Jacques was best known for two notable sex books: On The Safe Edge: A Manual for SM Play[1][2][3][4][5] and Alternate Sources.[6][7][8]
Biography
Jacques attended St. Joseph's College, Birkfield, Ipswich, a school run by the De La Salle brothers, from 1967 to 1974. He earned his degree in Physics from the Imperial College of Science and Technology in 1978, thereby becoming an associate of the Royal College of Science (A.R.C.S.) and graduate the Institute of Physics (GradInstP.). From 1979, he worked for Seismograph Service Ltd. as a field seismologist off the coast of the French Congo and Gabon and in England, for two and a half years, before designing the acceptance test specifications and procedure for the missile management system of a European aircraft for Computing Devices Company, in Hastings, East Sussex. In 1981, he emigrated to Toronto to work at Spar Aerospace for nine years on an infrared surveillance system for the Canadian and U.S. navies. Subsequently, he moved to SmartStar and Orapro (database companies) in Toronto, as head of technical support and then director of consulting. He was CIO at Stott Pilates (now Merrithew Health and Fitness) for three years (1998–2001), and continues to provide IT consulting to the company.
Later
He co-founded Toronto's Safer SM Education seminar series in 1991, along with co-authors of On The Safe Edge, Dr. Dale McCarthy (1937–2007, co-founder of the AIDS Committee of Toronto (ACT)), Michael Hamilton, and Sniffer (the latter being a dentist and teacher at the University of Toronto), and both organised and presented the seminars for thirteen years (1991–2004). The seminars led to both the publication of On The Safe Edge and updated versions of Safer SM (a BDSM safer sex pamphlet published by the AIDS Committee of Toronto).[9][10][11][12]
Jacques edited and published Gay Guide Canada[13] and Canada's Gay Guide, 1998[14] and 1999.[15] He also sponsored the production and printing Toronto's Pride Guide in 1996,[16] 1997,[17] and 1998[18] on behalf of Pride Toronto. In 2001[19] and 2002,[20] he edited and published the souvenir guide for the Mr. Leatherman Toronto Competition.
Jacques has contributed articles, interviews, and expert advice to dozens of magazines, newspapers, and radio and television stations in North America and Europe.
Jacques served as an expert witness in the 1998 "Bondage Bungalow" case in north Toronto. On The Safe Edge was cited in the submissions by the BDSM community in London, England to the Law Commission as it prepared its report "Consent in the Criminal Law" (consultation paper 139), as a result of the Spanner case.
In 2009, Jacques was featured in the fourth Canadian edition of the sexuality textbook Understanding Human Sexuality.[21]
Jacques's most recent publication is BDSM: Safer Kinky Sex, in both English and French, for the AIDS Committee of Toronto. It is the third major revision of a safer sex education pamphlet created and edited by the Toronto BDSM community, this time large enough to take the form of a booklet. He also edited the two variants of the previous version (see References). Jacques was invited by ACT to launch the French version in Montréal, in May 2011.
Mr. Leatherman Toronto Competition Francis Robichaud Memorial award for consistent significant contributions to Toronto's gay and lesbian community, 2001[20]
AIDS Committee of Toronto, 10 years outstanding service, 2002
^Jacques, Trevor; Pride Toronto (1996). Pride Guide '96 (1996 ed.). Toronto: Alternate Sources, WholeSM Publishing. p. 98. ISBN1-895857-13-9. ISSN1205-8017. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
^Pride Toronto (1997). "Pride Guide '97". Pride Guide (1997 ed.). Toronto: Pride Toronto: 36. ISSN1205-8017. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
^Pride Toronto (1998). "Pride Guide '98". Pride Guide (1998 ed.). Toronto: Pride Toronto: 36. ISSN1205-8017. Retrieved 18 December 2013.