
Pride events celebrated in 3 B.C. Interior communities for the 1st time
CBC
Pride parades are popping up in some smaller communities in the B.C. Interior this month for the first time, reflecting growing acceptance and a desire for inclusive events and spaces.
Vanderhoof, 100 Mile House and Armstrong are all celebrating their inaugural events this year.
"[LGBTQ folks] are feeling for the first time in their lives living in the North Okanagan that ... there's change afoot here," said Janine Carscadden, who co-founded the Armstrong Pride Society last June.
The Armstrong and 100 Mile House parades have already come and gone, but Vanderhoof residents can bring their rainbow flags out on June 25.
It's been a long time coming — B.C.'s biggest city Vancouver held its first pride parade in 1978.
In Armstrong, Carscadden says she collected 400 signatures from neighbours who wanted to paint a rainbow sidewalk in the city centre last July, a proposal that was unanimously approved by city council three months later.
She says public support for the rainbow sidewalk, which was unveiled on the same day as the Pride festival, shows the North Okanagan community has become more tolerant.
She added that safe spaces like rainbow sidewalks are particularly important for young LGBTQ who grow up in rural areas and have challenges coming out to their families.
"We want to make sure that the young people know that they live in a community that not only accepts them, but celebrates them, loves them, respects them and wants them to shine and thrive," she said.
In some larger communities in the Interior, Pride events have been around for a while, but Kamloops Pride Society president Ashton O'Brien said safe spaces are still critically needed.
O'Brien says even though LGBTQ people in the city have become more visible and face less hate and violence than in past years, more could be done to make the city inclusive.
The Kamloops Pride Society is advocating for more sensitivity from local businesses and members have been dropping off a guidebook to local shop owners explaining pronouns and describing proper etiquette for checking IDs.
"Part of our job is not just to create [and] facilitate those safe spaces for the queer community, but also to try to encourage and empower businesses to facilitate those spaces as well," O'Brien said.
In Kelowna, Dustyn Baulkham created the event company Rebellious Unicorns, which organizes events at local bars and nightclubs tailored to the LGBTQ community.