
ellie ade kur (she/her) works with Maggie’s Toronto Sex Workers Action Project and has run a number of sex worker mutual aid projects in Toronto, ON including rapid response, court and jail support efforts for incarcerated sex workers; dedicated spaces celebrating Black queer/trans sex workers and the politics of Black Liberaton organizing in sex worker justice movements; and through the COVID-19 pandemic supported Maggie’s in launching a series of free supports including a COVID-19 Emergency Survival Fund, a Black Sex Worker Emergency Survival Fund, free legal supports, food boxes and culturally-specific supports for Black and Indigenous sex workers in Toronto’s downtown east end. She is a graduate student in human Geography at the University of Toronto where she studies the policing and regulation of sex work in Toronto and sex workers’ activist histories.

Danielle Allard is an assistant professor at the School of Library and Information Studies at the University of Alberta. Danielle’s training is in Libraries and Information Sciences, and in Archival studies. Prior to taking up her position at UofA, she worked with Shawna Ferris, Amy Lebovitch, and a team of researchers and community consultants to develop the Sex Work Database and two other distinct but related digital activist archives called the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Database (MMIWD) and the Post-Apology Residential School Database (PARSD). She oversees much of the technical work involved with the Sex Work Database.
Sessions: Radical recordkeeping to counter violent narratives. 10:40am – 11:20am Thursday, May 6th

Asijiki Coalition for the Decriminalisation of Sex Work (“Asijiki”) is a group of sex workers, activists, advocates and human rights defenders who advocate for law reform for the decriminalisation of sex work in South Africa. Becoming a supporter is open to organisations and individuals and targeted at members of civil society from all sectors including gender, women’s rights, human rights, legal and public health. Asijiki’s principal aim is the full decriminalisation of sex work in South Africa. Currently, full criminalisation is the law – this has been in place since 1957, with clients being specifically criminalised since 2007. This has resulted in high levels of violence, a lack of access to basic services including health services and abuse of sex workers, including by police officers.
Sessions: How police cause harm and solutions to this & Decriminalization of sex work: views from South Africa 10:00am-10:40am Thursday, May 6th

Tammy Berger/Performer & Artist – I am from Tiger, Thunder Bay and Lightning. I am from being a SWAN and the smell of fresh air after it rains. From the sounds of people laughing, my bed and the forest. I am from my mom’s cinnamon buns and the Pow Wow. I am from the sun through a rainbow. ~ Tammy is very happy to be in this production. She is the proud mother of three beautiful children. Tammy would like to thank everyone who came here today for all of their support!
Sessions: ArmHer. 2:30pm – 3:30pm Friday May 7th

Sarah Broad is a Community Researcher and SWWAC member who has a background in social work and community development. She has been involved in activism for most of her life, having grown up in a feminist home with parents who were both active in their student and labour movements in Northeastern Ontario. Sarah believes strongly in human rights, climate justice and in building culturally safe models of community care that are rooted in harm reduction and that help to facilitate self-determination as well as a sense of belonging. It is for this reason that Sarah supports labour rights for sex workers and the full decriminalization of sex work. Sarah sat on the Prostitution Offender Program Oversight Committee from 2017-2020 as a representative of SWWAC. Sarah is grateful for relationships, hedgehogs and tea.
Sessions: John School in Winnipeg: Framework for a Critical Inquiry. 1:10pm – 2:10pm Thursday May 6th

Laurel Cassels is a queer, white, feminist, mother, artist, and program coordinator at a busy Winnipeg Community Resource Centre. She carries lived experience of poverty, drug use, homelessness, sex work and a good deal of classist and gendered violence. For about 10 years, Laurel has been working in Community-Based NGOs, in an attempt to make space for folks experiencing intersectional marginalization in Winnipeg’s notoriously gritty inner-city. Currently, Laurel is the facilitator of a “safe space” for sex workers (called OPSS) that delivers services, applying a lens that includes harm reduction, anti-oppressive and trauma-informed practices. SexWorkers Claiming Agency, Resilience and Safety (or S.C.A.R.S.) was created by the participants of this program as a means of defining and organizing our thoughts, ideas and feelings around violence experienced by sex workers every day. It has since grown into a passionate voice for sex workers and the folks who love and support them, identifying needed changes and demanding that they be acknowledged and addressed. You can contact laurel@dmsmca.ca if you would like to learn more about OPSS, S.C.A.R.S. or ways in which you can support local sex workers and fight stigma and violence against this well-loved, important and valuable segment of our community
Sessions: SCARS Zine! 10:00am – 10:30am Friday May 7th

Centre for Gender and Sexual Health Equity (CGSHE)
AESHA (An Evaluation of Sex Worker Health Access) at CGSHE is a community-based research project that includes a quantitative cohort and qualitative/ethnographic arm. As part of the quantitative arm, AESHA operates a community-based prospective cohort that involves semi-annual questionnaires and sexual health research visits with our community-based staff. The qualitative arm is focused on documenting the lived-experiences of sex workers of all genders and third parties who provide services for sex workers (e.g. receptionists, venue managers, owners, and security personnel).
Sessions: By Us, For Us: Examining Research from Metro Vancouver & Envisioning Sex Worker Involvement in Occupational Health Research. 3:00pm-4:00pm Wednesday May 5th

Claudyne Chevrier
Sessions: History of Sex Work in Winnipeg. 11:20am – 12:00pm Thursday May 6th

Jenn Clamen has been working at Stella, l’amie de Maimie since 2002 and is the national coordinator of the Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform which is an alliance of 25 sex worker rights groups leading a national strategy on sex work law reform in Canada.
Sessions: See you in court! Sex workers challenging PCEPA. 10:00am-11:00am Wednesday, May 5th

Susan Davis is the Coordinator of the BCCEC, an advocate of 19 years, a sex worker of 35 years, a partner in the social enterprise – The Naked Truth and epic trouble maker! The BC Coalition of Experiential Communities are a consortium of sex worker activists mandated as a mechanism to support the development of legislation and policies; peer driven programs and services; and work toward the elimination of oppressive systems that create harm within the sex industry.
The Naked Truth is a social enterprise committed to developing safety, autonomy, opportunities and communication in the Adult Entertainment Community.
Sessions: Local politics as the path forward. 12:30pm – 1:00pm Thursday May 6th

Ann De Shalit is a PhD candidate in the Policy Studies program at Ryerson University in Toronto, Ontario. Her research focuses on Canadian and international anti-trafficking policies, labour and migrant justice, and sex work studies.
Sessions: Exploring anti-trafficking responses in Ontario: Evidence of carceral protectionism in social service provision. 2:35pm – 3:00pm Wednesday, May 5th

Anne Dutrisac/Performer & Artist – I am from thunderstorms and achieving my PSW certificate. From my old man and my dog. I am from Vietnamese lemongrass chicken. From Canada’s Wonderland and Science North. I am from the love I have for coming to the SWANS group and spending Christmas with my parents, brother and sister. I am from the sight of Niagara Falls. I am from vanilla and coconut.
Sessions: ArmHer. 2:30pm – 3:30pm Friday May 7th

Shawna Ferris is an associate professor in Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of Manitoba. She researches and teaches in sex work/prostitution studies, and in feminist anti-violence and anti-colonialism theories and activisms. Shawna and Amy Lebovitch’s co-edited collection, Sex Work Activism in Canada, was published by ARP Books in 2019. Shawna’s book, Street Sex Work and Canadian Cities, was published in 2015. In addition to the Sex Work Activist Histories Project, Shawna works on two other community digital archiving projects that engage Indigenous anti-violence activisms and recently joined a project investigating John Schools in Manitoba.
Sessions: Radical recordkeeping to counter violent narratives. 10:40am – 11:20am Thursday, May 6th

Sarah Gartshore Ajiijak Ndoodem/Playwright & Director – I am from Nibi and Story Tellers. I am from the words of Kweok and writing every day. From tacos and the sight of my children sleeping. From the smell of new born babies. I am from under the trees and my mom’s kitchen table
Sessions: ArmHer. 2:30pm – 3:30pm Friday May 7th

Tracy Gregory/Performer & Artist – I am from anywhere with my Lover. I am from salt water and beach finds. I am from the smell of the catch of the day and the Atlantic Ocean. I am from the sound of deep beats and wind chimes. I am from homemade baking made by chubby little hands. I am from family pictures with a beautiful old mall Santa. I am from forgiveness, resilience and “just show the fuck up.” I am from learning that Love is a safe place to fall. –XXX– Tracy is a sex work advocate, activist and ally. She gives special thanks to her family for supporting her work, and for the women of SWANS for their courage, wisdom and fierce commitment to making their voices heard. Gratitude for the generous sharing of stories, time, expertise and energy. A dream come true xox Nothing About Us Without Us!
Sessions: ArmHer. 2:30pm – 3:30pm Friday May 7th

Shelly Grigg/Performer & Artist – I am from sun light reflectors and from the moon lit night. I am from the pride of being a bus driver. I am from the love of my dogs and the smell of baby powder. From my bed and from camping. I am from the joy of family gatherings. ~ Shelly is a very kind, free hearted person who is there to help anyone who needs it and she is excited and proud to be a part of this project. Her hope is that this project will help people to better understand why people might choose sex work. One of Shelly’s many goals is to see an end to discrimination against sex workers.
Sessions: ArmHer. 2:30pm – 3:30pm Friday May 7th

Dana Hickson is a graduate student in the department of Criminal Justice at the University of Winnipeg, and a Senior Research Assistant on the critical inquiry of the Manitoba John Schools project. Her research focuses on the ways in which governmental and non-governmental agencies have taken up the Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act in Manitoba, and how local sex worker activists respond to repressive legal regimes.
Sessions: John School in Winnipeg: Framework for a Critical Inquiry. 1:10pm – 2:10pm Thursday May 6th

C E Hoffman was born, gave birth, and tried to die in Edmonton, AB (not necessarily in that order). A sex work advocate, recorded musician, and wannabe Jungian, C E wrote their first full-length novel at 11 years old, and has been writing ever since. They’ve been published widely in print and online since 2010, have edited a poetry e-zine, Visceral Uterus, since 2012, and continue to live their best life despite struggles with mental health.
Sluts and Whores is their literary debut.
Sessions: “Prostitutes Are People Too”: Reclaiming Our Humanity. 12:00pm – 12:30pm Friday May 7th

Micheline Hughes is a PhD student in Native Studies at the University of Manitoba, and a senior Research Assistant on the Sex Work Activist Histories Project. She is a Wôpanâak woman with close familial ties to the Mi’kmaq nation. Micheline’s own research concentrates on the power of Indigenous oral tradition with a focus on Mi’kmaw Catholicism, resistance and agency, and relationships between Indigenous Peoples and colonizers. Micheline has worked for years on SWAHP and its predecessor projects, bringing and further developing key knowledges and practices for community-based relationships that facilitate meaningful community-oriented research.
Sessions: Radical recordkeeping to counter violent narratives. 10:40am – 11:20am Thursday, May 6th

Jasper Jay is a queer and whimsical unicorn who uses his imagination to stir up creative things. He is a training expressive arts therapist & spiritual care provider, makes children’s books, performs drag, hosts art workshops, and runs a bi+ arts therapy group. Jay believes that art, social justice, and healing are interconnected. Drawing from his own lived experiences, he hopes to carve out spaces for creative empowerment.
Web: jaybryan.art Insta: @jaybryanart FB: jaybryanart
Sessions: Art as Resistance: Reclaiming sex work narratives through zine making. 10:30am – 12:00pm Friday May 7th

Jonny moved from Vancouver to Winnipeg 12 years ago. Finishing their degree at the university of Winnipeg was a highlight – joining SWWAC (sex workers of Winnipeg action coalition) 5 … maybe 7 years ago was a natural progression in their activism path. Jonny currently administrates the Bad Date, aggressors and harassers reporting system in Winnipeg, has recently been involved in a community needs assessment for a safety call system and presents on the topics of sex work, safety and harm reduction. Jonny also excels at mobilizing community knowledge through their work as a researcher and facilitator.
Sessions: John School in Winnipeg: Framework for a Critical Inquiry. 1:10pm – 2:10pm Thursday May 6th

Sandra Ka Hon Chu is a lawyer and the Director of Research and Advocacy at the HIV Legal Network, an allied member group of the Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform. Sandra has led the HIV Legal Network’s interventions in two other challenges to sex work prohibitions Canada (Attorney General) v. Bedford and Canada (Attorney General) v. Downtown Eastside Sex Workers United Against Violence Society and is supporting the Alliance in its current Charter challenge.
Sessions: See you in court! Sex workers challenging PCEPA. 10:00am-11:00am Wednesday, May 5th

Sarah King Gold/Performer & Artist – I am from chicken broth and seafood spaghetti. From the smell of tomato leaves on my fingers and the joy on my children’s faces. I am from tarot cards and paint. From the sound of waterfalls roaring and the screeching of trains. I am from Fio and Ada and River. I am from the jagged rock on Wind Rush point and the gentle fields of Wind Rush farm and their expansive skies.
Sessions: ArmHer. 2:30pm – 3:30pm Friday May 7th

Amy Lebovitch is a sex worker and artist, with a love for cats, who is currently living with two on the prairies. She is a public speaker, educator and activist for the human rights of sex workers and people who use drugs, fighting for the full decriminalization and de-stigmatization of sex work and all drugs. Currently conspiring with Sex Professionals of Canada (SPOC) and Sex Workers of Winnipeg Action Coalition (SWWAC).
Sessions: Radical recordkeeping to counter violent narratives. 10:40am – 11:20am Thursday, May 6th

Janet Lyons is a harm reduction worker in the Moss Park area of Toronto. A former sex worker Janet now coordinates a harm reduction kit making group for the All Saints Sex Worker andSubstance User Program. Together with her team, Janet assists in many areas of the All Saints program, from harm reduction outreach walks to helping out at the Sex Worker Friday morning community breakfast.
Sessions: Harm Reduction Kit-Making Group Photo Documentation 9:30am – 10:00 Friday May 7th

Sylvia Machat – As a White, queer, cisgender health researcher focused on sex workers’ occupational health and safety, Sylvia strives to center the diverse voices of sex workers in sex work research. In addition to her work as a Research Assistant with AESHA, Sylvia is currently working as an evaluator for a sex worker needs assessment through the Transitions Metro Vancouver Consortium, which is a collaboration of multiple sex worker-serving organizations. Sylvia was born to refugee parents on and continues to live in the unceded (stolen) territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and Sel̓íl̓witulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations
Sessions: By Us, For Us: Examining Research from Metro Vancouver & Envisioning Sex Worker Involvement in Occupational Health Research 3:00pm – 4:00pm Wednesday May 5th

Jamie Magnusson is an allied harm reduction worker, trained by Janet. They help out on harm reduction outreach walks and assists wherever needed on site at community breakfasts. Jamie is also a photographer.
Sessions: Harm Reduction Kit-Making Group Photo Documentation 9:30am – 10:00 Friday May 7th

Bronwyn McBride is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Centre for Gender and Sexual Health Equity. She completed her PhD in July 2020, which evaluated the impacts of Canadian end-demand sex work laws and immigration policies on health and human rights among im/migrant women in sex work in Vancouver. Bronwyn is also a regular volunteer at the Wish Drop-In centre for street-based sex workers and a committed advocate for all sex workers’ labour rights.
Sessions: By Us, For Us: Examining Research from Metro Vancouver & Envisioning Sex Worker Involvement in Occupational Health Research 3:00pm – 4:00pm Wednesday May 5th

Lyra McKee: Lyra (she/her/hers) is Community Co-Executive Director at PACE Society, a grassroots non-profit in the Dowtown Eastside of so-called Vancouver for, by, and with sex workers of all genders. At PACE, Lyra’s work involves communications, social media, advocacy, community and fund development as well as strategic planning. She holds a Master of Arts in Gender, Race, Sexuality & Social Justice from the University of British Columbia, as well as lived experience as a trans women and sex worker. Lyra is a white settler from the US who moved to the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh nearly six years ago.
Sessions: BC Bad Date and Aggressor Reporting Project. 2:10pm – 2:50pm Thursday May 6th

Cait Mitchell/Documentarian & Artist – I am from saunas and lake water. From bergamot, cedar, and cardamom. I am from chamber music, distortion, pre-dawn coffee, and birdsong. From jet fuel and hydro fields. I am from meals shared around a table and Mumma’s piano. ~ Cait runs with a fairly small pack and is grateful for the opportunity to howl with this group of passionate, intelligent, strong, spirited women. She sends much love to her big little family whose support has made her commitment to this important and meaningful work possible.
Sessions: ArmHer. 2:30pm – 3:30pm Friday May 7th

Marie Pollock, Spirit name Blue Butterfly/Performer & Artist – I am from Baby G and Hugo Boss. I am from the sights of nature and the pride of my life, my children. I am from poetry, European food and Christmas. I am from rain. ~ ArmHer excerpt: See when she was a wee girl, God leaned in to put that gold dust on her eyes, and said “You, my beloved, have the most beautiful eyes. They’ll see like I do and I know that’s a lot to take” then God laughed and laughed, finishing with “But just imagine, oh imagine, the colours we are going to make!”
Sessions: ArmHer. 2:30pm – 3:30pm Friday May 7th

Katrin Roots is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminology at the University of Manitoba. Her work takes a critical lens to Canada’s anti-trafficking efforts, focusing on the policing and prosecution of activities labelled as ‘human trafficking’.
Sessions: John School in Winnipeg: Framework for a Critical Inquiry. 1:10pm – 2:10pm Thursday May 6th

The Safe Harbour Outreach Project (SHOP) is the only sex worker advocacy program in Newfoundland and Labrador. Our mandate at SHOP is to advocate for the human rights of all women who have engaged in sex work across our city and province, both on an individual and collective level. We serve women for whom sex work is an occupation. We also serve women who are in the industry not by choice, who are wishing to make changes in their lives. We support everyone who identifies as a current or former sex worker, regardless of industry sector area – this means that we are here for dancers, street level workers, in and out call workers, web cam workers, phone workers, independent escorts, those who work in porn, massage parlours, and more.
Sessions: Rights from The Rock: Sex Workers Struggles and Successes from Newfoundland 11:00am-11:45am Wednesday May 5th

Tara Santini is a Montreal-based lawyer working with various human rights groups including several members of the Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform. She is also co-counsel for the Alliance in their current Charter Challenge to certain criminal provisions related to sex work. She has worked directly with sex workers for over 2 decades, including building capacity for meaningful participation and leadership in litigation and law reform.
Sessions: See you in court! Sex workers challenging PCEPA. 10:00am-11:00am Wednesday, May 5th

Kathy Savage/Performer & Artist – I am from the sight of the Rocky mountains and the smell of L’air de temps. From my bed and my backyard, my dog Lexi and the sound of a saxophone. From my pride of have completed my TTOA training. I am from my jewelry, Christmas and apple crisp. ~ Kathy is very proud to be a part of Project ArmHer. She has thoroughly enjoyed working on the script and would like to thank all of the supporters, cast and facilitators for their kind hearts and patience. Kathy loves the SWANS group and all of the support that she receives from the women involved.
Sessions: ArmHer. 2:30pm – 3:30pm Friday May 7th

Halena Seiferling: Halena (she/her/hers) is the Executive Director of Living in Community, a non-profit society in BC. LIC brings together diverse stakeholders to collaboratively improve the health and safety of sex workers through education, policy advocacy, and community development, centering the needs and experiences of sex workers. LIC coordinates the BC Sex Work Support Service Network which brings together sex worker-serving organizations across BC for shared learning and advocacy. Halena holds a Masters in Public Policy from Simon Fraser University, and is also a dancer and artist.
Sessions: BC Bad Date and Aggressor Reporting Project. 2:10pm – 2:50pm Thursday May 6th

Caty Simon is a sex worker liaison for & a leadership team member of Urban Survivors Union, the U.S. national drug users union. She’s co-organizer of Whose Corner Is It Anyway, a harm reduction, mutual aid, political education, & organizing group by/for low-income/street-based/survival sex workers who use stimulants/opioids and/or experience housing insecurity. From 2013-2020, she was co-editor of Tits and Sass, a US media site by/for sex workers. TAS was quoted, linked & reposted in the New Yorker, the New York Times, Jezebel, the New Inquiry etc. Caty’s writing has appeared in The Forward, VICE, The Influence, Alternet, rawstory, & refinery29.
Sessions: Root Causes, Resources, And Our Survival: What American Drug-Using Sex Workers And Trafficking Survivors Actually Need. 12:00pm-12:40pm Wednesday, May 5th

Kate Sinclaire – Kate is a porno tour de force. Living in Winnipeg, Manitoba, she has been working in porn in front and behind the camera for the last 15 years – founding Cherrystems.com and her production and distribution company, Ciné Sinclaire. Her films centre queer identity in a documentary style that works to represent sex in the way that people have it (and that doesn’t just mean “soft and pretty”). Her speaking work centres around media literacy, comprehensive sex education, and emphasizing the harms that come from censorship and prohibition both for consumers of porn and those who work in the industry. She’s a member of SWWAC and is generally pretty happy to meet you. @MsKateSinclaire on all the platforms.
Sessions: -Power and Porn. 2:50pm – 3:50pm Thursday, May 6th
-Nuit Raunch Online! 7:30 – 8:30pm Friday May 7th

Zee St. James is an organizer with ANSWER Detroit and a community navigator with Michigan Liberation. They are also a sex worker liaison for the Urban Survivor’s Union, the national drug users union.
Sessions: Root Causes, Resources, And Our Survival: What American Drug-Using Sex Workers And Trafficking Survivors Actually Need. 12:00pm-12:40pm Wednesday, May 5th

Stella is a sex worker-led organization whose primary mission is to improve quality of life and working conditions for female-identified cis and trans sex workers, to educate the greater public on the different ways that sex work happens as well as about our lived experiences as sex workers, so that sex workers might also enjoy and benefit from the same rights to safety and security that are commonplace for other people. Since our birth in 1995, Stella has been a source and symbol of strength, creativity, resilience and community for sex workers in Montreal. Despite several attempts of nay-sayers to invisibilize sex work from the city, sex worker rights organizations run by and for sex workers – like Stella – ensure a space and voice for the respect for the rights of people working in the sex industry and those selling and trading sex.
Sessions: Living in Sin Gets You The Riches / La vie du vices rende riches: Maimie l’amie de Stella. 1:00pm – 1:40pm Friday May 7th

Valerie Webber – Valerie Webber is a PhD candidate in the Community Health & Humanities at Memorial University of Newfoundland. She holds degrees in sexuality studies, medical anthropology, and public health, and her dissertation looks at the politics of occupational health in porn production. Valerie has worked in the porn industry in various capacities for 15+ years (performer, studio manager, film crew, production assistant, voice actor, writer). She is active in sex worker rights, sexual health, and queer justice movements. Her writing appears in journals such as Porn Studies, Sexualities, Critical Public Health, Sexuality & Culture, and Forum: Qualitative Social Research. @publicpubics.
Sessions: Power and Porn. 2:50pm – 3:50pm Thursday, May 6th

Sandra Wesley is the executive director of Stella, l’amie de Maimie, an organization by and for sex workers located in Montreal since 1995. Stella aims to improve living and working conditions of sex workers through direct services, education and advocacy. She is also president of TOMS, Montreal’s network of HIV organizations, co-president of Montreal Sans Sida, Montreal’s UNAIDS Fast-Track Cities initiative and a board member of the Fédération des Femmes du Québec.
Sessions: Reflections on sex work and harm reduction discourse. 1:10pm-1:50pm Wednesday, May 5th

Winnipeg Police Cause Harm, also referred to as WPCH, is a community-centred, volunteer-based organized group committed to defunding and abolishing the Winnipeg Police Service. WPCH advocates for the complete defunding and abolition – not reform – of the WPS and the reallocation of their funds to sustainable, community-led alternatives including public housing, community-based crisis response, food security, harm reduction, public transit, substance use and mental health resources, as well as 24/7 safe spaces and low-barrier shelters.
Sessions: What are John Schools? 1:10pm – 2:10pm Thursday, May 6th

Alison Wood/Performer & Artist – I am from the bush, from strawberries and the sound of water. I am from sweet candy, my son Jordan and sunsets. I am from love. ~ Alison is a sex work advocate. She is blessed with a son named Jordan who has changed her life. Alison has the support of her parents Earl and Karen and the best sister ever, Melissa. It has been an honour to be a part of this great project that seeks to end discrimination against sex workers. Thank you for your support!
Sessions: ArmHer. 2:30pm – 3:30pm Friday May 7th