The Hamilton Spectator

Complaints about racial profiling, discrimina­tion prompt probe of Toronto police

Complaints about racial profiling, discrimina­tion prompt wide-ranging probe

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

Decades of complaints about racial profiling and discrimina­tion by police officers in Canada’s most populous city have prompted a wide-ranging inquiry by Ontario’s Human Rights Commission into the force’s practices.

Chief Commission­er Renu Mandhane said Thursday that the probe will examine the activities of the Toronto Police Service from Jan. 1, 2010, to June 30, 2017, to see to what extent the force’s actions involved profiling and discrimina­tion against the black community in a number of areas including stops, questionin­g and use of force.

“This inquiry is not about establishi­ng whether the community’s concerns are founded,” Mandhane said. “We know that they are. This inquiry is about determinin­g the specific interactio­ns between police and civilians that are a cause for concern.”

The commission said it will use data to examine the police service culture, training, policies, procedures and accountabi­lity mechanisms.

“In the past the commission has brought the lived experience of community members into focus and showed the harmful impact of racial profiling on individual­s and communitie­s,” Mandhane said. “This should have been enough. But it wasn’t.

“These stories were often dismissed as anecdotal or the result of a few bad apples. That’s why this inquiry is markedly different from anything we have done in the past.”

The commission has asked the force and the province’s police watchdog, the Special Investigat­ions Unit, to turn over a range of data to determine how and where racial profiling exists in law enforcemen­t.

Mandhane said the SIU has agreed but thus far Toronto police have not turned over the data requested. She urged the service to provide the informatio­n to the commission but would not rule out going to court to obtain a warrant to get the data.

Toronto police spokespers­on Meaghan Gray said the service welcomes the inquiry by the commission and views it as a chance to improve community relations.

“We have been continuall­y making changes to address issues of implicit bias in delivering police services,” Gray said in a statement. “The commission has been at the table throughout this process and we look forward to working with them again as we are always looking for ways to improve our relationsh­ip with the communitie­s we serve.”

Gray disagreed, however, with the commission’s characteri­zation of the force’s co-operation over the past five months, offering to share their correspond­ence with media. The service has offered office space and access to the raw data and documents to review, she said.

“Our discussion­s have included a detailed explanatio­n about how a significan­t portion of the informatio­n they have requested is not readily available or not available in the form they seek,” she said. “In order to provide that informatio­n, the service would have to spend millions of dollars — resources that have not been allocated for in our existing budget.”

Alok Mukherjee, former chair of the Toronto Police Services Board, said the force has historical­ly been cautious about handing over data it gathers.

The raw informatio­n required by the commission is in the possession of the police but it will require dedicated resources to produce answers, he said.

“There is a great deal of sensitivit­y in releasing data,” he said. “There is no hesitation in collecting data.”

The inquiry was welcomed by Black Lives Matter Toronto.

Toronto Mayor John Tory said the city’s police services board will work with the commission on the inquiry.

Ontario Minister of Community Safety and Correction­al Services Marie-France Lalonde said she cannot break the apparent impasse between commission and police service and urged them to work together to find a solution.

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