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MAY 27- JUNE 5, 2022
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MAY 27 – JUNE 5 PRIDE
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RAISING OUR FLAG TO SUPPORT EQUITY, DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION ON OUR CAMPUSES
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MAY 27 – JUNE 5
AFTER TWO-YEAR HIATUS
BY TODD LEWYS
When the organizers of Pride Winnipeg were told that the second National Fierté Canada Pride Festival was going to be held in Winnipeg in May and June of 2020, they were ecstatic. Then, the COVID-19 pandemic put the festival on hold for two years. Now, with the National Fierté Canada Pride Festival officially on — it will be held from May 27 to June 5 — Pride Festival Winnipeg president Barry Karlenzig says
all systems are go for the 2022 event. “Everyone is super excited,” he says, noting that 2022 is also the 35th anniversary of the Pride Winnipeg Festival. “We’re going to have 150 to 200 volunteers helping us put on the event, along with our operating team of 46. It’s going to be the first outdoor festival in Canada since COVID, so there’s going to be a really good turnout.” Which is to say attendance numbers are
expected to be exceptionally high. “With a normal Pride Festival, about 35,000 to 40,000 people would come out — our highest number was 42,500 in 2019,” he says. “This year, we’re expecting 80,000 to 90,000 people to attend.” Not surprisingly — this being a national event — the festival’s footprint is also going to be larger than normal for two reasons: health concerns and the fact that people from across Canada will be
BARRY KARLENZIG, PRIDE WINNIPEG PRESIDENT Photo by Shandi Strong
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Happy Pride!
“We’re so excited to welcome everyone from across the country and internationally to Winnipeg this summer to join us in conversation and celebration. ” – Barry Karlenzig, Pride Winnipeg president
UZOMA ASAGWARA they/them MLA for Union Station uzoma.asagwara@yourmanitoba.ca
NELLO ALTOMARE he/him MLA for Transcona nello.altomare@yourmanitoba.ca
WAB KINEW he/him MLA for Fort Rouge wab.kinew@yourmanitoba.ca
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MATT WIEBE he/him MLA for Concordia matt.wiebe@yourmanitoba.ca
LISA NAYLOR she/her MLA for Wolseley lisa.naylor@yourmanitoba.ca
BERNADETTE SMITH she/her MLA for Point Douglas bernadette.smith@yourmanitoba.ca
and will feature 40 speakers. There will be a youth conference, a Purge Fund discussion featuring the unveiling of a new exhibit at the CMHR and a gala on Wednesday night at the Winnipeg Art Gallery.” Once Pride Week is kicked off at city hall at noon on May 27, Karlenzig and his team will set about doing two things over the following 10 days. “First, we want to strengthen ties with community allies,” he says. “Second, we want to showcase Winnipeg and show we can put on a party as good or better than big cities. On Thursday (June 2), we’re going to invite 300 delegates to see Winnipeg by going downtown to explore the city. Our goal is to put Winnipeg on the global map by making people want to come back to hold events.” There’s no question the festival is going to be a spectacular event, says Karlenzig. “Its impact is going to be huge. The Alt Hotel Winnipeg (the festival’s host hotel) and Inn at The Forks are already at 90 per cent capacity and the Radisson Hotel is filling up. In total, we expect over 700 room nights to be booked. We’re so excited to welcome everyone from across the country and internationally to Winnipeg this summer to join us in conversation and celebration.”
descending on Winnipeg to celebrate for the first time in two years. “COVID isn’t done with us yet, so we’re doing everything by the book with the feds, province and city,” Karlenzig says. “We’re going to use every inch of available space to spread things out more to make for a safer environment. The footprint will be larger, going from Izzy Asper Way to the Red River and from the Canadian Museum for Human Rights to the old railway bridge across the Assiniboine River.” All that extra space will be needed because additional venues are also going to be added, from new stages to a second beer garden, 27 to 30 food trucks (featuring cuisine from every province) and more. “The main stage will be sponsored by TD,” he says. “There will also be a kids’ stage, Canada Pride Stage, a Kids’ Zone, and an Indigenous 2 Spirit field (programmed by Two Spirited People of Manitoba) that will host two days of specialized programming that will celebrate traditional ceremony, dance and culture. We’re going to have artists from across Canada performing.” Not to be forgotten is the fact that an FCP Human Rights Conference will be hosted by Pride Winnipeg and Fierté Canada Pride from June 1 to 3. “It will be held at the Radisson Hotel
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MAY 27 – JUNE 5
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MAY 27 – JUNE 5 PRIDE
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THE RAISING OF THE PRIDE FLAG WAS A CELEBRATORY SCENE ON FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2019, ATTENDED BY MAYOR BRIAN BOWMAN AND MUHAMMAD AHSAN, THEN- PRESIDENT OF PRIDE WINNIPEG, ALONG WITH OTHER DIGNITARIES.
winnipeg hosts the 2nd National Fierté Canada Pride Festival
Photo by Mike Deal/Winnipeg Free Press
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2018 PRIDE PARADE. Photo by Trevor Hagan/Winnipeg Free Press
Pride Happy Manitoba
Pride season is upon us — and it’s in person again! That alone is something to celebrate. Winnipeg is the host to the 2nd National Fierté Canada Pride Festival. With so many varying events and the fact that this will be the biggest festival footprint ever, it’s a great idea to put a plan in place to make the most of all that Pride has to offer. The festivities include 45 milestone and community events, such as the flag raising and vigil. And festival organizers have arranged for more than 50 singers, dancers, comedians, drag queens and more set to celebrate Pride! Musicians are joining the party from all over Canada to provide some toe-tapping tunes for all to enjoy.
The general event lineup:
May 27, 2022 – Pride Week in Manitoba officially begins with the raising of the Pride flag at city hall. June 1-2 & 3, 2022 – Pride Winnipeg and Fierté Canada Pride (FCP) will host the FCP Human Rights Conference at the Radisson Hotel Downtown. The conference will focus on five key themes to assess human rights concerns and consider what steps to take to create a better future. Keynote speakers are Kael McKenzie, Canada’s first openly transgender judge appointed to the Provincial Court of Manitoba, and Svend
Robinson, Canada’s first openly gay member of Parliament. June 3, 2022 - The Rainbow Resource Centre will offer youth programs. June 4 & 5, 2022 – The Fierté Canada Pride Festival will take place at The Forks and Parks Canada grounds. June 5, 2022: Pride Rally & Parade – Beginning at the Manitoba legislature. The Pride Winnipeg rally will have exciting speakers address core messages of advocacy and encourage celebration. As for the parade —that will be just pure fun!
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KATIE SIMPSON; PHOTO BY DAVID COOPER
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Headliner Spotlight:
PRIYANKA!
As the winner of Canada’s Drag Race , she is ready to shine on the Festival’s Canada Stage. Priyanka has an extensive background in the arts. Canadians would have seen her performing, writing and producing on YTV shows such as SpongeBob SquarePants and Fairly Odd Parents . In 2018, she displayed further talent by moving into the drag scene, where
she won several crowns. After being named Toronto’s “Number One Drag Entertainer,” Priyanka graced the cover of Now Toronto . Sunday, June 5 from 5 to 6 p.m. at Canada Stage —Free
As the winner of the first season of Canada’s Drag Race, Priyanka is now touted as Canada’s First
Ever Drag Superstar.
House of Gold Diamonds Get ready to party with Winnipeg’s beloved party production and DJ duo, Mama Cutsworth and DJ J. Jackson. This dynamic duo has created events that play tribute to Whitney Houston, Madonna, the movie classic The Birdcage and even a “Mariah Carey-oke Night” — prepare to hit those notes! House of Gold Diamonds is known for their diva-style dance parties. Often surrounded by drag queens enjoying the party, House of Gold Diamonds is definitely one to put on the must- see list! Sunday, June 5 from 5:45 to 7:30 p.m. at Winnipeg Stage — Free
the della kit
True to her name, the della kit hopes to nourish, soothe and empower her listeners. Hailing from the mountains of British Columbia, the della kit has toured all over the world and celebrates working with Mos Def, Miguel and more.
Her inspirations include Ella Fitzgerald, Joni Mitchell and India.Arie. No doubt, the della kit’s music will impress with stories of healing and self-love. Sunday, June 5 from 2 to 2:45 p.m. at Canada Stage — Free
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Kilusan’s style features breaking, hip hop, house, vogue, waacking, dancehall
and afrobeat. Get ready to enjoy the unexpected.
JayWood: JayWood blends fantasy, personal
Jessee Havey and the Banana Band Winnipeg children’s music group Jessee Havey and the Banana Band are ready to entertain. Jessee Havey of folk fusion band The Duhks is a Grammy and Juno Award-winning songwriter. Joining Havey is Nathaniel Good on guitar, Grace Hrabi on ukulele, Ethan Osland on bass and Ian La Rue on drums. Get ready to see your kids hopping along with the music. Sunday, June 5 from 4:15 to 5 p.m. at Kids Zone — Free
Kilusan Pride Winnipeg describes Maribeth Manalaysay Tabanera,
SoulBear After touring the world with bands for 20 years, SoulBear is now producing his own music. SoulBear’s personal story as a family man and a gay man — with a troubled past and hopeful future — is reflected in his themes, along with messages related to diversity, social change and equality. Sunday, June 5 from 1:15 to 2 p.m. at Winnipeg Stage — Free
experience, pop and dance instrumentals to share his journey in a musical self-portrait called Slingshot. After the loss of his mother, Jeremy Haywood-Smith channeled his energy into his recent LP, which helped him inspect pivotal aspects of his journey as a Black person living in the primarily white province of Manitoba. This journey allowed him to reconnect with his roots. Sunday, June 5 from 4:15 to 5 p.m. at Winnipeg Stage — Free
a.k.a. Kilusan, as “a Tagalog Visayan filipinx queer non-binary multi-hyphenate educator, artist and community organizer on Treaty No. 1 Territory (Winnipeg).” Kilsusan has DJed with Queer People of Colour Winnipeg, Synonym Art Consultation, DJ Bles-sed (Montreal), DJ Maseo at Bastid’s BBQ 2019, Kay Gee and Vin Rock of Naughty By Nature, and Skratch Bastid (Toronto) for Boogie'N'Brunch. Saturday, June 4 from 6 to 7 p.m. at Winnipeg Stage — Free
Photo suppied by Manitoba Music
Plan your PRIDE
Amenities and zones:
FCP Canada Village: Canada Stage, Beer Gardens, Taste of Canada food vendors, booths hosting Prides from across the country, sponsors and PrideMART. Location: North field of Parks Canada Winnipeg Festival Field: Winnipeg Stage, Beer Gardens and Substance-Free Zone,
Kids Zone will have children’s entertainment and snack vendors. Location: Main area of Forks grounds Indigenous 2 Spirit Field: Home to the largest dedicated Indigenous festival grounds in Pride Winnipeg history. Celebrate traditional ceremony, dance and culture over two days. Location: Behind Johnston Terminal
With more than 50 performers and 45 events, planning is the perfect way to enjoy the festival and help you to catch all your favourite performers. Pride Winnipeg’s website and mobile app have a ton of information that’s easily accessible for you to prepare to celebrate! Events, performers and community events can be sourced by date, time, location, style, 18+ and even free options to create your perfect Pride plan. Either log in to their Facebook site to set your choices into a schedule that you can keep on hand or use their mobile phone app. Learn more at Programming & Artists - Pride Winnipeg or download the Pride Winnipeg mobile app on your phone.
food vendors, sponsors and community partners. Location: Main area of Forks grounds
The Accessible festival
There are ASL services at all events, including the Rally and Festival stage performances. The Main Stage has a family- friendly section with front-of- stage access and more space (also equipped with tables).
The beverage tent and Liquor Mart patio have accessible entrances and accessible bars. The information tent is available to receive volunteer support, use the adult change table or ask questions.
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stories of inclusion ACTOR, PLAYWRIGHT STAUNCH ADVOCATE FOR TRANS REPRESENTATION ON STAGE
LIAM ZARRILLO Photo by Darcy Finley
HAPPY PRIDE The WCB is committed to diversity and inclusion in the workplace today and every day.
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MAY 27 – JUNE 5
Jim Carr, MP Winnipeg South Centre
Terry Duguid, MP Winnipeg South
Dan Vandal, MP Saint-Boniface - Saint-Vital
Kevin Lamoureux, MP Winnipeg North
Volare isn’t the only high-profile stage production Zarrillo is currently involved in. They’ve been cast as the lead in fellow Winnipeg playwright Daniel Thau-Eleff’s Narrow Bridge that will be staged by Winnipeg Jewish Theatre in early 2023. They play a character named Sholem who comes out as transgender and then as an Orthodox Jew and the story chronicles the parallel journeys they embark upon. Zarrillo first became involved in the production four years ago when they were asked by Thau-Eleff to serve as a story consultant to ensure the authenticity of the character Sholem. They subsequently began to read as an actor during the workshop development process before being cast in the role of Sholem. Zarrillo said they were honoured to be asked to bring their perspective to the production. “This process of cultural and experiential consultation really adds a richness and a robustness to characters so that all walks of life are present in the stories that we are seeing, but also that the telling of those characters and the creation of those characters is done correctly,” they added. While it might sound like Zarrillo’s plate is already pretty full, you don’t know the half of it. Zarrillo is a full-time Grade 7 teacher at Seven Oaks Middle School in the Seven Oaks School Division. In addition to assisting with the school’s musical theatre production, they are one of three teachers who help to co-ordinate the school’s student-led Gender Sexuality Alliance club where students can talk, learn about and educate others on sexual orientation and gender identity. Zarrillo also conducts workshops for the school’s population on topics such as pronouns and gender diversity. Zarrillo is also open with students about being transgender. They hope that by sharing their own experiences as a trans person, it will be easier for students who may be dealing with their own orientation or identity challenges.
BY JIM TIMLICK As an actor, Liam
Zarrillo enjoys stepping onto the stage but has always felt as though something was missing when the curtain rose. Zarrillo, who identifies as transgender, couldn’t help but notice a lack of trans representation in most theatre productions staged here in Winnipeg and other parts of the country. After talking with friends and colleagues, the actor soon realized that one of the few ways they could change that was to start developing their own stories. “The push to start developing my craft as a playwright came largely from a lack of trans representation in theatre in this city and elsewhere. I realized, and heard from a lot of other folks, that’s it’s going to take writing the plays to actually see that (change) happen on stage,” Zarrillo said. “I’m really passionate about the demystification of the queer experience. While it’s partly about writing stories that are going to touch on trans and gender-related issues to a point, it’s also just writing stories that have queer and trans characters but have nothing to do with being a trans issue-based play.” It was that desire to promote better representation of transgender people on stage that inspired Zarrillo to write Volare , which will make its world premiere at Prairie Theatre Exchange next spring. It tells the story of three characters who come together following the passing of the patriarch of their family to pack up his belongings while unpacking their own complicated shared history. “There is a character in the play who is trans. But the play does not explicitly grapple with his orientation and it’s not a coming out story. It’s basically just three folks packing up a family home and the inherent complexity that comes with that,” they said.
Happy Pride Winnipeg! Bonne Fierté Winnipeg!
HAPPY
MAY 27 – JUNE 5 PRIDE
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pride on the prairies
Today’s queer community owes a debt of gratitude to our queer ancestors.
When commenting about the book Out North , Canadian comedian Rick Mercer described societal progress made in Canada. “They were loud and proud. They risked it all and they changed the world,” he said. “Every right and privilege we enjoy as members of the 2SLGBTQ+ community we
owe entirely to those who fought before us. We stand on the shoulders of giants.” While many of the battles for queer equality took place in Canada’s largest cities, Manitoba’s queer community punched above our weight in fighting for equality.
BY GREG KLASSEN
1972
1973
‘30s & ‘40s
‘50s to ‘70s
During the 1930s and ‘40s, while some drag queens rode the streetcars proudly, most of Winnipeg’s queer community lived their lives underground.
The 1950s saw more lesbians in the public eye, and by the late 1960s, gay men and lesbians were increasingly going more public, creating gay bars and oth- er organizations to advocate for
Founded in 1972, Gays for Equality (GFE) was a local organization committed to radical and public gay liberation. Offering a phone line, peer counselling, support groups and information on gay political organizing, GFE was instrumental in helping many gay people to come out. Chris Vogel, who was involved with the organization, says, “The phone would ring and ring. It never stopped.”
In 1973, Chris Vogel and Richard North applied for a marriage licence, and they got married in a Unitarian church on Feb. 11, 1974. However, the Manitoba government wouldn’t register their marriage. Vogel and North took the provincial
their rights. In the mid 1970s, gay socials were springing up. When
But after the Second World War, Winnipeg flourished.
government to court over the matter, but the court ruled that
they need- ed permits, organizers
the terms of common law defined marriage as the union of one man and one woman.
often lied and said they were engagement parties.
FIGHTING FOR 2SLGBTQQIA+ HUMAN RIGHTS! FIGHTING FOR 2SLGBTQQIA+ HUMAN RIGHTS!
PRIDE HAPPY
NIKI ASHTON Member of Parliament Churchill–Keewatinook Aski 1-866-669-7770 niki.ashton@parl.gc.ca NIKI ASHTON Member of Parliament Churchill–Keewatinook Aski 1-866-669-7770 niki.ashton@parl.gc.ca
LEAH GAZAN Member of Parliament Winnipeg Centre 204-984-1675 Leah.Gazan@parl.gc.ca LEAH GAZAN Member of Parliament Winnipeg Centre 204-984-1675 Leah.Gazan@parl.gc.ca
DANIEL BLAIKIE Member of Parliament Elmwood–Transcona 204-984-2499 Daniel.Blaikie@parl.gc.ca DANIEL BLAIKIE Member of Parliament Elmwood–Transcona 204-984-2499 Daniel.Blaikie@parl.gc.ca
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MAY 27 – JUNE 5
1987
1990
1994
1998
1999 to today
2024
Sexual orientation was added to the Manitoba Human Rights Code in 1987, and same- sex marriage was legalized in Manitoba in 2004.
In 1990 at an international gathering of Indigenous gay and lesbian people, Elder Myra Laramee shared the term Two-Spirit, which has been widely adopted since then.
A queer tabloid called Swerve launched in November 1994, later changing its name to OutWords and finally suspending publication in 2016.
In 1998, Glen Murray was elected mayor of Winnipeg, becoming the first openly gay mayor of a large North American city.
In 1999, Jim Rondeau became Manitoba’s first openly gay MLA. In 2007, Jennifer Howard became Manitoba’s first publicly identified lesbian member of Parliament. In 2019, Uzoma Asagwara became the first gender non- conforming MLA.
In 2024, an exhibit is expected to open at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights focused on the LGBT Purge, which involved systemic discrimination within workplaces in the Canadian military, RCMP and federal civil service.
PHOTO OF GLEN MURRAY BY TREVOR HAGAN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
TDS supports Pride Winnipeg! We are committed to improving and emphasizing equity, diversity and inclusion in our workplace environment. These initiatives are championed by our Equity and Accountability Council made up of allies and members of the LGBTQIA2S+ community.
MAY 27 – JUNE 5 PRIDE
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REFLECTIONS ON PRIDE FROM CMHR CEO ISHA KHAN DOING BETTER IS A PRACTICE, NOT A CHECKLIST
tours were allowed to exclude content about 2SLGBTQ+ rights. Some staff also shared their experiences of racism and discrimination. That this was allowed to happen goes against the core principles of human rights and our values as a museum. Moving forward, we will remain focused on our responsibility to acknowledge the harm that was caused, to challenge bias and systemic barriers and to do better. We’re taking steps to spark change. We’ve made all our washrooms gender inclusive and held mandatory anti-racism and anti-oppression training for all staff and volunteers. We’ve launched a series of education sessions for staff about inherent bias and established a staff-led Rainbow Equity Council to advise us moving forward. Our executive and leadership teams include 2SLGBTQ+ members, and their guidance shapes how we do things in so many ways. We’re also working to launch an exhibition that shares the story of the LGBT Purge, which took place from the 1950s to the 1990s. It’s a story all Canadians need to know and one we’re honoured to share in partnership with the LGBT Purge Fund, guided by an advisory council of survivors, experts and Elders. (You can find events about the Purge happening this year during Pride, and I hope to see you there.) This is change from within that impacts us all. It’s a starting place, but not a destination. We know that doing better is a practice, not a checklist. The same is true for building a more inclusive Canada. We cannot be content with the world as it is, and the legal protections that are now in place. All Canadians – particularly those who do not identify as 2SLGBTQ+ – must be invested with every fibre of our beings in realizing the world as it should be. And we can’t stop unless equality is more than an idea, but a reality that is lived out by people of all sexual orientations and gender identities around the world. Find out more at humanrights.ca
It’s been 53 years since being gay was decriminalized in Canada. 29 years since 2SLGBTQ+ service members could serve openly in the military. 27 years since the Supreme Court of Canada recognized sexual orientation as a protected ground under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. 16 years since all Canadians have been allowed to marry whomever they like. Five years since transgender Canadians were recognized under human rights laws. Behind each of these victories are champions for human rights who sacrificed everything for their rights and ours. But do you think the fight is over? In 2019, hate crimes against 2SLGBTQ+ Canadians increased 41% from the previous year. Community members are twice as likely to experience homelessness or housing insecurity, far more likely to experience harassment, violence and mental health challenges. This is why I celebrate Pride: it’s both an opportunity to lift up those who have changed our world for the better and those who continue the fight for equality. As you read this, a growing number of states in the USA are restricting safe access to washrooms for trans and non-binary people. In Florida, “don’t say gay” laws make it illegal for some teachers to educate their students about sexual orientation and gender identity. In places like Russia and Zimbabwe, governments spread homophobia, transphobia and biphobia and persecute 2SLGBTQ+ people. And in dozens of countries around the world, 2SLGBTQ+ people face criminal prosecution. Human rights are universal and indivisible. We have a responsibility to challenge all forms of discrimination, everywhere it exists. And it’s clear we have work to do. For me, that work starts close to home. In 2020, the Canadian Museum for Human Rights was called to account for its own failures. From 2015 to 2017, school
CMHR CEO, ISHA KHAN Supplied photo
| 15 PRIDE
MAY 27 – JUNE 5
Greg Evans 204.992.3242 Lori Ainemer 204.992.3247 James Pullar 204.992.3244 Richard Pollock 204.992.3246 Kelly Riediger 204.992.3249 Alyssa Bird 204.306.9139 Kathleen McLean 204.560.4379
• Collaborative Family Law • Negotiated Settlements
• Assisted Reproduction Agreements • Spousal and Cohabition Agreements • Mediated Agreement
Happy Pride, Winnipeg!
Dougald Lamont MLA St. Boniface
Cindy Lamoureux MLA Tyndall Park
Jon Gerrard MLA River Heights
ST VITAL 1 - 827 Dakota St Winnipeg KIRKFIELD 3321 Portage Ave Winnipeg ST. JAMES 1 - 1719 Portage Ave Winnipeg
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MANITOBA LIBERALS
manitoba.liberals@leg.gov.mb.ca
These are core values to us, values that guide everything we do, helping us bring positive impact to our members, our communities and the environment. We’re proud to support the LGBTQ2S+ community, and we remain committed to promoting diversity in our company and in our community. We celebrate with you! JoinACU.ca Diversity and inclusion are as important to us as they are to you.
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