2-Spirit, queer and intersex (LGBTQ) communities can be impacted in a number of ways. ...Continue reading

Queer Ontario 19.10.2020

Queer Ontario Calls for Anti-Racist Actions Statement: https://queerontario.org/queer-ontario-calls-for-anti-raci/ #BlackLivesMatter #DefundThePolice #onpoli #PoliceBrutality #BLMprotest #BLM

Queer Ontario 09.10.2020

Thank you, everyone, for coming out and celebrating Queer Ontario’s 10th Anniversary Event! With a film screening of QueerEdge: From Gay to Queer Liberation (2019) and our Post-screening talkback and Q&A panel discussing Gay Liberation Then, Queer Liberation Now... Here are some lovely pictures of the event.

Queer Ontario 07.10.2020

Happening tonight!

Queer Ontario 20.09.2020

Queer Ontario Brief LGBTQ2 Health in Canada Submitted to: The House of Commons Standing Committee on Health

Queer Ontario 05.09.2020

Queer Ontario's submission to the "Government Education Survey" regarding, Ontario Sex Education Curriculum http://queerontario.org/queer-ontarios-submission-to-the-g/

Queer Ontario 18.08.2020

Breaking news! Bill C75 has passed its third reading in the House of Commons, which includes the repeal of Bawdy house and vagrancy laws from the Criminal Code... of Canada. Next step is for the Bill to pass in the Senate, and also to find ways for sex workers and third parties with bawdy house charges to appeal to have them removed from their criminal record. 69.1 (1) The definition common bawdy-house in subsection 197(1) of the Act is repealed. 73 The heading before section 210 and sections 210 and 211 of the Act are repealed. *** Dernières nouvelles! Les lois sur les maisons de débauche ont été abrogées du Code criminel du Canada. Les travailleuses du sexe et les tierces personnes accusés de cet loi peuvent faire appel pour les éliminer de leur casier judiciaire. Bill C-75: Joint Statement on the repeal of Criminal Code laws used against LGBTQ2S+ people and sex workers. This month the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human is examining Bill C-75, An Act to amend the Criminal Code, the Youth Criminal Justice Act and other Acts and to make consequential amendments to other Acts. While this is a very broad piece of legislation addressing unused and unconstitutional laws, it also forms part of the federal government’s apology to LGBTQ2S+ communities, delivered by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the House of Commons on November 28, 2017. Bill C-75 falls very short of the apology. Likewise, the government committed itself in 2015 to review laws that criminalize sex work, which also remains unaddressed in Bill C-75. This bill presents an opportunity to finally repeal archaic criminal offences historically used to criminalize the consensual activities of LGBTQ2S+ people, all of which stem from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. These include provisions against bawdy houses, indecent acts, obscenity, and vagrancy. In our view the criminal law should not be used to enforce notions of sexual morality but should instead be used in cases of actual violence, harassment and abuse, which are covered under other more appropriate sections of the Criminal Code. Bill C-75 has numerous limitations that must be addressed. The bill finally repeals the prohibition against anal intercourse, but does not address the many other historic uses of the Code to criminalize consensual LGBTQ2S+ sexual activities. This fact was acknowledged by the Prime Minister in his apology, he explicitly mentioned the use of the bawdy house law in the mass police raids on gay bathhouses. From 1968-2004, more than 1,300 men were charged with this and related offenses in raids on bathhouses and bars across Canada. If C-75 does not address the bawdy house laws it fails to address the large mass arrests of men for having consensual sex with other men. The provision against indecent act remains, which has long been used to criminalize consensual sex between men, involving thousands of charges. Charges of vagrancy have been used against trans and gender non-conforming people as well as sex workers. C-75 specifically reforms these laws, but it does not repeal them. We call for the repeal of the bawdy house law, indecent acts, and vagrancy from the Code. Other offences used to criminalize consensual LGBTQ2S+ activities, including obscenity, immoral theatrical performance, indecent exhibition, and nudity are not addressed, nor is the criminalization of cases involving HIV nondisclosure. The recently adopted criminal record expungement bill (C-66), which was also part of the apology process, only covers a small fraction of the offences used to criminalize LGBTQ2S+ people. Only charges for gross indecency and buggery/anal intercourse qualify for an expungement, meaning those convicted under the bawdy house laws in various bathhouse raids are still unable to clear their records. Nor will the many people charged for consensual activity through the indecent act or other sections of the Code. If the bawdy house laws and indecent act were repealed in C-75 it would allow people convicted of these offences to apply for expungement of their convictions for consensual sexual activity. As it stands Bill C-75 maintains most of the offenses used to criminalize consensual LGTBTQ2S+ activity, this must be changed. There is much in common between the policing of sex work and policing LGBTQ2S+ people, including historically through the bawdy house law and other sections of the Criminal Code. We fully support the repeal of all laws criminalizing sex work and the recommendations of the Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform. Since Bill C-75 only mentions the material benefits and advertising offences, both of which create harmful working and living conditions for sex workers, we call for these sections to be repealed at this time. By criminalizing the act of materially benefiting from another party’s sex work, section 286.2 of the Criminal Code restricts sex workers’ capacity to engage in supportive work relationships that enhance their safety and improve work conditions. This provision reproduces the harms of the prior living on the avails offense that was struck down in the 2013 Bedford decision for violating sex workers’ section 7 Charter rights. Criminal Code section 286.4 prohibits advertising paid sexual services. As with the prohibitions on communicating and purchasing, this provision undermines the safety benefits that sex workers derive from openly communicating the terms and conditions of their services and establishing boundaries with their clients in advance of in-person contact. Prohibiting advertising creates significant barriers to working indoors, which the evidentiary record in Bedford demonstrates is safer than working on the street. Since the enactment of the advertising provision, many websites and newspapers no longer publicize sex workers’ services. Those that do have often discontinued their virtual lounges that allowed workers to share safety and other valuable information. Despite an immunity clause that prevents arrest and prosecution of most sex workers in both the advertising and material benefit laws, these activities remain a crime for all people involved. It is working in this context of criminality that creates harmful conditions for sex workers. Repealing the material benefits and advertising offences are only the very first steps to a more holistic reform of sex work laws. The apology process to the LGBTQ2S+ communities also demands that the bawdy house, indecent act and vagrancy provisions are entirely repealed in C-75. Otherwise, the apology remains flawed and unfulfilled. Justice for sex workers demands that at the very least the material benefits and advertising provisions that continue to make the lives of sex workers and those supporting them unsafe also be repealed. We need to stop legislating a morality that disadvantages and discriminates against LGBTQ2S+ people and that creates unsafe working conditions in the lives of sex workers. Supported by Organizations Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform: Angel’s Angels (Hamilton); Action Santé Travesties et Transexuel(le)s du Québec (ASTTeQ) (Montréal); BC Coalition of Experiential Communities (Vancouver); Butterfly Asian and Migrant Sex Workers Network (Toronto); Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network (Toronto); Downtown Eastside Sex Workers United Against Violence (SWUAV) (Vancouver); Émissaire (Longueuil); FIRST (Vancouver); HIV Community Link, Shift Program (Calgary); Maggie’s Toronto Sex Workers Action Project (Toronto); Maggie’s Indigenous Sex Workers Drum Group (Toronto); Migrant Sex Workers Project (Toronto); PEERS (Victoria); Projet Lune (Québec); Prostitutes Involved Empowered Cogent Edmonton (PIECE) (Edmonton); Providing Alternatives, Counselling and Education (PACE) Society (Vancouver); Rézo, projet travailleurs du sexe (Montréal); Safe Harbour Outreach Project (S.H.O.P.) (St John’s); Safe Space (London); Sault Ste. Marie Sex Workers’ Rights (Sault Ste. Marie); Sex Professionals of Canada (SPOC) (Toronto); Sex Workers Advisory Network of Sudbury (SWANS) (Sudbury); Stella, l’amie de Maimie (Montreal); Stop the Arrests! (Sault Ste. Marie) Strut! (Toronto); Supporting Women’s Alternatives Network (SWAN)(Vancouver); Shift (Calgary); West Coast Cooperative of Sex Industry Professionals (WCCSIP) (Vancouver); Sex Workers of Winnipeg Action Coalition (Winnipeg) The Canadian AIDS Society The Canadian Centre for Gender and Sexual Diversity The Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network HIV & AIDS Legal Clinic Ontario Triple-X Workers’ Solidarity Association of British Columbia Queer Ontario Individuals Dr. Rebecca Jaremko Bromwich, Director, GDCR Program, Department of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University. Ryan Conrad, Postdoctoral Fellow, AIDS Activist History Project, Carleton University, Communications Officer, Sexuality Studies Association Patrizia Gentile, Associate Professor, Carleton University Tom Hooper, historian of the Toronto bath raids. Gary Kinsman, author of The Regulation of Desire and co-author of The Canadian War on Queers. Steven Maynard, Assistant Professor, Department of History, Queen’s University Tim McCaskell, author of Queer Progress. Eric Mykhalovskiy, Professor, Department of Sociology, York University Casey Oraa, Vice President, COPE Local 343 Ron Rosenes, Chair, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network Alexis Shotwell, Associate Professor, Carleton University, Department of Sociology & Anthropology Marie-Eve Sylvestre, Professeure titulaire, Section de droit civil, Université d'Ottaw