Pride Group Garnishes Mayor’s Bank Account in Northern Ontario Due to Unpaid Fine
A Pride organization has garnished the bank account of a Northwestern Ontario mayor following his refusal to pay a $5,000 fine imposed for voting against a motion to recognize Pride month in his community.
In addition to the fines, tribunal vice-chair Karen Dawson also ordered McQuacker and Emo’s chief administrative officer to complete human rights training within 30 days of her decision and provide proof of completion to Borderland Pride.
The Epoch Times contacted McQuacker and the town’s CAO for comment but did not receive a response prior to publication.
McQuaker told The Toronto Sun that he refused to pay the $5,000 penalty, describing it as “extortion” and said he would not take the training either.
Borderland Pride responded by using legal means to take the money from McQuaker’s account.
“That is how you enforce a court order for the payment of money,” the group added in a comment on the post. “The Tribunal’s judgment is not optional.”
Tribunal Decision
The discrimination ruling was based on a remark made by McQuaker after the council’s vote on the request to designate June as Pride month, according to the tribunal decision.
“There’s no flag being flown for the other side of the coin … there’s no flags being flown for the straight people,” he said during the May 12 council meeting, shortly after the Borderland Pride vote.
The tribunal found the remark discriminatory, saying it was “at least a factor” in the mayor’s dissenting vote, which it said consequently made the vote against designating June as Pride month discriminatory.
“If municipal councillors vote against a resolution for a discriminatory reason, and their votes determine the outcome, then the outcome itself is discriminatory,” Dawson wrote.
McQuaker said he believed his comment was factual, not discriminatory.
“I don’t hate anybody. We just don’t have a flagpole at our town hall,” he told the Sun.
McQuaker told the Sun neither he nor the town would be issuing any more media statements until Dec. 11, after the town council’s next meeting. He said council would decide at its Dec. 10 meeting if the town will pay the $10,000 fine.
Emo is 380 kilometres west of Thunder Bay near the Ontario-Minnesota border. The Township of Emo is home to approximately 1,300 people.