FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Thursday, May 30, 2002
AFL demands quick answer from Calgary on venue for
counter-summit activities
City will have to deal with the consequences of nixing
organized event
CALGARY – The Alberta Federation of Labour has
presented the City of Calgary with an ultimatum – either approve the AFL’s
application for a venue for activities during the upcoming G-8 summit by 2 p.m.
tomorrow or face the prospect activists taking their protests to the streets.
In a letter faxed yesterday afternoon to John Chaput, the
City’s G-8 Project manager, AFL president Les Steel urged the City to help
find an outdoor venue large enough to accommodate the thousands of activists
expected to converge on Calgary next month.
"If we have not heard from the City by Friday at 2 p.m.
with news about an acceptable venue we will abandon all efforts to plan an
organized, controlled event," wrote Steel. "This is not our
preference, but without cooperation from the City, we will have no choice."
If the AFL and other groups organizing counter-summit
activities are unable to plan a large outdoor event, Steel warned Chaput that
activists will "literally be forced out into the streets."
"By rejecting our application (for a city-owned venue)
the City will inadvertently increase the likelihood of the very kind of
confrontations that they’re seeking to avoid," wrote Steel.
Steel concluded his letter to Chaput by saying that the
interests of the City and groups like the AFL are not really that different.
"We both want to make things run as smoothly as possible
during the week of the summit. We both want to ensure the safety and promote the
rights of Calgarians and people visiting the city. And we both want to reduce
the likelihood of confrontation, violence and property damage. I remain
convinced that the best way to achieve all these goals is to grant our request
and help us find an outdoor venue for our Solidarity Festival."
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(Note: Due to a family emergency, AFL President Les Steel
will not be available for comment on the letter – attached – that was sent
to the City of Calgary. Alternate spokespeople are list below. All have been
closely involved with efforts to organize a Solidarity Village.)
May 29, 2002
Sent by Fax: (403) 537-3068
John Chaput
G8 Project Manager
City of Calgary
Calgary, Alberta
Dear Mr. Chaput:
Re: Rejection of AFL Application for Solidarity Village at
Shaw Millennium Park
As you are no doubt aware, the City of Calgary has formally
rejected our application to use Shaw Millennium Park as a venue for Solidarity
Village activities during the upcoming G-8 Summit. I am writing today to urge
you and your colleagues in the City administration to either reconsider this
decision or help us find another city-owned site that would meet our needs.
We at the AFL sympathize with the City’s concerns about
safety. We understand that it’s your job to be cautious and make decisions
which you perceive to be in the public’s best interests. But the AFL and other
organizations involved in planning counter-summit events are also concerned
about safety. In fact, by holding a large outdoor event at a city-run facility,
we were hoping to enhance safety and reduce the likelihood of unwanted
confrontations.
The bottom line is that in three short weeks, thousands of
people will be converging on Calgary to exercise their democratic rights and
voice legitimate concerns about the G-8 and its policies. Refusing our
application will not stop these people from coming. However, what it might do is
create unwanted problems. Without an organized outdoor event like the one we’re
proposing, people protesting the G-8 will literally be forced into the streets.
Obviously, it is not your intent to promote confrontations
between activists and security forces. But I’m afraid that by denying us the
right to gather in a city facility, you may be doing just that. By rejecting our
application, the City will inadvertently increase the likelihood of the very
kind of confrontations that you’re seeking to avoid.
Given the extremely short timeline and the serious
implications of not having an outdoor venue, I am asking you to personally
intervene with City Council and the City administration. Tell them that what we’re
proposing is not dangerous –
it will end up looking more like a folk festival than a
militant rally. And tell them that the interests of the people of Calgary
would be better served by granting us a venue – rather than
by rejecting our application and turning activists out into the streets.
At this point, I am not asking specifically for Shaw
Millennium Park. Earlier today, we submitted a request for the Foothills
Athletic grounds. But we’d be happy to use any facility that can accommodate
the size of crowd that we’re expecting.
In conclusion, I’d just like to remind you that our
interests and goals in this matter are not really that different. We both want
to make things run as smoothly as possible during the week of the summit. We
both want to ensure the safety and promote the rights of Calgarians and people
visiting the city. And we both want to reduce the likelihood of confrontation,
violence and property damage. I remain convinced that the best way to achieve
all these goals is to grant our request and help us find an outdoor venue for
our Solidarity Festival.
Thank you for considering this urgent request – and I
encourage you to take quick action. If we have not heard from the City by Friday
at 2 p.m. with news about an acceptable venue we will abandon all efforts to
plan an organized, controlled event. This is not our preference, but without
cooperation from the City, we will have no choice. And as the saying goes:
"the chips will fall as they may." I look forward to hearing from you
soon.
Sincerely,
Alberta Federation of Labour

Les Steel, President
For more information call:
Gil McGowan, AFL Communications Director
780-483-3021
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