×

Warning

JUser: :_load: Unable to load user with ID: 7305
The Alberta March for Life Association is suing the City of Edmonton after administrators approved — and then cancelled — a scheduled lighting of the city’s High Level Bridge on May 9 in honour of the annual pro-life event. Photo by Lincoln Ho

City sued after bridge lighting denied

By  Kyle Greenham, Canadian Catholic News
  • October 19, 2019

EDMONTON -- The Alberta March for Life Association is suing the City of Edmonton after city administrators cancelled a previously-approved lighting of a bridge on May 9 in honour of the annual pro-life event.

Jerry Pasternak, vice-chairman of Alberta March for Life, submitted an application to light up the High Level Bridge in pink, blue and white for the pro-life cause.

The application was first approved by the city on March 7 and then revoked on April 5, a month before the march.

The Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms filed a court application Oct. 4 on behalf of Pasternak and the Alberta March for Life Association (AMLA). In a news release, the Justice Centre says the city discriminated against Alberta March for Life by denying its request.

According to the court application, the city had cancelled the lighting due to the “polarizing nature” of its message. The Justice Centre said the same thing happened in May 2017 when it approved, then cancelled, bridge lighting for March for Life.

“The state has no proper role to be playing favourites among ideologies, political beliefs and religious beliefs. They’re supposed to stand neutral,” said Justice Centre lawyer James Kitchen.

“The March for Life is accused of being polarizing, but the City has not explained to them what that means or why it excludes them from having the bridge lit up. The government should not promote or hinder any specific belief or ideology. It’s something that needs to be challenged.”

Since the court application was filed, Kitchen says the City of Edmonton has been in contact with the Justice Centre. It has not yet been determined whether the city will reverse its decision or the matter will be taken to court.

The City of Edmonton has been notified of the lawsuit but is unable to comment while the matter is before the courts, communication advisor Karen McDonnell said.

Alberta March for Life has held a rally on the Alberta Legislature for the past 12 years. An estimated 1,500 people attended the most recent march.

The High Level ‘Light the Bridge’ Program began in 2014 to recognize Edmonton events and cultural celebrations by lighting the bridge in specific colours. The criteria states that the lighting must be in support of an event of national or international significance, to support a local festival or to support an issue that builds community.

However, the criteria states that “the City reserves the right to deny requests that do not merit public support or are mainly personal, private, political, polarizing or commercial in nature.”

The bridge has been lit in honour of Pride parades, religious holidays and various awareness campaigns. In the past few weeks alone, the bridge was lit for the Edmonton International Film Festival, the Jewish New Year Rosh Hashanah, World Cerebral Palsy Day and a variety of other requested events.

By denying Alberta March for Life’s request, the Justice Centre says the city is limiting the right to free speech.

“There’s a whole range of events and ideologies this bridge is lit up in association with,” said Kitchen. “They don’t spend all this money to a have a great big platform for expression, and then play favourites and pick who can and can’t use it. The Charter of Rights and Freedoms precludes that.”

This year’s march, which coincided with similar demonstrations across the country, took place around the 50th anniversary of the decriminalization of abortion in Canada in May 1969.

March for Life is held each year, to recognize the dignity of the elderly and the disabled, to protest euthanasia and the decriminalization of abortion in 1969, and to raise awareness of the sanctity of life from conception to natural death. 

(Grandin Media)

Please support The Catholic Register

Unlike many media companies, The Catholic Register has never charged readers for access to the news and information on our website. We want to keep our award-winning journalism as widely available as possible. But we need your help.

For more than 125 years, The Register has been a trusted source of faith-based journalism. By making even a small donation you help ensure our future as an important voice in the Catholic Church. If you support the mission of Catholic journalism, please donate today. Thank you.

DONATE