Obviously, a huge door opened and presented me with a chance at joining the Calgary Police Services. It was very business-like there was no yelling, no insults. I explained that was not possible and that I was going to keep going with the program. is currently the CEO and a director of Home Care Assistance, Inc., where he has served since November 2020. No more presentations until I could meet all of their demands and then seek the approval of the Human Resources officer. I was served a document from the RCMP – eight pages – that was basically a cease-and-desist order saying I had to stop immediately. I was doing it on my own time at my own expense. It was two years into being a Mountie that I did. I was not out as a gay man when I applied. I ended up being hired by the RCMP in Surrey, B.C. That's when he said, 'Have you ever tried? Why wouldn't you at least try because you have nothing to lose but potentially everything to gain?' So I did. Sothebys CEO Tad Smith has been replaced by Charles Stewart, an Altice executive hand-picked by the houses new owner, Patrick Drahi. How did you end up becoming a police officer?Īfter I ran away from home and got my own apartment, I was working in retail and restaurants and it was just a fluke encounter that at 32 years old I met someone who was a police officer. I didn't want my stepmom seeing that because I would be the one blamed for it. The two guys were gone but I could see the glass screen door was all covered in spit. When I got home, I said, 'Okay, I'm safe.' I could hear some fumbling around on the porch area. … I remember two boys once followed me after school. Sometimes I'd be allowed to come up for dinner, most of the time it was left at the top of the stairs so I'd eat it in the basement. I'd come home from school and go right to the basement, and it was a real basement with concrete walls, no TV, no radio, just a bed. Now, in the job he always wanted, the openly gay Calgary police officer is promoting Bullying Ends Here, a program of hope, writes Allan Maki. After running away at 17, Milmine struggled with his confidence and sexuality. As a kid, Tad Milmine was bullied by a hostile step-mother, ignored by a drunken father and banished to the basement of the family home in Cambridge, Ont.
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