Close X
Tuesday, October 8, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Police Issue Policy On How To Interact With Transgender People

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2016 01:24 PM
    VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Police Department has issued a new policy for interacting with transgender people after it was rebuked by the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal over its treatment of a trans woman.
     
    The department says the policy was created with respectful criteria for the identification of trans people and its officers will receive training around the new procedures.
     
    The changes come after the tribunal awarded Angela Dawson $15,000 for injuries to her dignity, feelings and self-respect after officers referred to her by her legal name, Jeffrey, and a male pronoun and refused to allow her post-surgery care while she spent a night in jail.
     
     
    A 17-minute video entitled "Walk With Me," outlining the difficulties many trans people go through in daily life, was developed by the department and will be shown to all VPD employees.
     
    The department says the policy has been endorsed by both the Trans Alliance Society Board and the City of Vancouver's LGBTQ2 Advisory Committee.
     
    The department's director of planning, research and audit, Drazen Manojlovic, says the policy strikes a balance between officers' legal responsibilities to verify identities, while being respectful of a trans person's right to be referred to by the name and gender they have chosen.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    First Tornado Of The Year Touches Down In Ontario Farm Country: Environment Canada

    First Tornado Of The Year Touches Down In Ontario Farm Country: Environment Canada
    Environment Canada says the first Canadian tornado of 2016 touched down earlier this week in southwestern Ontario.

    First Tornado Of The Year Touches Down In Ontario Farm Country: Environment Canada

    B.C. LNG Approval Deadline Next Week 'Premature' As Feds Review Documents

    B.C. LNG Approval Deadline Next Week 'Premature' As Feds Review Documents
    A glut of new documents is undermining an approval deadline for the proposed $36 billion Pacific NorthWest liquefied natural gas project planned for British Columbia's northern coast.

    B.C. LNG Approval Deadline Next Week 'Premature' As Feds Review Documents

    Toronto Daycare Operators Get 30 Days Jail Time And $15,000 Fine After Toddler's Death

    Toronto Daycare Operators Get 30 Days Jail Time And $15,000 Fine After Toddler's Death
    Ruslan Panfilova, his wife Olena Panfilova and her daughter Karyna Rabadanova were found guilty in February of operating an illegal daycare and were convicted under Ontario's Day Nurseries Act.

    Toronto Daycare Operators Get 30 Days Jail Time And $15,000 Fine After Toddler's Death

    B.C. NDP Proposes New Laws To Tackle 'Out Of Control' Vancouver Real Estate Affordability Crisis

    NDP Leader John Horgan says people can't afford to live in Metro Vancouver, which hurts the vibrancy of the city and impacts the economy.

    B.C. NDP Proposes New Laws To Tackle 'Out Of Control' Vancouver Real Estate Affordability Crisis

    B.C. Liberal Party Reinstates Executive Director Charged In Ontario Scandal

    itish Columbia's Liberal Party is bringing back its executive director even as she faces criminal charges connected to a long-running document deletion scandal in former Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty's office.

    B.C. Liberal Party Reinstates Executive Director Charged In Ontario Scandal

    Tech Company Pitches On System To Link Veterans With Private Sector Jobs

    Tech Company Pitches On System To Link Veterans With Private Sector Jobs
    Monster Government Solutions has been showcasing its military skills translator software, hoping the Canadian government will follow the lead of the Obama Administration in the U.S. by utilizing the program through Veterans Affairs, and possibly National Defence.

    Tech Company Pitches On System To Link Veterans With Private Sector Jobs