Toronto·Point of View

This gay Toronto cop sent an open letter to Pride Toronto about the Black Lives Matter protest

In an open letter, Toronto police Const. Chuck Krangle says the Black Lives Matter protest that disrupted yesterday's Pride parade is exclusionary and says police 'have just as much right to participate as any other group. '
Const. Chuck Krangle said the LGBT community is well represented on Toronto's police force. 'The support that I have from my peers and supervisors has been unwavering,' he said. (Supplied by Chuck Krangle)

A gay Toronto police officer has sent an open letter to Pride Toronto to voice his concern about the organization's agreement Sunday with the activist group Black Lives Matter, which was given the status of Honoured Group for Sunday's Pride parade.

The agreement, which Pride Toronto executive director Mathieu Chantelois has since acknowledged he signed to get the parade moving again, included a commitment to increase representation among Pride Toronto staff and to prioritize the hiring of black transgender women and indigenous people.

But it's Pride Toronto's assent to a request that police floats and booths not appear in future Pride parades, marches and community spaces that Const. Chuck Krangle's letter singles out.

Krangle opted not to be interviewed by CBC News for further comment, saying he preferred to have this letter stand on its own.


Dear Pride Toronto,

I am writing today to address concerns I have with your recent agreement with Black Lives Matter TO. I am particularly concerned with your willingness to remove all police floats and booths in future parades and community spaces. I should give you my background first. 

I am a Toronto Police Service Constable, and a homosexual. I have been on the job eight years. Prior to becoming a Police Officer, I served in the Canadian Armed Forces and completed a tour in Kandahar, Afghanistan, in 2006-07. 

I never "came out" while serving in the military. Though not for fear of persecution, I only told a select few about my orientation. I was still quite young and was simply not ready. 

It wasn't until 2012 that I decided to come out. I began to tell a few peers at work, and soon word spread. I can say with absolute pride that my peers, and my employers/senior management, have never made an inappropriate comment to me. I have never been made to feel discriminated against. 

This year, 2016, marked a first for me. My first Pride parade. I would be working, nonetheless it would be my first one in any capacity. Wow, what an event. What a spectacle, a joining of everyone. 

The 2016 pride events really opened my eyes to something. The support that I have from my peers and supervisors has been unwavering. When I saw all those floats and officers marching (hundreds), I realized that my employer fully supports this part of me, and so many others like me. As I stood post at Yonge and College, ensuring a safe atmosphere, Chief Mark Saunders came up to me. I had the opportunity to salute him, and I knew that I had a leader who was invested in this celebration of Pride. 

LGBTQ cops have struggled for decades. I am fortunate, because it is their struggles in the past, that have made my orientation an irrelevant factor in my workplace interactions. Members of police services, and their employers (like RBC, Telus, Porter, etc.) have just as much right to participate as any other group.

Police officers are significantly represented in the LGBTQ community and it would be unacceptable to alienate and discriminate against them and those who support them. They too struggled to gain a place and workplace free from discrimination and bias. 

I do not speak for the police, and I do not speak for the LGBTQ community. I speak as an individual, one who saw his first Pride, only to be excluded from the next. 

Exclusion does not promote inclusion. 

Chuck Krangle​
Const. Chuck Krangle said the LGBT community is well represented on Toronto's police force. 'The support that I have from my peers and supervisors has been unwavering,' he said. (CBC)