Edmonton celebrates Pride month with summer-long celebrations

The City of Edmonton is holding its largest ever Pride celebration this year.
Friday, the Summer of Pride officially began with several events at different venues in the city.
There are more than 80 Pride events planned across 39 venues in the city throughout June, July and August. Included are a Pride Day at K-Days in July, the Edmonton Pride Festival in August and the first-ever Edmonton Drag Festival on June 17.
"One of the coolest things about Edmonton this year is that there's a whole summer of Pride," said Joshua Wolchansky of the Fruit Loop Society of Alberta.
Having so many events, organized by more than 40 LGBTQ2S+ organizations and allies, ensures there is a Pride event for everyone, he added.
"It's not just one big tent and everyone needs to fit into that Pride, there's a lot of different producers who are bringing something very unique and very special to the ecosystem," Wolchansky said. "You get a more diverse representation of what Pride is."
More information on the Summer of Pride can be found on the Fruit Loop Society webpage or at PrideEdmonton.ca.
The first week of June is also Pride Week at Edmonton Public Schools.
At D.S. MacKenzie School in south Edmonton, around 300 students spent the day outdoors at a Pride celebration featuring games, an ice cream truck and a photo booth.
The school has been celebrating Pride the past two years, and teacher Katie Griffith said the events help LGBTQ2S+ students feel valued while giving other kids the chance to help build community and create safe spaces for their friends.
"They really just get to be themselves and showcase who they are and just feel that love and acceptance, before they might not have had that," Griffith said. "So these kinds of days are just so important to keep that allyship up all year."
Grade 9 student Rorie Vanderzyde is a member of the Gay-Straight Alliance at D.S. MacKenzie. Vanderzyde said Pride celebrations are for all students and show the school's commitment to making kids feel safe regardless of their gender identity or sexual orientation.
"This day is important because we just want to celebrate everyone, queer, allies, questioning," Vanderzyde added. "It's a day to celebrate inclusivity and diversity."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

McCarthy becomes the first U.S. speaker ever to be ousted from the job in a House vote
U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy was voted out of the job Tuesday in an extraordinary showdown, a first in U.S. history that was forced by a contingent of hard-right conservatives and threw the House and its Republican leadership into chaos.
DEVELOPING CN experiencing network-wide system failure; Via, GO and other trains affected
Canadian National Railway Co. is experiencing a network-wide system failure that is affecting Via, GO and other trains in Ontario.
Parks Canada reveals additional details about deadly bear attack in Banff
The couple and dog mauled and killed by a grizzly bear in the backcountry of Banff National Park late last week did everything right, Parks Canada says.
Poilievre defends Truth and Reconciliation Day post, calls criticism 'appalling politicization'
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is defending the caption on photos he posted to social media on the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation after Liberal cabinet minister Marc Miller accused him of misidentifying Inuit people as Algonquin.
A bus crash near Italian city of Venice kills at least 21 people, including Ukrainian tourists
A bus carrying foreign tourists including Ukrainians crashed near the Italian city of Venice when it fell from an elevated street Tuesday, killing at least 21 people and injuring 18 others, authorities said.
Liberal Greg Fergus makes history, elected first Black House Speaker
Liberal MP Greg Fergus is Canada's new House of Commons Speaker, following a secret ranked ballot election on Tuesday. It is a day for the political history books as Fergus, once a parliamentary page, becomes the first Black Canadian to hold the prestigious role.
After a four-week campaign, Manitobans to decide on Tories' bid for a third term
Manitobans are to make history today as they cast final ballots in an election that has followed four weeks of promises, debates and controversial advertisements.
MK-ULTRA mind-control experiments: Quebec high court says U.S. has immunity in Canada
The United States government cannot be sued in Canada for its alleged role in infamous brainwashing experiments at a Montreal psychiatric hospital, Quebec's Court of Appeal ruled this week.
New York judge issues limited gag order after Trump sends disparaging post about court clerk
Rebuking Donald Trump, a state court judge imposed a limited gag order Tuesday in the former president's civil business fraud trial and ordered him to delete a social media post that publicly maligned a key court staffer.