Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Police Mull Updates To Street Checks But Find No Systemic Racism

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Sep, 2018 12:25 PM
    VANCOUVER — An internal report from the Vancouver Police Department recommends an overhaul of the use of random street checks, even though the review finds "no statistical basis" to conclude officers use the checks to discriminate against certain races.
     
     
    The report's six recommendations include calls to formalize existing street check standards, make street check data public and continue training sessions to ensure officers stay within their legal authority when conducting the checks. 
     
     
    Police Chief Adam Palmer commissioned the study following complaints earlier this year from the B.C. Civil Liberties Association and the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs about the checks, also referred to as "carding."
     
     
    During a check, a person is stopped and officers obtain and record their identification and other personal information, even though no particular offence has occurred.
     
     
    Advocacy groups wanted B.C.'s police complaint commissioner to investigate an apparent racial disparity linked to carding, pointing to data showing Indigenous people make up 15 per cent of street checks, yet form just two per cent of the population. 
     
     
    Palmer's decision to proceed with an internal review was called "problematic" by the civil liberties association but a spokesman said Wednesday that the report's recommendations show the department has acknowledged problems with carding.
     
     
    "This is a start," said Josh Paterson, the association's executive director.
     
     
    "(The police) recognize there's an issue, they recognize it's important to better understand the perception of the communities they serve in relation to their work. So they are essentially saying there is more work that needs to be done," he said in an interview.
     
     
    "We agree. What they propose here is not enough to get to the answers that are required."
     
     
    The findings of the internal report will be considered by the Vancouver Police Board at its meeting Wednesday.
     
     
    The report says the analysis does not contain anything to suggest people are checked because of their ethnicity.
     
     
    "However, there is a lot to suggest that people are checked as a result of their actions," it says.
     
     
    Street checks are used infrequently, says the report, and it calls carding a "valuable proactive policing tool for ensuring public safety."
     
     
    Police report well-being checks may account for the apparently high rate of carding of Indigenous women, which the civil liberties group said made up 21 per cent of all checks of women in 2016, although Indigenous women only account for two per cent of Vancouver's female population.
     
     
    Among the initiative proposed in the report for the carding process is a call to find a new way to record a well-being check, removing it from the tally of street checks, potentially allowing for better oversight of checks on vulnerable citizens.
     
     
    The report also seeks expansion of the Indigenous Liaison role, creating a dedicated resource for Indigenous people or those with questions about street checks, and it calls for development of a new public education initiative.
     
     
    The education component would offer details about what street checks are, and why and how they are used by police, the report says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    10-Yr-Old Saskatoon Girl Sells Lemonade To Raise Money To Help People With Cystic Fibrosis

    10-Yr-Old Saskatoon Girl Sells Lemonade To Raise Money To Help People With Cystic Fibrosis
    SASKATOON — A Saskatoon girl has turned her v stand into a non-profit business to raise money to help people with cystic fibrosis.

    10-Yr-Old Saskatoon Girl Sells Lemonade To Raise Money To Help People With Cystic Fibrosis

    Woman And Her Dog Are Missing After Hike Near British Columbia’s Jumbo Pass

    A woman and her dog have disappeared during a hike in Jumbo Pass in British Columbia's southeast.

    Woman And Her Dog Are Missing After Hike Near British Columbia’s Jumbo Pass

    RCMP To Search For Body After Man In His 40S Drowns In B.C.'s Buntzen Lake

    RCMP To Search For Body After Man In His 40S Drowns In B.C.'s Buntzen Lake
    ANMORE, B.C. — Mounties say a man in his 40s drowned in Buntzen Lake in Metro Vancouver on Tuesday.

    RCMP To Search For Body After Man In His 40S Drowns In B.C.'s Buntzen Lake

    Victoria Officer Hurt In Vehicle Crash Involving Alleged Impaired Driver: Police

    Victoria Officer Hurt In Vehicle Crash Involving Alleged Impaired Driver: Police
    A Victoria police officer is nursing injuries after a collision early Tuesday between a police van and another vehicle.

    Victoria Officer Hurt In Vehicle Crash Involving Alleged Impaired Driver: Police

    Victoria Police Say Explicit Phone Calls Aimed At Women Provincewide

    Victoria Police Say Explicit Phone Calls Aimed At Women Provincewide
    Police in Victoria say they have received more than 50 reports of unwanted sexually explicit phone calls aimed at female employees of local businesses.

    Victoria Police Say Explicit Phone Calls Aimed At Women Provincewide

    Plaque Replacing Sir John A. Macdonald Statue Defaced, Victoria Keeping Monument

    Plaque Replacing Sir John A. Macdonald Statue Defaced, Victoria Keeping Monument
    VICTORIA — An offer from Ontario to find a new home for a statue of Sir John A. Macdonald has been declined by the city of Victoria.

    Plaque Replacing Sir John A. Macdonald Statue Defaced, Victoria Keeping Monument