Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario To Regulate Controversial Police Stops, Known In Toronto As Carding

The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2015 11:45 AM
    ORONTO — Ontario's Liberal government will bring in regulations to standardize police street checks, a controversial tactic known in Toronto as carding, but advocates against the practice say that's not enough.
     
    Those advocates say the practice is arbitrary and amounts to racial profiling and believe it's not something that can be reformed through regulations, but should be banned outright.
     
    Community Safety Minister Yasir Naqvi says it's not acceptable for police to stop and question a member of a racialized community for no reason then record that person's information in a database.
     
    But when asked why he wouldn't eliminate police street checks altogether, Naqvi said it's important both for police to be able to engage with the communities and that they be able to investigate any suspicious activity.
     
    Desmond Cole, a prominent activist against carding, says he's fine with police having informal conversations with members of their communities and he's fine with police questioning people in formal investigations, but he says if people are not suspected of a crime police should not be documenting them.
     
    The provincial government will be holding consultations over the summer with community organizations, police, civil liberties groups and the public before bringing in regulations in the fall.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. SPCA Finds Owner Of Emaciated Husky Found Wandering In Maple Ridge

    B.C. SPCA Finds Owner Of Emaciated Husky Found Wandering In Maple Ridge
    MAPLE RIDGE, B.C. — The B.C. SPCA says it has identified the owner of a severely emaciated Siberian husky who had been eating gravel and dirt to stay alive.

    B.C. SPCA Finds Owner Of Emaciated Husky Found Wandering In Maple Ridge

    Blackouts In Small BC Towns Of Kitimat And Terrace After Record-Breaking Snowfall

    Blackouts In Small BC Towns Of Kitimat And Terrace After Record-Breaking Snowfall
    KITIMAT, B.C. — The northern British Columbia communities of Kitimat and Terrace are buried in nearly two metres of snow, as a stormy Pineapple Express weather system continues to pummel the B.C. coast.

    Blackouts In Small BC Towns Of Kitimat And Terrace After Record-Breaking Snowfall

    Talking Terrorism: Harper And Obama Sound Like Yin And Yang

    Talking Terrorism: Harper And Obama Sound Like Yin And Yang
    WASHINGTON — The last few days have shown vivid differences in the way the leaders of Canada and the United States discuss terrorism and the threat posed by Islamist fighters.

    Talking Terrorism: Harper And Obama Sound Like Yin And Yang

    Ice Climber Missing In Banff National Park Was On Military Exercise: Spokeswoman

    Ice Climber Missing In Banff National Park Was On Military Exercise: Spokeswoman
    LAKE LOUISE, Alta. — A search and rescue technician with the Canadian military is missing in Banff National Park after being swept away in an avalanche.

    Ice Climber Missing In Banff National Park Was On Military Exercise: Spokeswoman

    Delhi Exit Polls Predict Aam Aadmi Party Win After Record Voting

    Delhi Exit Polls Predict Aam Aadmi Party Win After Record Voting
    A year after its 49-day stint in power ended abruptly, Arvind Kejriwal's AAP was set to return to power in Delhi, exit polls said Saturday after record voting in assembly elections whose outcome is bound to have national ramifications.

    Delhi Exit Polls Predict Aam Aadmi Party Win After Record Voting

    Bus Crash At No. 3 Road And Steveston Highway Knocks Out Power In Richmond

    Bus Crash At No. 3 Road And Steveston Highway Knocks Out Power In Richmond
    RICHMOND, B.C. — Thousands of homes in Richmond, B.C., were without power this morning after a transit bus crashed into a power pole at No. 3 Road and Steveston Highway.

    Bus Crash At No. 3 Road And Steveston Highway Knocks Out Power In Richmond