Red Dress Day remembers missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls and two-spirited people
Poll
Yes
By Herald on May 5, 2021.
Herald photo by Tim Kalinowski -
City of Lethbridge Indigenous relations co-ordinator Pamela Beebe speaks to reporters in front of city hall on Wednesday about the importance of marking Red Dress Day.
Tim Kalinowski – Lethbridge Herald
The City of Lethbridge marked Red Dress Day in memory of murdered and missing Indigenous women, girls and two-spirited people by hanging two bright red dresses among the green leaves of a weeping willow in front of city hall on Wednesday.
“Today is an important day,” stated Mayor Chris Spearman. “It tells the families of murdered and missing women that they have not been forgotten. The red dress is symbolic of murdered and missing Indigenous women, and those families feel abandoned. Those stories have been forgotten for too long.
Council approves three-year funding for reconciliation initiatives
Poll
Should authorities crack down on churches that break public health orders for capacity, social distancing and masks?
Yes
City council approved $435,000 over three years to help fund initiatives arising from the Reconciliation Lethbridge Advisory Committee’s local calls-to-action emanating from the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Women and Girls report during Tuesday’s council meeting.
Council was supposed to have heard a presentation from the group during the Sept. 28 Community Issues Committee meeting of city council where they would have formally made a request for funding prior to November’s budget discussions.