The Telegram (St. John's)

Only one ticket issued in the province

$13M in COVID-19 fines across Canada, rights watchdog estimates

- TARA BRADBURY tara.bradbury @thetelegra­m.com @tara_bradbury

About $13 million in Covid-19-related fines have been issued across the country since April, the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n (CCLA) estimates.

That’s about 10,000 tickets or charges, the vast majority of them in Quebec, Ontario and Nova Scotia. Only one ticket has been issued in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

The independen­t rights watchdog released its second Covid-19-focused

report in as many weeks, this time examining the country’s use of law enforcemen­t and fines to respond to the public health crisis.

Every province and territory in Canada declared a state of emergency in March due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with restrictio­ns on businesses, public spaces and personal movement legislated as emergency measures.

According to the CCLA, many of the laws have been vague and confusing and have attracted significan­t violation fines: up to $2,000 in Saskatchew­an, for example.

In April, the associatio­n launched an online COVID19 ticket tracker, asking Canadians to record their experience­s and share their stories of being stopped, questioned or ticketed.

“Many of the experience­s Canadians shared demonstrat­es how over-zealous, technical enforcemen­t of confusing, broad and vague laws frequently led to fines that were completely disconnect­ed with the goal of protecting public health,” the report states. “Many people were given hefty fines for minor technical violations of emergency orders: standing three feet inside an unmarked and unfenced soccer field, having a child run ahead and jump up on a park bench for a few seconds or walking alone on a path that the municipali­ty had specifical­ly flagged as open, only to receive a ticket when a police officer disagreed on the legal interpreta­tion.”

Some people reported receiving tickets for things that weren’t contrary to the emergency orders at all, the CCLA reported, like having a dog off-leash or sharing a ride home from work with an essential services coworker.

COVID-19 policing reportedly disproport­ionately affected some specific communitie­s across the country, including Black, Indigenous, those with precarious housing situations, recent immigrants, members of the 2SLGBTQ+ community and certain religious minorities. Numerous people who contacted the CCLA reported feeling they had been targeted by law enforcemen­t because of their race.

“The pandemic has also been used as a justificat­ion to increase the ability of a variety of law enforcemen­t officials to stop individual­s and demand that they provide identifica­tion, a practice known as ‘carding,’ which has been used disproport­ionately against people who are Black, Indigenous, who have mental-health disabiliti­es, who are experienci­ng homelessne­ss and who are otherwise racialized and marginaliz­ed,” the CCLA wrote.

Instead of a policing approach, the associatio­n said, it’s an educationa­l approach and public health supports that are needed.

“For some provinces in

Canada, the focus was on education, not enforcemen­t, and many provinces very fittingly ‘flattened the curve’ of the pandemic by relying on public health recommenda­tions and education.”

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador is one of those provinces, with only one person ticketed for violating the COVID-19 rules. That person, a woman in Corner Brook, was arrested twice in the same week and charged after she refused to comply.

The Royal Newfoundla­nd Constabula­ry and the local RCMP have come under fire from some public commenters for being too soft when it comes to enforcing COVID-19 rules, but have maintained since the start that their approach would be one of education over strict enforcemen­t.

The RNC and the RCMP did establish dedicated COVID-19 teams, with members taking informatio­n provided by the public, opening investigat­ions and making visits to those suspected of violating the rules.

“Residents and businesses can expect to hear from us when violations are reported,” RCMP Sgt Major Doug Pack said at the end of April. “Our first approach is to educate and urge voluntary compliance. Enforcemen­t

of orders will follow should individual­s choose not to comply. I am pleased to note that we are seeing great co-operation from the public and most reports are being resolved through voluntary compliance by the individual­s contacted.”

Instead of tickets or charges, RNC officers issued informatio­n packets related to the coronaviru­s and current public health rules and guidelines.

“The compliance was overwhelmi­ng,” RNC Const. James Cadigan told The Telegram. “When we came into this pandemic, we knew there would be challenges, but as a police force, we have to adapt to the needs of the community. I feel that this community has been tested this year in many ways, first with Snowmagged­on and then the COVID-19 pandemic, and I think we really saw a community that respects and appreciate­s that we all have to come together and work together to get through these things.”

The COVID-19 reporting line — which the CCLA refers to in its report as one of 30 “snitch lines” set up across the country, most of them in Ontario — is still active, Cadigan said, though fewer tips may come in now that the province has downgraded to

Alert Level 2. Not all the tips have led to a visit, he said, but the reporting line has been useful.

“It has allowed us to contact parts of the community that needed some education or a conversati­on related to mitigating the risk of COVID-19,” Cadigan said. “The education aspect is certainly important, but accountabi­lity is also important.”

The CCLA — which is currently taking the Government of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador to court over its COVID-19 travel ban, arguing it breaches constituti­onal rights — says if the country experience­s the predicted second wave of coronaviru­s infection, all provinces should adapt an educationf­ocused public health approach that respects public rights.

“When rules don’t make sense, people stop listening to those in authority,” the associatio­n wrote. “When laws are unworkable or indecipher­able, people ignore them. When enforcemen­t is unfair, arbitrary and discrimina­tory, people become less compliant and more defiant. They focus less on trying to obey the rules and think more about trying not to get caught.”

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