Close X
Thursday, September 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police Racial Profiling 'Corrosive,' Ontario Human Rights Commission Says

The Canadian Press, 11 Jun, 2015 12:16 PM
    TORONTO — Racially biased policing is destructive and counterproductive and should be stamped out immediately, the Ontario Human Rights Commission said Thursday.
     
    In its annual report, the commission called on the Toronto police force to end carding — stopping and questioning people without any specific criminal investigative purpose — but said the practice is only part of a larger racism picture.
     
    "Racial profiling has a deeply corrosive impact, especially on young black and indigenous men," the report states.
     
    "When racial profiling happens, neighbourhoods become places of distrust and fear."
     
    The commission's report comes amid ongoing controversy about carding. Although police deny any bias, the practice has drawn widespread condemnation for disproportionately targeting young black men.
     
    On Wednesday, a black law student who has been stopped 30 times launched a charter challenge to carding. After initially defending it, Mayor John Tory recently called carding "toxic."
     
    However, Mark Saunders, the force's new police chief who is black, says stopping and questioning people on the streets can enhance public safety. Such stops are "intelligence-based" and help investigate the "criminal element," he said.
     
    "When it's done right, it is lawful," Saunders told CBC radio's Metro Morning Thursday.
     
    In an interview, interim rights commissioner Ruth Goba said she hoped the mayor's change of heart may spur police to change their ways.
     
    At the same time, she suggested, the Toronto Police Service has not been responsive to the commission's racial profiling concerns.
     
    "We have given a lot of advice to the (service) and it hasn't been implemented in any meaningful way," Goba said.
     
    The commission's report calls racial profiling by Toronto police "a recognized problem in need of an effective solution." It urges the police services board — which has essentially waffled and flip-flopped on the issue — to make major changes to carding or scrap the policy entirely.
     
    At minimum, the commission says, police services need to:
     
    — Guide and limit officer discretion to stop and question people
     
    — Require officers to tell people they stop about their right to leave and not answer questions
     
    — Collect race-based data to identify bias
     
    — Provide transparency through receipts
     
    — Purge carding data that lacks a non-discriminatory explanation
     
    Goba said apart from developing comprehensive anti-bias policies and offering better training for officers, police services need to punish officers who indulge in racial profiling.
     
    Among other things, the annual report also warns that discrimination against pregnant women or nursing mothers continues despite clear laws.
     
    "We continue to see regular reports of women not getting hired or losing their jobs because they are pregnant, or getting fired when they take or return from a maternity leave," the report states.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    VIBC Not To Hold Future Vancouver Bhangra Events In June To Respect Sikh Sentiments

    VIBC Not To Hold Future Vancouver Bhangra Events In June To Respect Sikh Sentiments
    The announcement came after there was uproar over the event as it coincided with the June 1984 Indian Army's assault on The Golden Temple.

    VIBC Not To Hold Future Vancouver Bhangra Events In June To Respect Sikh Sentiments

    Man Arrested After Woman Found Dead In New Westminster: Police

    Man Arrested After Woman Found Dead In New Westminster: Police
    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Police say a woman is dead and a man is in custody after an apparent fight in New Westminster, B.C.

    Man Arrested After Woman Found Dead In New Westminster: Police

    Help Us Solve Mystery Involving Man In Critical Condition: Vancouver Police

    Help Us Solve Mystery Involving Man In Critical Condition: Vancouver Police
    Police say that around 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, a 58-year-old man watched a hockey game at home and then went to the Kitsilano Beach area.

    Help Us Solve Mystery Involving Man In Critical Condition: Vancouver Police

    Vancouver-Based Special Effects Artist, Katie Chappell, Killed By Lion In South Africa

    Vancouver-Based Special Effects Artist, Katie Chappell, Killed By Lion In South Africa
    A woman who was killed by a lion in South Africa has been identified on social media as Kate Chappell, a 29-year-old visual effects editor who lived in Vancouver.

    Vancouver-Based Special Effects Artist, Katie Chappell, Killed By Lion In South Africa

    Toss Cases Of 375 Female RCMP Members Alleging Discrimination: B.C. Lawyer

    Toss Cases Of 375 Female RCMP Members Alleging Discrimination: B.C. Lawyer
    Mitchell Taylor is arguing the federal government is not directly liable for alleged harassment and bullying of former and current RCMP employees who are seeking to have a class-action lawsuit certified.

    Toss Cases Of 375 Female RCMP Members Alleging Discrimination: B.C. Lawyer

    Next Chapter In Case Of B.C. Couple Found Guilty Of Terror Holds New Challenges

    Simon Fraser University criminology professor David MacAlister says John Nuttall and Amanda Korody will have to convince a judge they wouldn't have carried out their bomb plot without police involvement.

    Next Chapter In Case Of B.C. Couple Found Guilty Of Terror Holds New Challenges