National Post

Civil liberties group decries ‘arbitrary’ enforcemen­t

It warns against hazy social distancing rules

- Jesse Snyder

OT TAWA • A civil liberties group is cautioning police and municipal bylaw officers against levelling increasing­ly draconian fines against people who fail to adhere to social distancing measures, as cities and towns double down on efforts to stem the spread of COVID-19.

Police and bylaw officers across Canada have issued hundreds of fines against people who break social distancing rules, turning unwitting dog walkers into social deviants and sowing confusion over what is acceptable behaviour during the pandemic.

Municipal law enforcemen­t in Halifax, Montreal and Ottawa in particular have slapped residents with harsh penalties in recent days, according to a review of fines in major cities by the National Post. City officials have fined people who rest in public parks or cross through empty soccer fields, and threatened charges against neighbours who attended a social- distancing birthday party from their cars.

“At some point this pandemic, in some jurisdicti­ons, stopped being about public health and started being about public order, because politician­s weren’t seeing the behaviour that they wanted out of their constituen­ts,” said Michael Bryant, executive director of the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n.

He warned that the still-hazy social distancing measures being enforced across the country could lead to further negligence if people feel targeted, or if government is seen to be overreachi­ng its authority. Various pundits and political observers have warned that the social fallout from overly strict isolation measures could outweigh the health risks themselves.

“When laws are unworkable or indecipher­able, people will ignore them,” Bryant said. “When enforcemen­t is unfair and arbitrary, people become less compliant and more defiant. They focus less on trying to obey the rules, and more on trying to not get caught.”

The warning comes amid mounting confusion and frustratio­n over the introducti­on of stringent social distancing rules, which have been enforced in a patchwork manner across Canadian cities and towns.

Bylaw officers in Ottawa handed out more than 40 tickets this weekend, including an $880 fine for a man who was caught walking his dog. Corey Yanofsky was fined for walking through Ottawa’s Britannia Park, which has been closed to pedestrian­s in an effort to contain the spread of the virus, according to a report by the Ottawa Citizen. Officers ticketed another Ottawa man $ 2,000 for declining to identify himself.

As of Monday morning, the Montreal Police Service had issued 67 fines at around $1,546 each, including fees. The Quebec provincial police had filed 157 reports on people as of Monday.

In the last four days alone, RCMP in Nova Scotia have fined 38 people for offences under the Nova Scotia Health Protection and Emergency Management Acts, according to a news release.

Montreal charges included fines worth $ 1,500 each against a group of 12 youth playing soccer at an outdoor field, according to a report by La Presse. Bylaw officers also threatened fines against Montreal woman Mélissa Leblanc for “disrespect­ing social distancing,” after a group of Leblanc’s friends wished her happy birthday by driving to her house and honking their car horns. Leblanc had watched the celebratio­n through the window of her home, according to the La Presse report.

Toronto police issued nine tickets over the weekend, and bylaw officers issued one ticket, according to the city.

Fines in Western cities have also been on the rise.

The Regina Police Service, for its part, issued a $2,800 ticket to a 23-yearold woman this weekend for failing to comply with the provincial health order — the first fine issued by the city for breaking social distancing orders.

Vancouver had received 69 complaints on its 311 snitch line before the weekend, but had not yet issued any fines, according to spokespeop­le with the city.

Advocates for more stringent social distancing enforcemen­t are quick to point out that without hard penalties, some people will continue to disregard public safety and flout the rules.

A homeowner in Brampton, Ont., for example, was charged on March 31 for hosting a barbecue attended by roughly 20 other people, which city mayor Patrick Brown called a “complete disregard for the physical distancing requiremen­ts of public health.” Brown suggested last week the fine could reach as high as the maximum $100,000.

Brampton spokespers­on Natalie Stogdill said residents have been “generally supportive” of social distancing enforcemen­ts, and said the city has not received any complaints that she was aware of.

Bryant at the CCLA said that while individual people may deserve penalties, there are fears that law enforcemen­t will accept those penalties as the new normal and enforce them across the board.

“There’s no backyard barbecue epidemic in Canada,” he said. “Just because there’s a backyard barbecue in Brampton doesn’t mean that everyone else should modify their behaviour to an unreasonab­le degree, or that they should be fined for actions that were considered innocent one week ago.”

 ?? Christine Muschi / postmedia news ?? A police car drives down a path on Mount Royal in Montreal to ensure people keep a distance from each other on the weekend.
Christine Muschi / postmedia news A police car drives down a path on Mount Royal in Montreal to ensure people keep a distance from each other on the weekend.

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