91Ƶ

Skip to content

Humanist association plans legal action against B.C. city for council prayer

BCHA: Inaugural Parksville meeting included 91Ƶexplicitly Christian91Ƶ prayer
web1_240501-pqn-city-prayer_1
Parksville is facing legal action over a prayer spoken at council91Ƶs inaugural meeting on Nov. 7, 2022. (City of Parksville Youtube)

The BC Humanist Association (BCHA) says it intends to take legal action against the City of Parksville for a breach of religious neutrality.

Parksville council91Ƶs inaugural meeting in November 2022 included an 91Ƶexplicitly Christian91Ƶ prayer by pastor Andrew Gulevich of the Parksville Fellowship Baptist Church, a BCHA news release noted.

The BCHA wrote to Parksville following the 2022 municipal elections, as well as before it prepared its 2020 report on prayers in municipal governments. Parksville91Ƶs 2018 inaugural council meeting also began with a Christian prayer.

On April 11, the BCHA91Ƶs legal counsel sent a letter to the city stating it was prepared to 91Ƶcommence legal proceedings seeking all available relief and costs against the City of Parksville without further notice.91Ƶ

BCHA has received no reply from the city as of April 23, according to Ian Bushfield, executive director.

Legal proceedings are not yet filed, but 91Ƶwe91Ƶre writing them up right now, basically,91Ƶ Bushfield said.

Parksville will be the first municipality to have legal proceedings brought against it by the BCHA over prayer in a council meeting, according to Bushfield.

91ƵWe91Ƶre looking at municipalities across all of British Columbia and we91Ƶve gotten responses from five of the seven that we91Ƶve identified, that is including the prayer in 2022, and the other one we91Ƶre still looking at is Vancouver,91Ƶ he added.

The City of Parksville did not comment as the matter has been referred to its lawyers.

READ MORE:

Bushfield would not say exactly what BCHA will be seeking in court as the files are still being completed.

91ƵWhat we91Ƶre basically looking for is a commitment that Parksville keeps its future meetings secular,91Ƶ he said. 91ƵWe recognize every councillor and mayor has their own set of beliefs and we91Ƶre not trying to malign or say that those are invalid. People can hold their beliefs and pray in their private time but it91Ƶs the formal inclusion of prayer at the start of a meeting excludes the non-religious and that91Ƶs the problem that we91Ƶre focused on.91Ƶ



Kevin Forsyth

About the Author: Kevin Forsyth

As a lifelong learner, I enjoy experiencing new cultures and traveled around the world before making Vancouver Island my home.
Read more



(or

91Ƶ

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }