Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Transgender Community, NDP Urge Trudeau Government To Change Travel Regulations

The Canadian Press, 18 May, 2017 10:11 AM
    OTTAWA — Jennifer McCreath has a fear of flying of a different sort: a fear she won't be allowed on board.
     
    McCreath, a 43-year-old transgender woman in St. John's, N.L., takes issue with a federal regulation that prohibits airlines from transporting anyone who "does not appear to be of the gender indicated on the identification presented."
     
    Doing away with the regulation is a cause the federal NDP has been pushing for five years, and one for which Justin Trudeau expressed support before becoming prime minister.
     
    It's also one the federal Liberal government should be all over, given its self-proclaimed reputation as the party of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, McCreath said in an interview Wednesday.
     
    "It all comes back to the notion of equality," said McCreath, who described having to wait for two hours in a holding area before a flight to the United States in 2011, when she was in the process of changing the gender on her birth certificate.
     
    The Canadian regulation, she said, gives officials too much power in cases where someone doesn't look like the gender indicated on their identification.
     
    "Ultimately, access to air travel or any type of transportation is ... a fundamental service that's out there. It just sends the wrong message."
     
    Trudeau's cabinet has the ability to change the regulation immediately, said Randall Garrison, the NDP's critic for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer issues.
     
    The regulation has nothing to do with safety and does little more than subject transgender Canadians to public humiliation and obstructs their fundamental right to travel, Garrison said.
     
    He noted Trudeau himself raised the issue both in the House of Commons and on Twitter in 2012, when he was an opposition MP.
     
    "If he supported removing this discriminatory regulation then," Garrison asked during question period Wednesday, "why as prime minister has he taken absolutely no action?"
     
     
    The question came one day after Transport Minister Marc Garneau introduced a new passenger bill of rights, a response of sorts to last month's sensational viral video showing airline security forcibly dragging a passenger off a United Airlines jet.
     
    The Liberal government is looking at the transgender issue, Garneau responded.
     
    "We will have more to say in due course."
     
    Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale's office went further in a statement on Wednesday night, noting all passengers — regardless of their gender identity or expression — are expected to have a travel document that is valid and up to date.
     
    "This includes ensuring that they accurately resemble their identification documents," the office said.
     
    Earlier Wednesday, transgender Canadians were on Parliament Hill to push for the passage of the government's Bill C-16, a ban on discrimination on the basis of gender identity or gender expression.
     
    If passed, the legislation would make it illegal to deny someone a job or to discriminate against them in the workplace on the basis of their gender identity or how they outwardly express it.
     
    It would also amend the Criminal Code to extend hate speech laws.
     
    Fae Johnstone, a 21-year-old social work student at Carleton University who helped to organize Wednesday's rally, sees the current travel regulation as "oppressive" and "transphobic."
     
    "I don't look like the gender marker that is on my identification," said Johnstone, who identifies as neither a man nor a woman.
     
    "I don't think it is very fair that if I tried to travel that because I'm trans, because I present differently than they expect me to, that they wouldn't let me travel."
     
    The Liberal government also says it is working to address gender identity on passports — an issue already tackled in countries like Australia and New Zealand.
     
    "That work is continuing," Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould told the Senate legal affairs committee earlier this month.
     
    For her part, McCreath said she hasn't been back to the United States since 2011, a trip she used to take at least once a year.
     
    "It left a very bad and sad taste in my mouth," she said.
     
    "I learned very quickly that just because I'd had ... (sex-reassignment) surgery didn't necessarily mean I was going to find full acceptance in the world as a woman."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Search Suspended For Fire Chief Missing From Cache Creek, B.C.

    Search Suspended For Fire Chief Missing From Cache Creek, B.C.
    ASHCROFT, B.C. — Police say the search has been suspended for a fire chief believed to have been swept away by high flood waters in British Columbia's interior.

    Search Suspended For Fire Chief Missing From Cache Creek, B.C.

    Ontario's Sikh Politician Jagmeet Singh To Shake Up Federal NDP Leadership Race

    Ontario's Sikh Politician Jagmeet Singh To Shake Up Federal NDP Leadership Race
    Should he be successful, Singh — a turbaned Sikh — would break through a long-standing barrier at the federal level, one that really ought have been shattered long ago

    Ontario's Sikh Politician Jagmeet Singh To Shake Up Federal NDP Leadership Race

    Abbotsford Real Estate Appraiser Facing Child Porn Charges

    Abbotsford Real Estate Appraiser Facing Child Porn Charges
    A 33-year-old suspect named Joshua James KITSUL was identified inconnection to that internet account. Investigators executed a search warrant at KITSUL’s residence on April 28, 2017, and seized numerous computers, data storage devices and cell phones. 

    Abbotsford Real Estate Appraiser Facing Child Porn Charges

    Residents In Okanagan Ready For Second Flood As Water Rises Elsewhere In B.C.

    Residents In Okanagan Ready For Second Flood As Water Rises Elsewhere In B.C.
    Residents dealing with homes damaged by flooding in Kelowna, B.C., have walled off their properties with six to seven layers of sandbags in preparation for another threat of rising water.

    Residents In Okanagan Ready For Second Flood As Water Rises Elsewhere In B.C.

    One Suspect In Custody After Targeted Double Shooting In Burnaby Sends Two To Hospital

    One Suspect In Custody After Targeted Double Shooting In Burnaby Sends Two To Hospital
    On May 11, 2017, at approximately 6 p.m., Burnaby RCMP was called to the 6700-block of Broadway Avenue after receiving a report of a shooting.

    One Suspect In Custody After Targeted Double Shooting In Burnaby Sends Two To Hospital

    Elections BC Estimates Voter Turnout At 60 Per Cent, Up From 2013 Election

    Elections BC Estimates Voter Turnout At 60 Per Cent, Up From 2013 Election
    VICTORIA — Elections BC says preliminary data from Tuesday's provincial election suggests registered voter turnout was about 60 per cent.

    Elections BC Estimates Voter Turnout At 60 Per Cent, Up From 2013 Election