Edmonton Journal

NDP in N.S. vows to ban street checks

Election platform takes aim at racial profiling

- DANIELLE EDWARDS

LOON LAKE, N.S. • Nova Scotia's NDP Leader Gary Burrill spent Saturday campaignin­g in the largely Black Nova Scotian riding of Preston where he promised, if elected next month, an end to street checks to curb racial profiling.

The province's Liberal government has said it would ban the practice in 2019 after the release of a report from the provincial Human Rights Commission found street checks disproport­ionately affect Black Nova Scotians.

But despite its promise to do away with it, Black people in the province continue to experience unfair interactio­ns with the police, Burrill told reporters.

“I think a lot of people in Nova Scotia have the idea that street checks now are gone, that when that decision was made by the Department of Justice that was going to be the end of it,” he said. “But we know better.”

He added that his party is also promising to do away with the “suspicious activity” exception for the checks, calling the practice “highly problemati­c.”

Burrill was joined by the NDP candidate for Preston, Colter Simmonds, who shared several of his own personal experience­s dealing with police and the lack of accountabi­lity when complaints are made.

“The general public is getting to see the discrepanc­ies and the unfair treatment that definitely has to change,” said Simmonds. “Enough is enough.”

To make that kind of change, Burrill said his government would lean on the report, which laid out several recommenda­tions about the street check practice, including the eventual de-identifica­tion of historical street check data and ordering officers to stop recording informatio­n for “street check purposes.”

Preston, which is east of Halifax, was restored to its position as a protected riding in 2019, along with three other largely Acadian ridings, after being eliminated in 2012 when the then NDP government decided there were too few voters in each.

Now, along with Simmonds, the other two major parties also have Black candidates in the riding, including Archy Beals for the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves and Angela Simmonds for the Nova Scotia Liberals.

“The area has some specific relevant cultural issues that need to be addressed,” Beals said, including systemic issues in education, business developmen­t and employment.”

 ??  ?? Gary Burrill
Gary Burrill

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