Category Archives: Library Strike

Pay equity issues in the media + writer Tom Sandborn coming to speak to Library Workers

Pay equity issues in the media + writer Tom Sandborn coming to speak to Library Workers

Ugh… it's back to the picket lines today… after my blissful little dragon boat racing and cultural visit to Victoria.  More about my visits to Emily Carr House, Craigdarroch Castle and Victoria Chinatown tomorrow…

Today, we have a visit from writer Tom Sandborn to come speak to library workers at Library Square.  I have met Tom on various occasions, and after last week's visit by author Terry Glavin, Tom was recommended by former Vancouver city councillor Fred Bass.

Yesterday, Tom wrote an article for The Tyee about the pay equity issues raised by CUPE 391, Vancouver library workers.  And today, the Vancouver Sun published a story about pay equity issues. Fancy that!  Finally… library issues are breaking past the concerns about garbage.

Vancouver's Library Strike: Women's Pay on the Line

Picketing librarians at VPL.

Men get nearly $6 more hourly for similar work, says union.


By Tom Sandborn

Published: August 20, 2007

http://thetyee.ca/News/2007/08/20/LibraryStrike/


Vancouver city librarians say a key reason they're still on the
picket line is a sexist divide in pay rates. Hourly pay for library
jobs filled mostly by women start at nearly $6 less than jobs of equal
value that happen to be filled by a majority of men, a study shows.

The 17.5 per cent raise over five years the city is now offering is only part of what the union is fighting for, they said.

Spokespeople for CUPE 391, the local that represents city
librarians, told The Tyee on Thursday night that they were encouraged
that their employer had agreed to meet for negotiations on Friday, Aug.
17, but were cautious about how much progress they could make. They
said that although the city's press release announcing the new
negotiations indicated a willingness “to negotiate wage adjustments as
a means of addressing wage issues raised by library staff,” to date the
city negotiators have refused to discuss any of the local's four key
bargaining demands: pay equity, improvements for part-time workers, job
security and general benefit improvements.

Three weeks into the strike, they say the city's latest offer falls
short of others already settled in the Lower Mainland, and includes a
proposal to add a new, low-wage job classification that would hire
workers at reduced wages to do work currently done by library
assistants.

“Pay equity is a human rights issue,” said Laura Safarian, a
librarian at VPL's downtown main branch, and a member of her local's
bargaining committee.

“Canada has signed on to international agreements that recognize the
human rights implications of gender bias in wages. This statement from
the city, awkward as it is, represents the first time we've seen any
recognition at all of the issue from the employer. We have made
significant compromises in our negotiations already, including a
reduction in the special wage adjustment we're asking for, for all
professional librarians,” Safarian added.

read more Vancouver's Library Strike: Women's Pay on the Line

Here is the Vancouver Sun article:

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=56f23425-f043-4857-8e2d-460edf3ab71e&k=30845

Strike could last months, city official says

City, union making no progress toward settlement, spokesman says

Jeff Lee,
Vancouver Sun

Published: Monday, August 20, 2007

Vancouver city officials say a simmering summer strike by three civic unions could last for months.
Saying
a new proposal from the union representing striking library workers “is
going in the wrong direction,” city spokesman Jerry Dobrovolny said the
public should brace for the strike, which began more than a month ago,
to continue much longer.
“Typical city strikes tend to be about six
to eight weeks,” he said. “While I can't speculate on how long this one
will now last, I can say that this one clearly isn't typical. I would
say it is going to be a long one.”
Dobrovolny's comments followed a  meeting Monday with The Vancouver Sun's editorial board.
During
the meeting, he accused the unions representing 6,000 striking inside,
outside and library workers of engaging in a “larger political agenda,”
a comment a union official later dismissed as “rubbish.”
 Dobrovolny
said the city offer essentially matches five-year contracts recently
signed with 10 other municipalities, apart from some specific issues
peculiar to each union.
Dobrovolny said no new talks are scheduled,
and the city has no idea how it is going to resolve the dispute, which
is actually three separate strikes, the longest of which is now in its
33rd day.
He said striking workers now appear to be trying to put
new demands on the table, something that “takes the two sides in
different directions.”
For example, he said, library workers made
significant new demands in a proposal opened by city negotiators on the
weekend, and a statement on the outside workers' website warns that
“the longer this strike goes on, our demands and costs to the employer
will go up.”
But the presidents of all three striking locals of the
Canadian Union of Public Employees said Monday afternoon they are not
making new demands and in fact are generally happy with the standard
set in the other five-year municipal agreements.
 Where they disagree is on issues that specifically affect their unions, they said.

Read more: Strike could last months, city official says

What are the real issues in the Vancouver Civic strike? The Georgia Straight finds a political spin between Vision Vancouver's Raymond Louie and the NPA's Suzanne Anton.

What are the real issues in the Vancouver Civic strike?
The Georgia Straight finds a political spin between Vision Vancouver's Raymond Louie and the NPA's Suzanne Anton.

The Georgia Straight has just printed an
interesting story about the Vancouver Civic strike, finding an NPA vs
Vision Vancouver angle.  Both city councillors Raymond Louie and
Suzanne Anton have attended and loved my Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish
McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinners.  And they are both
well-respected figures in the community.

Suzanne was one of the first politicians we called on for help with the Save Joy Kogawa House
campaign when she was a parks commissioner, as was Heather Deal.  I've known Raymond since
just before he was elected city councillor, and our family histories
were both included in the Three Early Chinese Canadian Pioneer Families exhibit at the Chinese Cultural Centre's Museum and Archives back in 2002.

By accident (or fortune) I bumped into Suzanne Anton last week, while
on picket duty at Library Square.  Suzanne was on her way to a meeting
at Library Square and recognized me, but she hadn't been aware that I
worked for the library.  We had a short friendly chat about some of the
issues regarding the strike.  At the city hall rally last week on
Friday I bumped into Vision Vancouver councillor George Chow, whom I
also know.  George was the only city councillor to come outside and
talk with city workers to find out their issues and feelings were.

Check out the Georgia Straight article below… then read my comments


Suzanne Anton: Vision using strike for political gain

http://www.straight.com/article-105744/suzanne-anton-vision-using-strike-for-political-gain

News Features By Carlito Pablo
Vision Vancouver’s Raymond Louie rejects Coun. Suzanne Anton’s claims, suggesting instead that Mayor Sam Sullivan’s inaction extended the strike.

Vision
Vancouver’s Raymond Louie rejects Coun. Suzanne Anton’s claims,
suggesting instead that Mayor Sam Sullivan’s inaction extended the
strike.

There's more to
Vancouver's civic strike than just the question of wages and benefits,
says a member of Mayor Sam Sullivan's Non-Partisan Association caucus.

As
far as NPA councillor Suzanne Anton is concerned, the job disruption is
being orchestrated by CUPE locals and the opposition party Vision
Vancouver as a disguised political action against Sullivan. “There's a
huge political agenda going on here,” Anton told the Straight. “It's
interesting that the non–NPA councillors seem to very closely related
to CUPE. They don't support management, they support CUPE, [and] they
certainly don't support the mayor at all. It appears to be suiting
their political agenda to have the strike continue.”

Prior
to the strike, Anton told the Straight that she is supporting the
mayor's bid for reelection in 2008. Anton said that the language being
used by locals of the Canadian Union of Public Employees and by Vision
Vancouver to describe the strike is a giveaway.

“It's
interesting that both [Vision councillors] Heather Deal and Raymond
Louie and CUPE like to call this 'Sam's strike',” Anton said. “Why are
they doing that? That's obviously 100 percent politics. That's not
about trying to get a good settlement for CUPE members. That's about
promoting a political agenda. Councillors Raymond Louie and Heather
Deal are on the same page politically as CUPE–and that is, they hope to
take shots at the mayor.”

An ex–union organizer, Louie has
often been touted as a future mayor by former mayor Larry Campbell.
When sought for comment about Anton's political reading of the strike,
Louie told the Straight that Sullivan has only himself to blame for the
labour mess. He said voters will decide if it's a “political hit”
against the mayor.

“But clearly voters are unhappy with the
strike and the mayor's inability to solve this,” Louie said. “The
inaction of the mayor to solve this is what is driving the displeasure.”

see more:  Suzanne Anton: Vision using strike for political gain

IMG_1658


Todd Wong plays accordion on the CUPE
391 picket line – sharing his talents and helping to make the strike
environment a more culturally stimulating and beautiful place.

But while the media spins intrigue about the hidden agendas and
the roles of the GVRD labour relations bureau, and the Wilcox Group…
shouldn't the real issues include that the workers want to get back to
work, and provide the service that city taxpayers want to receive???

CUPE 391 has NEVER been on strike before, not in our 77 year history!

The library strike is getting lost in the shuffle!!!  We are being
treated just as if we are the same as CUPE 15 and CUPE 1004.  We are
NOT!  We did not go on strike in 2000, and we have often worked without a contract while our union and employer bargained.

CUPE 391 made their opening offer in November 2006.  Why did it take 9
months later for “the employer” to make their opening offer, after CUPE
391 was already on the picket lines for 2 weeks?

Watch a video about Vancouver Library workers on DAY 15.  See me playing accordion!
http://jamesandannie.cyberflunk.com/portfolio/video13.html

We are creative, intellectual, literate, cultural, and dedicated to the community… why would we want to be on strike? 

Unless we knew it was in the best interests of our fellow workers, our public patrons, and the City of Vancouver…

A tremendous brain trust and community resource is being squandered. 
Community programs are not being presented.  Businesses can't access
information.  Academic researchers can't find their information. 
Children are cut off from summer reading programs.  Cultural groups and
sporting organizations can't access information or promote their
events.  Nobody wins.  Everybody loses.

When former city librarian Madge D'alto first came to the Vancouver
Public Library, she remarked what a wonderful resource and institution
that the Vancouver Public Library was.  And that if she was an invading
army, the first thing she would do would be to close down the
libraries, to cut off the access to information.  That is how important
libraries are.

We don't want a War Room as advertised on the Wilcox Group website… Library workers want peace.  We would rather the money spent on a PR firm be better spent on a mediator.

I am proud of the good work that I have done in the city libraries. Last year I received my 30 year service pin at the Vancouver Public Library,
and was also thanked by VPL board chair Joan Andersen for my community
work too.  She was wonderfully surprised to be able to present me with
my service pin, because she is more aware of the community and cultural work I have
done through my involvements with the CBC – both radio and television,
as I am often asked for interviews or for resources.  These are the kinds of workers we have at the library – resourceful, community-oriented and dedicated.


by
Todd
on Thu 27 Apr 2006 12:05 AM PDT

The Tyee: Endless Summer – a great in depth story about Vancouver's civic strike

The Tyee:  Endless Summer – a great in depth story about Vancouver's civic strike

Monte Paulsen has written a nice in depth story about Vancouver's civic strike.  He examines and compares each of the sides…  the City's, the Union's, the GVRD Labour Relations Bureau, and the role of the Wilcox Group – a PR firm.

Check it out:

http://thetyee.ca/News/2007/08/16/EndlessSummer/

Endless Summer (Strike)

Ten other cities have settled with civic workers. Why can't Vancouver?


By Monte Paulsen

Published: August 16, 2007

TheTyee.ca


The City of White Rock reached a tentative deal with its employees
on Wednesday, the tenth such agreement struck in the Lower Mainland in
recent weeks. But the City of Vancouver isn't even talking to the two
CUPE locals that represent most of its workers, and both sides are
warning that this summer's strike could continue well into September.

Each side has its own explanation as to why “Sam's Strike” will go
on. The union claims highly paid strike-breaking consultants have
guided employer strategy. City hall claims the union is out to deal
Mayor Sullivan a mortal blow.

But the divergent explanations do more to illustrate the chasm than to illuminate negotiations…..

Read the rest at  Endless Summer (Strike)

Also read: http://thetyee.ca/News/2007/07/27/Bottleneck/

'Bottleneck' Blamed for Strike

GVRD employers' rep overloaded, slow, says union.


By Tom Sandborn

Published: July 27, 2007
TheTyee.ca


As municipal strikes in B.C.'s Lower Mainland grind toward the end
of their first full week, questions are being raised about the role
played by a little known body of regional bureaucrats, the Greater
Vancouver Regional Labour Relations Bureau.

The bureau is an umbrella group for municipal employers that is
supposed to make labour bargaining more efficient. But the only
significant progress so far during July's escalating labour disputes
came in Richmond, a municipality that has opted out of the bureau.

Cities like Vancouver, still locked into what is portrayed by some
as a bottlenecked process, are not even back at the table negotiating…..

Read the rest at : 'Bottleneck' Blamed for Strike

Civic Strike: send a letter to Mayor Sam Sullivan and city council

Civic Strike: send a letter to Mayor Sam Sullivan and city council



The Vancouver civic strike is affecting many aspects of life in Vancouver.  From community centres, garbage pick-up, permits, parking, city business and of course libraries!

This is the first strike in our union's 77 year history!!!  In previous years, we have worked without a contract to ensure the smooth operation of library services.  But now.. the process is turned upside down.  The Library board is not in charge of negotiations. 

City Hall's human resources is directing it with the GVRD Labour Relations Council, with the aid of the Wilcox Group – a PR firm hired to handle labour disputes, crisis management as well as VANOC.  Why has the city hired a PR firm to create political spins on contract negotiations instead of hiring a mediator to find resolution.  Why hire a PR firm that advertises a “War Room” on their website, when we should be seeking “Peace”…. I thought that Vancouver's nick name was “City of Peace.”  Check out the information found by CUPE 15, released through a Freedom of Information application:
http://cupe.ca/news/Wilcox_Group_reveale

For information about the strike please check:
www.cupe391.ca/blog2/
www.fairnessforcivicworkers.ca

Main issues are pay equity, respect and bargaining fairly… not asking for more concessions!

Here is a letter that you can download, and send to Vancouver city council and your friends. It reads:

August, 2007
Vancouver City Council
Vancouver City Hall
453 West 12th Avenue
Vancouver, BC V5Y 1V4

Dear Mayor Sullivan and Council,

As someone who lives/works in Vancouver, I value the services provided by city outside, inside and library workers.
Our workers deserve much better than the treatment they've recently received. I am particularly upset by:

Please direct your staff to bargain in good faith with our city and library workers, and address the issues that they are bringing to the table. At the very least, our workers deserve:

Sincerely,
Name:
Address:

Community support for CUPE 391 Vancouver library workers from Author Terry Glavin and Dr. Fred Bass – former city councillor

Community support for CUPE 391 Vancouver Library workers from Author Terry Glavin and Dr. Fred Bass – former city councillor


Author Terry Glavin speaks about the important role library workers have in aiding authors for their research – photo Todd Wong

Renowned author, columnist, journalist and UBC faculty intructor –  Terry Glavin came by to give words of support to striking Vancouver Library workers.  Former city councillor Dr. Fred Bass also attended and gave words of support too!

Glavin says he probably spent a year of his life on the picket line, during 15 years of work including 3 strikes at Pacific Press when he was a writer for the Vancouver Sun.  His first union strike experience was 30 years ago for pay equity at the Daily Columbian newspaper where he discovered veteran female workers earning far less than brand new male workers.

Aliza wrote on the CUPE 391 blog:

Most interesting was his very first strike in the early eighties when
he and his colleagues at the “Columbian” went out in support of their
fellow female workers for pay equity! Twenty-five years have gone by
and here the members of 391 stand outside the doors of our libraries
fighting for the very same thing. It’s not right. In a civilized and
modern culture, gender discrimination should have no place.

Glavin is a self-admitting fan of Gung Haggis Fat Choy and wanted to interview me for a piece he is writing about diversity.  Earlier this year, he recommended me to a German Public television company ZDF TV, which is making a travelogue about multiculturalism in Vancouver.  It will be aired in Europe in December.  Hopefully we can have Terry as a featured Canadian writer of Irish-Celtic descent at a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinne in Victoria one day.

Read Terry's blog at http://transmontanus.blogspot.com/
or check out his new column in The Tyee :: Views :: thetyee.ca


Dr. Fred Bass came by give Todd Wong some support on the picket line
and listened to Terry Glavin speak – photo Peggy Watkins/Todd Wong
Collection

Dr. Fred Bass, former City Councillor also came by to say hello and give support to the striking Vancouver Library Workers.  By coincidence, Bass' daughter Jennifer works for the library too – we've worked beside and known each other for years…  Fred even had some words to say how Mayor Sam Sullivan likes to operate in city council. 

Even Doug Perry, perennial provincial and federal Green Party candidate for Vancouver Fraserview and Vancouver South, asked to address the crowd to give words of support.


Dr. Fred Bass, former Vancouver City councillor talks with Vancouver library workers on the strike line – photo Todd Wong

In the morning, our union executive came by with Jim Gorman.
Aliza wrote on the CUPE 391 blog

Jim gave the crowd a quick overview of the
five days we spent last week in bargaining and then he and the members
of the committee answered some questions.

 The one of everyone’s mind was probably “how long can this go on?”
The City of Vancouver spokesman was quoted as saying six to eight
weeks. A frightening thought, but I can assure you that the bargaining
committee will do everything it can to end it sooner. If it should last
that long, it is because that is how the city wants it. Regardless, the
members of CUPE 391 will stand strong together.

In the afternoon… Vancouver Library workers moved en masse to Georgia Street to wave to cars drawing supportive honks from many rush hour commuters.  A City TV camera crew captured the scene and told me that it was great action to film and witnessing the interaction between the striking workers and the general public.  The mood was positive and lots of cars, buses and trucks honked their horns receiving uplifted cheers from the library workers.



CUPE 391 Vancouver City Library workers wave to cars in the Tuesday afternoon rush hour – photo Todd Wong


Other strike issues can be found on
www.fairnessforcivicworkers.ca

My library friends on the picket line

My library friends on the picket line

The biggest plus about being on the picket line is having lots of time to socialize and chat with my fellow co-workers.  Usually I am always so busy answering questions or helping patrons with their books, or even shelving books onto the shelves that sometimes we don't get a chance to talk and catch up with each other.


Ross Bliss' gypsy jazz guitar and Todd Wong's classical accordion meet for cultural fusion – photo T.Wong collection

I have known Ross Bliss for a few years… usually we pass at Central Branch, in between organzing programs.  Ross has created the Jazz 101 series and also plays gypsy jazz guitar in the style of Django Reinhardt…  okay maybe not that incredible… but incredible for us non-guitar players.  Ross often plays at the Kino Cafe in Vancouver on Cambie St.  It was great to try some duets with Ross – even though he improvises gypsy jazz and I sight read classical.  We worked out some nice stuff on O Sole Mio, Avalon and Carnaval of Venice.


Lily Gee, longtime Vancouver city library worker – photo Todd Wong

Last week Lily Gee asked me to sign her autograph book celebrating her 35 years of service at the Vancouver Public Library.  I first met Lily when I was a teenager and worked on Sundays in the Stacks department at the Central Library.  Our paths have often crossed, and it is always with a smile.  Lily is great to work with!

Diana Keng and Tasha are fellow CUPE 391 picketers – photo Todd Wong

I have worked with Diana at at many branches over the years.  She really enjoys travelling and always shows me her latest travel pictures.  She is one of the first facebook users I know, and started up the VPL facebookers group.  I have only met Tasha a few times at Kitsilano library, and have enjoyed her company and conversation.  Both of these fellow co-workers are great people, and they are constructively using the picket time to knit caps that are being sold to help needy people at the Carnegie Centre.

CUPE 391: Vancouver Library workers still on strike

CUPE 391: Vancouver Library workers still on strike


Todd Wong is thanked by Donald Law – photo Sam King

Yesterday I met Donald Law while I was playing my accordion on the picket line.  Donald came up to me and asked “Are you Todd Wong?”

He said I had been instrumental in helping direct him to the information to help his family apply for the Chinese Head Tax ex-gratia payments.  I had directed Donald to the history division which holds a micro-fiche collection of Chinese head tax registrations, of which the Vancouver Public Library is one of the few institutions in Canada to have.

It’s people like Donald who understand how important having access to information is, and how the information that we provide helps their lives, that make working at the library so satisfying.  We are proud of the jobs that we do at the library.  I have worked for VPL for over thirty years… I love it.

Meanwhile…

We are disappointed with the labour negotiations for the library.  Our union has told us that the library board finally presented us with their “opening offer” – 9 months after CUPE 391 submitted an offer back in Nov. ’06.  In all the months since, they kept saying make something “more reasonable” without constructive guidelines.

from www.cupe391.ca

Back on the Line with 391

Bargaining Committee wrote this in the late afternoon:

Today, the Bargaining Committee returned to the picket lines frustrated,
exhausted, but more resolved than ever to get a fair settlement. We are
extremely angry and frankly a bit horrified that the Employer and City
of Vancouver thinks that it is perfectly fine to waste thousands of tax
payers’ dollars on hotel rooms and countless hours of our time waiting
to finally start meaningful negotiations while our members are stuck on
the picket line and the public is unable to access library and city
services.

Needless to say, after our return we were met with the most amazing
show of support yet for both our bargaining team and our key issues.
Everyone has been so amazing and we cannot thank you enough for the
warm welcome home and the incredible show support. As long as you are
behind us willing to fight for what is right, we will always be able to
find the strength to carry on.

Later today, we joined hundreds of members from CUPE 15, 391, 1004,
the HEU, and the Vancouver Fight Fighters Union, Local 18 at a rally at
City Hall to show our support and let everyone know that we want a fair
collective agreement.

With so much solidarity out there from our members, other unions,
and the public it is unfathomable why the City is still continuing to
behave in such a non-constructive manner. Around the region
municipalities and unions are reaching fair agreements:

Richmond contract – ratified July 26
Delta contract – ratified August 1
Burnaby contact – ratified August 2
North Van contract – ratified August 4
Surrey contract – ratified August 7

So, what is the problem with our Employer and the City of Vancouver?
And where exactly does City Council and our Library Board stand on
getting a fair settlement?

The only thing that has been made clear to us is that the Employer
and the City have no interest in negotiating a fair collective
agreement at this time.

So, if we are to get a fair settlement any time soon we must more
than ever continue to be strong and encourage the public to contact
City Council to demand that a fair deal be reached immediately with all
civic workers.

When the City of Vancouver and Vancouver Public Library Board are
prepared to seriously address our issues, then CUPE 391 is prepared to
bargain anytime.

Early next week the Bargaining Committee with be meeting to
strategize the next steps. In the meantime, stay strong and check the
blog for more information.

Again you are heart, soul, and will behind us. Thank you for doing the right thing.

– Your Bargaining Committee

Toddish McWong in Vancouver's Pride Parade

Toddish McWong in Vancouver's Pride Parade



Toddish McWong finds a fellow kilt wearer at the Vancouver Pride Parade – photo E. Harris/T. Wong collection


I had never ever before attended Vancouver's Pride Parade, let alone actually be in the parade. 

But I admit… I'd thought about it before. 

Each year Vancouver Library Workers union CUPE 391 participates in the Pride parade.  This year, I thought it would be good to go out and join fellow co-workers – especially during the strike.

While I am straight… I have supported Gay-Lesbian issues on a number of community fronts, especially in my past  roles with student newspapers, when I once was a regional human rights coordinator for Western Region, Canadian University Press.



CUPE 391 Pride parade participants… Janis (front), Ross, Catherine, Todd and Electra – photo T. Wong collection

It was good fun walking with fellow Vancouver library workers, some I have known for years and years, and some whom I met brand new.  One librarian had only worked four shifts with VPL, before we went on strike, and yet she still came out to join the CUPE 391 delegation for the Pride Parade.

We met on Robson Street, with other CUPE locals and other unions.  Our parade number was 31, just behind the official City of Vancouver delegation with the mayor and other city councillors at number 27.



CUPE 391: Ross with cowboy hat, Janis with child in stroller, Electra with tutu, Sophie with hand bag – photo T. Wong

While past library participants had created the now legendary “book buggy brigade” in which they took book trucks and wheeled them in formations similar to the RCMP musical ride… we simply walked along with the group flow.  Ross danced along waving the CUPE BC flag.  Electra held out bubbles for children to blow.  It was a parade.  It was a happy time.  And it was good to be able to participate.

Afterwards, somebody asked me if I was afraid that people who saw me in the parade might think that I was gay.  I said I wasn't.  The parade is about celebrating diversity… well more sexual diversity rather than ethnic or cultural diversity.  But is still about diversity, human rights and respect. 



Pride parade '07… Does this guy think he is supposed to be Chinese? He isn't short enough! photo T. Wong

Maybe next year will see an official Gung Haggis Fat Choy parade entry.  I have put a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat float in the first three years of Vancouver's St. Patrick's parade, since the Celtic Fest Vancouver people originally asked me to be involved as a way of helping the parade be multicultural.  Hmmm… a dragon boat float in the Pride parade?  Since 1997, I have coached gay paddlers and lesbian paddlers on my teams.  Do you think Vancouver is ready to handle a parade entry full of “Dragon Boat Queens?”



Toddish McWong carrying a CUPE flag in the Pride Parade – photo E. Harris for T.Wong collection


see my Pride pictures at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/53803790@N00/sets/72157601262211104/