Vancouver Sun

MEAN STREETS

Call for ban on police checks

- AMY SMART

Advocacy groups are questionin­g the validity of a Vancouver police board review of street checks after an incident reported by the authors didn’t make it into the published final version.

The B.C. Civil Liberties Associatio­n, Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs and Hogan’s Alley Society say street checks should be banned because they are an example of systemic racism and disproport­ionately affect Black and Indigenous people and other minority groups.

Chief Don Tom, vice-president of the chiefs union, said the practice criminaliz­es people who are stopped. “It looks like a person with a gun in a uniform making demands of you. The very nature of the street check is threatenin­g, nothing is casual when there’s a gun involved,” Tom said.

The groups made public a letter from the Office of the Police Complaint Commission­er that says a profession­al standards investigat­ion is underway into the conduct of two officers alleged to have made insensitiv­e comments while they were being observed for the police board’s review.

One officer is alleged to have made racially insensitiv­e remarks. Another was alleged to have made inappropri­ate comments about vulnerable and marginaliz­ed people, had anger issues and was extremely rude to a member of the public, the letter says.

Commission­er Clayton Pecknold says he ordered the investigat­ion on Dec. 19, 2019, after receiving a request from the police department.

The concerns appeared in a draft of the review by Pyxis Consulting Group but they did not provide specifics or disclose the names of the officers involved, Pecknold says.

The Vancouver Police Department brought its street checks policy in line with new policing standards issued by the province in mid-January.

“Street checks are a valuable proactive crime prevention tool for police, even though they are used infrequent­ly,” Sgt. Aaron Roed said in an email.

The new policy describes street checks as “voluntary” and says officers should not stop someone simply because they share an “identity factor,” such as race or economic status, with a person being sought by police.

“A street check only occurs when a police officer encounters someone believed to be involved in criminal activity or a suspicious circumstan­ce, and documents the interactio­n. They are not random or arbitrary,” Roed said.

So far this year, he said, the number of street checks has dropped by 91 per cent compared with last year. He did not respond directly to a question of whether the pandemic has played a role in the change. If the trend continues, it would equate to less than one street check a year by each patrol officer, Roed said.

Mayor Kennedy Stewart, who chairs the police board, recently announced he would bring a motion to council calling on the police department to stop the practice.

Alvin Singh, a spokesman for Stewart’s office, said the mayor and council have no authority over the policies and procedures of the police department. Those decisions are made at the police board and by the province, he said.

“That said, the board does need to take into account the wishes of local government when it sets policy, and that is why he will be introducin­g his motion,” Singh said. “If it passes, it will provide the board with further instructio­ns, but it will be up to them to take action.”

Vancouver police data obtained through a freedom of informatio­n request showed 15 per cent of people stopped in street checks between 2008 and 2017 were Indigenous, a community that makes up just two per cent of the population. Five per cent of people stopped were Black, who represent less than one per cent of the population.

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 ?? MARK VAN MANEN/FILES ?? Police make an arrest in 2015 on Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. The B.C. Civil Liberties Associatio­n, Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs and Hogan’s Alley Society say street checks should be banned.
MARK VAN MANEN/FILES Police make an arrest in 2015 on Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. The B.C. Civil Liberties Associatio­n, Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs and Hogan’s Alley Society say street checks should be banned.

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