Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hockey Player Who Pushed Ontario On Transgender Inclusion Hopes For More

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Sep, 2016 12:33 PM
    Jesse Thompson wanted transgender inclusive policies for hockey dressing rooms to be implemented sooner and for them to be Canada-wide, but says an important first step is happening in Ontario.
     
    The 19-year-old from Oshawa, Ont., got the ball rolling on transgender inclusion in 2013 when he filed a human rights complaint in Ontario against Hockey Canada.
     
    Ontario's minor hockey branches agreed in 2014 to change dressing room policies and to educate personnel on transgender inclusion.
     
    The new policy states that "players who identify as trans can use the dressing room corresponding to their gender identity, be addressed by their preferred name and pronoun, and have the privacy and confidentiality of their transgender status respected.''
     
    Full implementation is going to effect this 2016-17 season. 
     
    "I'm very happy about it," Thompson told The Canadian Press on Thursday. "It took a long time."
     
    Thompson felt being forced by a minor hockey league official to change in a separate dressing room during the 2012-13 season "outed" him and exposed him to harassment and bullying.
     
    "Sometimes I would get really bad anxiety before hockey because I didn't know what the convener was going to do or if someone was going to say something," he said.
     
    If the atmosphere didn't change, Thompson said he would have quit hockey.
     
     
    He shared a dressing room with his teammates in his final season of minor hockey in 2013-14 and said his gender was a non-issue.
     
    "I think the biggest problem was going to be the parents, not so much the kids," he said. "Hockey started becoming more fun for me again."
     
    Minor hockey branches outside of Ontario have yet to adopt transgender policies. The issue hasn't been tabled for discussion yet at Hockey Canada's annual general meetings, according to a spokeswoman.
     
    Thompson hopes minor hockey associations across Canada will take on transgender inclusivity before it goes to human rights tribunals or the courts.
     
    "Sports are what kids use to get away from things when they're stressed out," he explained. "Hockey is sometimes the only place you can escape your school, your parents, stuff like that.
     
    "I feel like adults are always saying kids need to have hobbies so we don't get into trouble, but then they're kind of taking it away from us because of how we are."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Police Close Investigation Into Death Of 19-Year-Old Soldier

    Ontario Police Close Investigation Into Death Of 19-Year-Old Soldier
    Police in Ontario say their investigation into the death of a 19-year-old soldier from Nova Scotia has concluded.

    Ontario Police Close Investigation Into Death Of 19-Year-Old Soldier

    B.C. Wildfire Costs Top $100 Million, But Still Less Than Half Of 2015 Expenditures

    B.C. Wildfire Costs Top $100 Million, But Still Less Than Half Of 2015 Expenditures
    Information officer Claire Allen of the BC Wildfire Service says that is less than half the amount spent in B.C. over the same period last year.

    B.C. Wildfire Costs Top $100 Million, But Still Less Than Half Of 2015 Expenditures

    Cause Of Earthquakes That Shook A New Brunswick Village For Months Is A Mystery

    Cause Of Earthquakes That Shook A New Brunswick Village For Months Is A Mystery
    Stephen Halchuk at Earthquakes Canada said the kind of earthquake swarm that began rumbling under the village of McAdam in February is unusual but not unheard of.

    Cause Of Earthquakes That Shook A New Brunswick Village For Months Is A Mystery

    Biggest Lottery Win In Saskatchewan: Woman Managed To Keep $60 Million A Secret

    Biggest Lottery Win In Saskatchewan: Woman Managed To Keep $60 Million A Secret
    Mary Wernicke of Neville says she had "a feeling" the day she learned she had won the Lotto Max $60-million jackpot of Aug. 12.

    Biggest Lottery Win In Saskatchewan: Woman Managed To Keep $60 Million A Secret

    Elusive Snake Finally Coaxed Out Of Drain Pipe Under Victoria Street

    Elusive Snake Finally Coaxed Out Of Drain Pipe Under Victoria Street
    VICTORIA — A reclusive reptile that has been living in a storm drain below the streets of Victoria now has a new home.

    Elusive Snake Finally Coaxed Out Of Drain Pipe Under Victoria Street

    'I Want Answers So Bad:' Manitoba First Nations Men Angry Over Birth Mix-up

    'I Want Answers So Bad:' Manitoba First Nations Men Angry Over Birth Mix-up
    "I want answers so bad," David Tait Jr. told a news conference Friday about what appears to be a second birth mix-up at the same federally run hospital during the mid-1970s.

    'I Want Answers So Bad:' Manitoba First Nations Men Angry Over Birth Mix-up