Calgary Herald

Two Pride-themed crosswalks vandalized

- ALANNA SMITH alsmith@postmedia.com Twitter: @alanna_smithh

The newly painted Calgary Pride and Transgende­r Pride crosswalks were vandalized this week, less than a month after the permanent crosswalks were unveiled at the popular downtown intersecti­on at Stephen Avenue and Centre Street.

The Calgary Police’s hate crimes co-ordinator is investigat­ing the incident.

“As vandals targeted these specific crosswalks there are reasonable grounds for police to suspect a hate-motivated crime. Police are investigat­ing and canvassing the area for CCTV footage and witnesses,” police said in a statement.

Sandon Hansen of Zoom Painting, the company that painted the crosswalks, said the words “Lust” and “Lost” were written on the two crosswalks, one word on each. Hansen said he thinks the words have a religious connotatio­n to them.

He said they expected vandalism at the intersecti­on considerin­g the meaning and location of the Lgbtq-supportive paintings.

“It was a bigger deal than we thought it would be. The amount of hate was shocking but support was 10 times more,” said Hansen.

The company’s creative director expected the crosswalks to be restored by early afternoon Wednesday, with painters working on erasing the vandalism immediatel­y.

City of Calgary spokesman Sean Somers said they aren’t sure when the vandalism occurred but are working on identifyin­g the culprit through video surveillan­ce from the area.

He said a handful of businesses have cameras pointing toward or near the busy intersecti­on and are working with the city. They hope to charge the person responsibl­e, with help from Calgary police.

“We’re going to dig in and see if we can track down who did it,” said Somers. “Any type of vandalism, not just on the Pride crosswalk, costs all of us in the end. We’re having to remove that graffiti and things that have defaced city property.”

Somers said it’s particular­ly disappoint­ing considerin­g the Pride Parade is just weeks away.

“I feel like it’s 2019. Let’s move on from this type of behaviour,” he said. “I feel like as a city we are better than that. I don’t think that type of behaviour and those actions are representa­tive of the city of Calgary as a whole.”

The celebrator­y crosswalks were created following efforts of Calgary Pride, Calgary Queer Arts Society, Centre for Sexuality, Skipping Stone Foundation, Treaty 7 Dyke and Trans March and Voices, in addition to support from area councillor­s Druh Farrell and Evan Woolley and the City of Calgary roads department.

Zoom Painting also installed a permanent Pride crosswalk at Mount Royal University in 2018.

Anyone with informatio­n about the incident is asked to call the Calgary Police Service non-emergency line at 403-266-1234 or submit anonymous tips through Crime Stoppers 1-800-222-8477 or online at www.calgarycri­mestoppers.org

 ?? PHOTOS: AZIN GHAFFARI ?? Police say there are “reasonable grounds” to suspect vandalism at two Pride-themed crosswalks was a hate-motivated crime.
PHOTOS: AZIN GHAFFARI Police say there are “reasonable grounds” to suspect vandalism at two Pride-themed crosswalks was a hate-motivated crime.
 ??  ?? The words ‘lust’ and ‘lost’ were written on the two crosswalks. Calgary police say they are investigat­ing and canvassing the area for CCTV footage.
The words ‘lust’ and ‘lost’ were written on the two crosswalks. Calgary police say they are investigat­ing and canvassing the area for CCTV footage.

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