New mayor scraps Pembroke diversity committee, shocking residents - Action News
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New mayor scraps Pembroke diversity committee, shocking residents

Some residents in Pembroke, Ont., say they're shocked and disappointed after learning their new mayorscrapped without notice a committee created to address racism and discrimination in the community.

Committee created in 2021 by former mayor to tackle racism, inclusion in city

A blue-and-white sign for the city of Pembroke.
A sign welcoming people to Pembroke, Ont., is seen on July 14, 2022. Several residents and former members of city-sanctioned committees are speaking out after new mayor, Ron Gervais, decided to discontinue the diversity, seniors, and climate action committees in the new council term. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)

Some residents in Pembroke, Ont., say they're shocked and disappointed after learning their new mayorscrapped without notice several local committees, including onecreated abouttwo years ago to address racism and discrimination in the community.

They now want accountability fromMayor Ron Gervais, inaugurated just last week, who even sat on the 10-person diversity advisory committee as a city councillor last term.

"For all of a sudden, just out of the blue, for this committee to have the rug pulled out from underneath it it really sends a bad message ... to Pembroke's LGBTQ2S+ and BIPOC[Black, Indigenous and people of colour] community that we're not really welcome here," said Duane Gastant' Aucoin, who was a member of the diversity committee.

"To be disbanded by the mayor, it's really a punch in the gutfor us."

Council created the city's firstdiversity advisory committee in 2021. It was spurred by former mayor Mike LeMay, whovowed Pembroke wouldn't be "defined by racism" after anelderly Vietnamese woman became a victim of an alleged hate-motivated assaultin late 2020.

In the following months, several people in the Ottawa Valley came forward with their experience living with racism in towns such as Pembroke.

Former Pembroke mayor Mike LeMay started the initiative to create the diversity advisory council in 2020, after a Vietnamese woman was attacked by a group of teens in the city. OPP investigated that as a 'racially motivated assault.' (Francis Ferland/CBC)

The committee's goal was to provide advice and recommendations on diversity, equity and inclusion to the city's planning committee. It was also mandated to advise the city on actions it can take to make it a safe and welcoming place for people from various ethnic and cultural backgrounds, ages and sexual orientations.

Pembroke's committee motivated other Ottawa Valley communities to create their own diversity committees. Council in Petawawa, Ont., became thelatestto vote in favour of creating a diversity committeelast month.

"All eyes were on Pembroke," said Suli Adams, co-chair of the former Pembroke diversity committee, which ended its term this November. "People were watching very closely and they saw some really good things happening and so they have followed suit."

Adams explained she andthe other co-chair only found out the committee was abandoned whenthe city didn't post it on its renewed list of committees last week.

"Why would you drop this now?" she said.

Mayor issues statement on unilateral decision

Mayor Gervais did not agree to an interview after CBC contacted him late last week.

In a statement released Saturday, Gervais justified his decision to discontinue the diversity advisory committee, alongside committees for seniors, climate action and parks and recreation.

"With the commencement of the new council, I, as Mayor of the City of Pembroke exercised my prerogative to implement the slate of committees for the new term," Gervais wrote.

A mayor speaks at a podium.
New mayor of Pembroke Ont., Ron Gervais, speaks at the inaugural council meeting on Nov. 29, 2022. Gervais says he 'exercised my prerogative' to decide which committees will be part of council's new term. (City of Pembroke/YouTube)

Gervais didn't directly answer why he made the decision to discontinue the diversity committee.

Instead, he promised to fund an Indigenous mural, to train senior staff on inclusion and reconciliation with Indigenous people, and to review and try to implement the diversity committee's action plan which was presented to the previous council in November.

(The citypaid for a third-party company ChlaInc., to conduct and gather interviews,focus groups, news stories and surveysfrom people of colour and members of the 2SLGBTQ community in the city and developed a 58-pageinclusion action plan with recommendations to make Pembroke a moreinclusive place.)

"I will personally ensure that theCityremains cognizant of diversity, equity, and inclusion as we move forward," wrote Gervais.

Several residents took to the comments section on the City of Pembroke's Facebook post, sharing they're "extremely disappointed" with the mayor's decision,and calling on council to "please strive for better."

Suli, Gastant' Aucoin and other committee members also toldCBC Gervaisreassuredthem duringprior meetingsthat the diversity committee should continue.

"That's why for many of us committee members, it's such a shock," said Gastant' Aucoin.

In a response to this by email, Gervaiscited the action plan and said,"in the time since I may have made those comments, new information has come to my attention."

Duane Gastant' Aucoin, pictured here in 2020, says he was shocked that Gervais, who sat on the diversity committee as a councillor, would unilaterally decide to scrap the group for this term. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

Councillors should vote, say residents

Julianna Morin, another former member who goes by the pronouns they and them,said the decision doesn't make sense and it was "three really big hits to social diversity" in the community.

"Having diversity, climate action and seniors advocacy cut from the slate ... is unsettling in the worst possible way," said Morin.

"This committee served as an inroad for really bringing thatvoice of the community directly to city hall ...Some of those inroads are being lost."

Climate action advisory committee meeting at Pembroke City Hall in August 2022. Dorian Pearce, the chair of the committee which was recently scrapped, presents while then-mayor Mike LeMay, Coun. Ed Jacyno, and committee advisor Duncan Noble is on the screen. (Submitted by Dorian Pearce)

Morin, who penned an open letter alongside Gastant' Aucoin,said they're concerned with the mayor's statementas there appeared to be a lack ofconsultation.

In the letter, the two authors point out "recent unfortunate incidents of intolerance" against Pembroke's BIPOC and 2SLGBTQ residents, and argue there's more work for the committee to do.

The authors point to the committee'sterms of reference passed by last council, whichstate the diversity committee"be reviewed with every new Council to determine the membership and if the Committee should remain in place."

"We feel that it should be all of Council who decides the future of this committee," the letter reads.

CBC contacted all six councillors on Friday. Only Coun. Ed Jacyno responded, referring the matter to the mayor.

Reinstate groups, calls climate committee chair

Dorian Pearce, chair of the climate action advisory committee, said he was also shocked by that committee getting the axe.

Pearce pointed out that during a council meeting on Feb. 4, 2020, when councillors discussed creating the climate action advisory committee, Gervaisexpressed support of it.

"This committee has been reworked to be included in a related committee known as Keeping Pembroke Beautiful," Gervais said in his statement.

"I very simply would liketo see the committees reinstated," Pearce shared."People in our community wanted tosee Pembroke continue to move forward on these issues."