The Hamilton Spectator

Police watchdog to collect race data

Activist says move falls short of what’s needed to address inequality

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO—The agency that investigat­es police conduct in encounters resulting in serious injury will begin collecting racebased data later this year, it said on Thursday, but critics say the informatio­n by itself will have little effect on addressing racial inequities in policing.

Currently, the Special Investigat­ions Unit only collects data on the age and gender of complainan­ts. Recording new data will likely start Oct. 1, when new legislatio­n is expected to take effect, spokespers­on Monica Hudon said.

“Collecting race-based data will help identify and monitor racial disparity in access to the SIU’s services and outcomes, identify potential barriers within our agency, and increase transparen­cy through public reporting,” Hudon said. “By identifyin­g and monitoring systemic racial disparitie­s, public sector organizati­ons will be better able to close gaps, eliminate barriers, and advance the fair treatment of everyone.”

The SIU said it would publicly report on findings related to the data. A committee, it said, was working out the details to ensure collection is done sensitivel­y and in a way that does not personally identify individual­s.

Activists said such data is helpful in providing further evidence of the perennial overrepres­entation of Black people in police killings. However, Syrus Marcus Ware, a core member of Black Lives Matter in Toronto, said collecting the data falls far short of what’s needed.

“We are fighting now to end the targeted policing of Black communitie­s,” Ware said. “The collection of race-based data, however helpful, is not going to replace the thundering calls to abolish the police system and completely reimagine how we deal with conflict, crisis and harm in our communitie­s.” The SIU change comes amid an internatio­nal uproar over police brutality — particular­ly toward Black people — sparked by the recent killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. People across Canada have denounced police violence, calling for radical reforms.

Commission­s and advocates have long pushed the recording of race informatio­n in light of studies and reports showing Black and Indigenous people were disproport­ionately at the blunt end of law enforcemen­t.

In November 2018, for example, the Ontario Human Rights Commission reported Toronto police were almost 20 times more likely to shoot and kill a Black person than a white person despite Black men making up little more than four per cent of the city’s population.

The informatio­n also showed that Black people were significan­tly overrepres­ented in cases where police resorted to force, deadly encounters and fatal shootings.

“Black civilians are overrepres­ented in all types of SIU investigat­ion,” Scot Wortley, a criminolog­y professor at the University of Toronto, said in the commission report. “Black overrepres­entation appears to increase with case seriousnes­s.”

 ?? LUIS LOPEZ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The Special Investigat­ions Unit currently only collects data on the age and gender of complainan­ts.
LUIS LOPEZ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO The Special Investigat­ions Unit currently only collects data on the age and gender of complainan­ts.

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