Broadview Village – The Salvation Army

Diversity, Inclusion and Equity

Broadview’s Commitment to Diversity, Inclusion and Equity

At Broadview Village we are committed to living as an inclusive organizational culture by:

Our Council on Diversity, Inclusion and Equity

A smiling person with curly hair and glasses, wearing a patterned top and a necklace, is pictured against a plain background.

Karen Kyle Martin
Executive Assistant

Naz Shaheed

Naz Shaheed
Residential Manager

Major Christine Johnston

Major Christine Johnston
Director, Spiritual and Religious Care

Bonnie Chimanikire

Bonnie Chimanikire
Administrative Assistant

Staphanie Leah

Staphanie Leah
Manager of Human Relations

A person with short, dark red hair and glasses smiles at the camera, wearing dangling earrings and a dark top.

Barb Barron
Communications and Social Media Relations Coordinator

Karen Rose-Hosang

Karen Rose-Hosang
Program Counsellor

A person with long dark hair and a neutral expression against a plain background.

Shieldon Elefano
CEPE Supervisor

Michele Walsh

Michele Walsh
Residential Manager

Art Mathews

Art Mathews
Program Counsellor

Phil Grey

Phil Grey
Residential Counsellor

Systemic Review Committee, with 2 areas of focus:

Education Committee, with 2 areas of focus:

Completed/Implemented (to date):

Currently working on/in draft:

What we are planning to do in the near future:

If you would like any more information on any of these initiatives please contact us.

Cultural Celebrations and Significant Dates

Here you can explore and learn about different events that we celebrate and why they are celebrated

Red Dress Day

Red Dress Day, also known as the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and Two-Spirit People, is observed on May 5th. The day honours and brings awareness to the thousands of Indigenous women, girls and two-spirit people who have been subject to disproportionate violence in Canada. Red Dress Day was inspired by Métis artist Jaime Black’s REDress Project installation, in which she hung empty, red dresses to represent the missing and murdered women. Red dresses have become symbolic of the crisis as a result of her installation.

See at left: Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Art installation at Seaforth Peace Park in Vancouver, BC, inspired by Métis artist Jaime Black’s REDress Project. The red dresses symbolize the missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls in Canada.

(courtesy Edna Winti/Flickr CC)

https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca