STAY CONNECTED: Have the stories that matter most delivered every night to your email inbox. Subscribe to our daily local news wrap.

B.C. event featuring Meghan Murphy moved to new venue over security concern

Nov 1, 2019 | 6:48 PM

VANCOUVER — The organizer of a panel discussion on gender and sexuality says the location of the event in Vancouver has been changed over possible security risks because of the views of a featured speaker who drew protests at a Toronto public library this week.

Prof. Mark Collard of Simon Fraser University said the senior director of campus security assessed a high safety concern for the event that was set to take place on Saturday.

Collard, who teaches human evolutionary studies, said he’s been planning the event that includes Meghan Murphy since the spring and ticket holders will be emailed a few hours before Saturday’s talk with details of the new location.

Collard said the security director, Tim Marron, assessed the security risk as “11 out of 10” and suggested violence could be used by a group called the Coalition Against Trans Antagonism, which is not affiliated with the university, but Out on Campus, which supports LGBTQ students, was not considered a threat.

Marron said he couldn’t discuss any security issues and a spokesman for the university said no one was available to speak about the issue.

Murphy, a freelance writer, has said the acceptance of trans rights threaten women’s rights and that people who are born male remain male for life so can’t understand women’s experiences.

Tami Starlight with the Coalition Against Trans Antagonism said members of the group had planned to chant loudly and will be showing up “in force” at the new location, wherever it will be, to do the same.

Starlight said coalition members met with Out on Campus, which Starlight criticized for planning a separate rally instead of aligning with the coalition.

Ashley Brooks, who speaks for Out on Campus, said the group intended to protest peacefully and uphold the university’s code of conduct without engaging in any crimes.

“It’s in my job interest to keep students thriving here,” Brooks said, adding the group decided not to collaborate with the coalition because its members had different goals and do not advocate for direct action that could include disrupting the event.

He has decided not to attend any protest at the new venue “from a safety perspective.”

Collard said he didn’t want to take any chances when he heard about safety risks that led to the change in venue.

“That was a big problem to hear,” he said, adding he was concerned about potential disruptions for people who would be gathering in a nearby meeting room at the university’s campus as well as members of the public who could be in the building.

“I decided I just couldn’t in good conscience expose people to that level of risk. Given that the security team is telling me that there is a very, very high probably of being some sort of violence that the evening I decided it would be irresponsible for me to continue.”

Collard, who attended Murphy’s talk earlier this year at the Vancouver Public Library as protesters gathered outside, said he understands her views are controversial but she has a right to express them in a society that values free speech.

“I don’t agree with everything she says but I think she has a right to say them but actually some of these issues that she talks about are incredibly important and we need to have a public discussion about them. We can’t just allow one side of the debate to win by suppressing the other.”

Murphy, who completed a master’s degree at Simon Fraser University’s department of gender, sexuality and women’s studies in 2012, was not immediately available for comment.

The panel will also feature Quillette editor Jon Kay, writer Anna Slatz and Lindsay Shepherd, who rose to prominence as a Wilfrid Laurier University teaching assistant who ran afoul of faculty for showing clips of professor Jordan Peterson’s TV appearances to students.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 1, 2019.

Camille Bains, The Canadian Press