VICTORIA—A bill calling for parental consent for pronoun change at schools and restrictions on gender transition procedures for minors was narrowly defeated before first reading at the B.C. legislature.
The bill proposed outlawing gender transition surgery for minors in B.C. and bar the use of public funds to provide or promote puberty blockers or gender transition surgery to minors. It would have given parents the right to sue doctors up to 25 years later if their children suffered mental or physical harm as a result of gender transition medical services provided.
‘Billboard Chris’
Armstrong’s bill was introduced following a morning presentation by Chris Elston, known as “Billboard Chris,” at an event in the legislature building. Elston addressed an audience of around 100 about the mental and physical dangers of child gender transition. Elston is known for going to public places and having conversations with passersby while wearing billboards with messages opposing child gender transition.Elston said schools shouldn’t be promoting gender transition to children.
“Teachers are engaging in what is effectively a psychological intervention with these children with no training to do so,” Elston said.
Medical professionals themselves should be taking the lead in stopping gender transition procedures for children, he said.
“It shouldn’t take politicians to put a stop to this practice, because the medical organizations themselves should be stopping it, like what happened in Finland. It was the pediatricians, not the politicians, that stopped it in Finland. Same thing in Sweden, where they conducted a systematic review of all the scientific literature,” Elston said.
“But when medical bodies fail to uphold their Hippocratic Oath to pursue no harm, it does become the job of government.”

NDP’s Rejection
Responding to the introduction of Armstrong’s bill, NDP MLA and B.C. Deputy Premier and Attorney General Niki Sharma said the bill was spreading “intolerance” and “hate.” She accused OneBC of “racism” and trying to interfere with the relationship between children, parents, and their doctors.In remarks at the legislature, OneBC Leader Dallas Brodie recounted the story of a father she met whose 8-year-old son was encouraged by school staff “to believe he was actually a girl” and was called by new pronouns without his father’s knowledge. Such situations leave parents “justifiably enraged,” Brodie said.
Sharma dismissed the concerns as “disproven conspiracy theories,” saying it was “another sad day in the B.C. legislature when conservative politicians are trying to dictate what parents should be doing and decisions they should be making with love and support for their children.”
At a press conference, Brodie said Sharma was “name-calling” to avoid discussing the issue on its merit.
“We have known that the NDP resorts to name-calling and accusing us of some other bigger agenda, and this is becoming a pattern,” Brodie said.
The B.C. NDP did not respond to a request for comment by publication time.
Saskatchewan and Alberta
In August 2023, Saskatchewan put new policies in effect requiring a parent or guardian’s consent for students under 16 to change their names or pronouns at school. When the legislation faced legal challenge by activist groups, the provincial government used the notwithstanding clause of Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms to pass the law.Alberta’s laws are being challenged in court, with the provincial government saying it may use the notwithstanding clause if it has to in order to maintain the laws.







