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New Pride event planned in Greeley after High Plains Library canceled event

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Editor’s note: This is Part 2 of a two-part series about the High Plains Library District’s cancellation of its LGBTQIA+ Pride celebration, how community members are reacting and the wider context of the event’s cancellation. Part 1 is available here.

A new event celebrating the LGBTQIA+ community will take place this summer following the High Plains Library District’s decision to cancel its Popup Pride Celebration.

The new event is set for noon to 6 p.m. Saturday, July 29 at Aims Community College. Community partners and High Plains Library staff members are in the process of finalizations but more information will come when available. Despite district staff’s involvement in planning the event, the new event is not associated with High Plains.

High Plains Library District announced in late April the cancellation of its annual Greeley Popup Pride Celebration despite nearly six months of planning by staff and others community members. The district has only said input from a “key and valued” partner led to the decision, without identifying the partner or the nature of the input.

Simone Perry, an educator at Northridge High School and the producer of Greeley Does Drag, is one of many planning the new event after experiencing several disappointments involving the High Plains Library District as a member of the LBBTQIA+ community. Perry is nonbinary, identifying as neither male nor female, and uses they/them pronouns.

Perry said the district’s cancellation follows a national trend of backlash against the LGBTQIA+ community, such as drag bans, legislation targeting the community and attempts to challenge the presence of LGBTQIA+ resources and books in the wider community.

Kimberly Chambers, the founder of NoCoSafeSpace and executive director of SPLASH Youth — both organizations supporting LGBTQIA+ people  — was disappointed to hear that the Pride event is no longer sponsored by High Plains, especially given its past support for the community.

“Their support in the past has been a genuine action in allyship to the LGBTQIA+ community throughout Weld County, where many queer and trans folks struggle to find safer spaces who offer programming that is welcoming to us,” Chambers said.

In February, the Colorado Civil Rights Division ordered the High Plains Library District to undergo mediation after finding probable cause in discrimination claims by a former teen librarian who was fired after challenging the district’s cancellation of her programming for LGBTQIA+ youth, as well as programming for youth of color.

Prior to the cancellation, the district also had plans to enforce a drag ban at the Greeley Popup Pride Celebration, according to Perry.


Editor’s note: This is Part 2 of a two-part series about the High Plains Library District’s cancellation of its LGBTQIA+ Pride celebration, how community members are reacting and the wider context of the event’s cancellation. Part 1 is available here.

A new event celebrating the LGBTQIA+ community will take place this summer following the High Plains Library District’s decision to cancel its Popup Pride Celebration.

The new event is set for noon to 6 p.m. Saturday, July 29 at Aims Community College. Community partners and High Plains Library staff members are in the process of finalizations but more information will come when available. Despite district staff’s involvement in planning the event, the new event is not associated with High Plains.

High Plains Library District announced in late April the cancellation of its annual Greeley Popup Pride Celebration despite nearly six months of planning by staff and others community members. The district has only said input from a “key and valued” partner led to the decision, without identifying the partner or the nature of the input.

Simone Perry, an educator at Northridge High School and the producer of Greeley Does Drag, is one of many planning the new event after experiencing several disappointments involving the High Plains Library District as a member of the LBBTQIA+ community. Perry is nonbinary, identifying as neither male nor female, and uses they/them pronouns.

Perry said the district’s cancellation follows a national trend of backlash against the LGBTQIA+ community, such as drag bans, legislation targeting the community and attempts to challenge the presence of LGBTQIA+ resources and books in the wider community.

Kimberly Chambers, the founder of NoCoSafeSpace and executive director of SPLASH Youth — both organizations supporting LGBTQIA+ people  — was disappointed to hear that the Pride event is no longer sponsored by High Plains, especially given its past support for the community.

“Their support in the past has been a genuine action in allyship to the LGBTQIA+ community throughout Weld County, where many queer and trans folks struggle to find safer spaces who offer programming that is welcoming to us,” Chambers said.

In February, the Colorado Civil Rights Division ordered the High Plains Library District to undergo mediation after finding probable cause in discrimination claims by a former teen librarian who was fired after challenging the district’s cancellation of her programming for LGBTQIA+ youth, as well as programming for youth of color.

Prior to the cancellation, the district also had plans to enforce a drag ban at the Greeley Popup Pride Celebration, according to Perry.

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