Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Edmonton Man Who Got Homophobic Valentine At Work Gets New Card Signed By Justin Trudeau

The Canadian Press, 13 Mar, 2016 12:33 PM
    ST. ALBERT, Alta. — An Alberta man who got a Valentine at work defaced with a homophobic slur has received a much nicer card signed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
     
    The card, which Degas Sikorski received on Saturday, contains messages of support from the prime minister as well as cabinet ministers and MPs.
     
    "Know that your friends outnumber the haters by millions, and I am one of your friends," Trudeau wrote in the card, which was delivered to Sikorski by Edmonton Centre MP Randy Boissonnault.
     
    A photo of the Valentine that Sikorski, 20, of St. Albert received last month at a party supplies store in Edmonton caused an online furor after his mother posted it to Facebook and explained what happened.
     
    She said a supervisor at the Party City store made Valentines for all the staff, but when her son picked his up, it had a hate message on it.
     
     
    The company said after the incident that it would investigate the matter.
     
    Sikorski said the card from Trudeau and other MPs also contained photos of the prime minister signing it.
     
    "It was a beautiful card," Sikorski said. "There were so many pictures and so many people wanted to sign it, they had to add extra pages."
     
    "Canada went from being this big, wide-open country to feeling like Ottawa and Ontario were right next to Alberta."
     
    Sikorski said he has quit Party City. He's since accepted a job from Starbucks that was offered by a manager who reached out to him on Facebook after hearing his story.
     
    He said he's dropped his plan of pursuing a police investigation, not wishing the person who defaced his Valentine to suffer a criminal record.
     
    "Whoever did it knows it was wrong," Sikorski said.
     
     
    Sikorski said he's still pursuing a human rights investigation against his former employer.
     
    The company issued a statement at the time saying it did not condone what happened and was committed to creating a fair and inclusive work environment.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Culling Of Fawns In Cranbrook, B.C., Infuriates Deer Protection Society

    Culling Of Fawns In Cranbrook, B.C., Infuriates Deer Protection Society
    The B.C. Deer Protection Society is furious about what it says is a cull of deer, conducted without any notification, in southeastern B.C., near Cranbrook.

    Culling Of Fawns In Cranbrook, B.C., Infuriates Deer Protection Society

    Holiday Sales Rose 3 Per Cent Below 3.7 Per Cent Forecast

    Holiday Sales Rose 3 Per Cent Below 3.7 Per Cent Forecast
    Holiday shoppers flocked online during the critical holiday shopping season, but overall sales in November and December were disappointing.

    Holiday Sales Rose 3 Per Cent Below 3.7 Per Cent Forecast

    Man Steals $1,528 Worth Of Chewing Gum; Police Say They've Exhausted All Leads

    Man Steals $1,528 Worth Of Chewing Gum; Police Say They've Exhausted All Leads
    York Regional Police say a man stole more than $1,500 worth of gum from a pharmacy in Markham, Ont., and they're hoping the public can help them identify the culprit.

    Man Steals $1,528 Worth Of Chewing Gum; Police Say They've Exhausted All Leads

    Scientists Agree Fracking Can Cause Earthquakes, But How Is Still A Mystery

    A record-breaking earthquake this week in the middle of an Alberta oilfield heavily subject to hydraulic fracking is one of a growing number of such events across the continent, scientists say.

    Scientists Agree Fracking Can Cause Earthquakes, But How Is Still A Mystery

    OPP Officer Dies While On Duty In Orillia, Ont.; Foul Play Not Suspected

    OPP Officer Dies While On Duty In Orillia, Ont.; Foul Play Not Suspected
    ORILLIA, Ont. — Ontario Provincial Police say a member of the force has died while on duty.

    OPP Officer Dies While On Duty In Orillia, Ont.; Foul Play Not Suspected

    A Rarity In A U.S. Presidential Debate: Candidate Defends His Canadian Birth

    A Rarity In A U.S. Presidential Debate: Candidate Defends His Canadian Birth
    Thursday night's debate was a shift from the relative civility between the billionaire and the senator in the days leading up to the Feb. 1 Iowa caucuses.

    A Rarity In A U.S. Presidential Debate: Candidate Defends His Canadian Birth