'Out of reach': Edmontonian faces accessibility struggles at local concert venues
A local wheelchair user is drawing attention to the vast differences in accessibility features at Edmonton concert venues.
Raven Van Camp started using a wheelchair five years ago after discovering it helped with their myalgic encephalomyelitis, also called chronic fatigue syndrome.
"The exertion of walking places was causing my illness to get worse quicker than it should have," they told CTV News Edmonton.
"Lots of people talk about being wheelchair-bound like, 'Oh, that's the saddest thing,' but for me it was a freedom."
Van Camp and their husband both enjoy live music, but quickly noticed the wheelchair made going out much more complicated.
"Smaller venues, the downside is usually they are in a back alley, or you go down a back alley to get into the stairs. But then there's also five or six sets of stairs. You have to go up and down, up and down, and then usually the bathroom is in the basement and there isn't any elevator."
Van Camp said they decided not to attend a show at the Starlite Room after being told over the phone they would have to be carried in.
"To which I was like, 'Well, that's very thoughtful and I appreciate the offer, but that's not very dignified."
The stairs the general public use to access the Starlite Room on September 27, 2024. (CTV News Edmonton)
Financial barriers to accessibility
The issue doesn't escape Tyson Boyd, one of the owner-operators of the Starlite Room.
"The building's almost 100 years old, so it wasn't made to be terribly friendly," he told CTV News Edmonton.
Boyd and his business partner planned to make the venue an "accessible space for all people" by 2022, however those plans were derailed by the COVID-19 pandemic.
"We still have not fully recovered, so unfortunately, it's a money thing," he explained.
Boyd said their priority right now is "survival" as venues across North America shutter their doors.
"To get structural engineers in for the building and its age, that's even an initial startup cost that's kind of out of reach for us right now."
Starlite Room owner-operator Tyson Boyd looking at a copy of the building's original blueprints on September 27, 2024. (CTV News Edmonton)
Boyd said when they first looked into the cost of installing a lift it was in the $200,000-$250,000 range.
"And having to close down the business, doing that, is a pretty big concern," he added.
The Starlite did recently invest in portable ramps after discovering they could be set up on a small set of stairs in an unused side entrance.
"It was Edmonton International Jazz Fest in June, where we had to get an organ in here and they rented a ramp and it was kind of a eureka moment," Boyd said.
The entrance provides access to the main hall, but the public washroom is downstairs so anyone who can't navigate steps must share the backstage bathroom with the performer.
"It's not an ideal thing but it has helped immensely," Boyd said.
Alberta among last provinces without standalone accessibility legislation
In an interview with CTV News Edmonton, the social services shadow minister and MLA for St. Albert said comprehensive accessibility legislation would help with these issues.
Marie Renaud has been advocating for such legislation and said it could be a pathway to new grants.
"You'd have your experts develop the regulations and then you'd have to do that other work. So how do you help these organizations or these entities meet those standards?
"Well, they're going to need some help doing that."
Community & Social Services Shadow Minister Marie Renaud calls on the UCP government to create accessibility legislation on October 30, 2024.
Alberta is one of the last provinces in Canada without standalone accessibility legislation, though the province's disability advocate has spent two years researching it and engaging with stakeholders.
"The disability advocate did a report here not that long ago and I know there's people within government evaluating that and determining what the next steps are," said Municipal Affairs Minister Ric McIver.
The minister told CTV News Edmonton the province has "quite a bit" of accessibility legislation but acknowledged it is not all in one place.
"Some of it is in the Human Rights Code for Alberta. Some of it is in Occupational Health. Some of it is in different pieces of legislation, so bringing it together in one piece of legislation is something to think about."
As the current government considers it, Renaud plans to introduce her own accessibility legislation as a private member's bill this fall.
"We actually in Alberta don't have a framework to measure the progress that we're making in terms of identifying, removing and preventing different barriers," she said.
"My hope is that we can pass that as a province and start to catch up with the rest of the country."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Jubilation and gunfire as Syrians celebrate the end of the Assad family's half-century rule
Syrians poured into streets echoing with celebratory gunfire on Sunday after a stunning rebel advance reached the capital, putting an end to the Assad family's 50 years of iron rule but raising questions about the future of the country and the wider region.
Canada 'falling so consistently short' on defence spending has hurt standing on world stage, but improving: U.S. ambassador
U.S. Ambassador to Canada David Cohen says while Canada's defence spending is going in the right direction, the federal government's persistent failure to meet NATO targets has been damaging to the country's reputation on the world stage.
Most Canadians would avoid buying U.S. products post-Trump tariff: Nanos survey
A majority of Canadians would be hesitant to buy U.S. goods in response to the proposed American tariff on products from Canada, according to a new survey.
Canadians turn domestic for holiday travel, with weak loonie discouraging U.S. trips
After turning abroad for holiday vacations last year, more Canadians are keeping their travel plans in-country this Christmas season due to squeezed budgets, lower domestic fares and a decisive end to the post-pandemic boom in overseas travel — and now a slumping currency.
MP Jamil Jivani meets U.S. vice president-elect amid Trump's tariff threats
A Conservative member of Parliament has tapped a longtime friendship to connect with Donald Trump's inner circle as Canada prepares for the president-elect’s return to the White House next month amid threats of devastating tariffs.
Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly focused on re-election, doesn’t explicitly rule out future Liberal leadership bid
Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly insisted she supports Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and is focused on her own re-election, but wouldn't explicitly rule out a future Liberal leadership bid, in an interview on CTV's Question Period airing Sunday.
Longer careers in hockey are linked to greater risk of CTE: study
The largest study ever done on the brains of male hockey players has found the odds of getting a neurodegenerative disease caused by repeated traumatic brain injuries increases with each year played.
Trump calls for 'immediate ceasefire' in Ukraine after meeting Zelenskyy in Paris
U.S. president-elect Donald Trump on Sunday called for an immediate ceasefire in Ukraine, shortly after a meeting in Paris with French and Ukrainian leaders, claiming Kyiv 'would like to make a deal' to end the more than 1,000-day war.
Renovations underway to return one of the last Quonset-style theatres in Canada back to former glory
Community members in the small town of Coleman, Alta. are eagerly waiting for the grand re-opening of the historic Roxy Theatre now that renovations have started.