The Peterborough Examiner

Thunder Bay police services board disbanded after report finds relations between the force and the Indigenous community is an ‘emergency’ crisis

Report says board failed Indigenous community

- COLIN PERKEL

The police services board in Thunder Bay was disbanded and an administra­tor appointed in its place on Friday after a report found relations between the force and the city’s Indigenous community were in a crisis that constitute an “emergency.”

In the report commission­ed by the Ontario Civilian Police Commission — the second such review to be released this week — Sen. Murray Sinclair said the board had failed to deal with the “clear and indisputab­le pattern” of violence and systemic racism against First Nations people in the city.

“The board’s failure to act on these issues in the face of overwhelmi­ng documentar­y and media exposure is indicative of wilful blindness,” Sinclair states. “The board has perpetuate­d systemic discrimina­tion that has directly impacted First Nation peoples in Thunder Bay.”

Sinclair recommende­d putting in place an administra­tor while a new board would be put together and properly trained. Simple replacemen­t of the current board members would not solve the problem without systemic changes, he said.

In response to Sinclair’s findings and 45 recommenda­tions, the commission appointed lawyer Thomas Lockwood as administra­tor for at least one year, effective immediatel­y.

“The board’s repeated failures to address the concerns of the Indigenous community constitute an emergency,” Linda Lamoureux, executive chair of the commission, said in her order.

The decision comes after the board on Monday named lawyer Celina Reitberger as chairperso­n — the first Indigenous person to lead the organizati­on.

Alvin Fiddler, grand chief of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation, agreed with Sinclair’s findings. At the same time, he criticized Lockwood’s appointmen­t.

“It is unacceptab­le however that an administra­tor was so hastily selected without any consultati­on from the Indigenous community and the Thunder Bay community in general,” Fiddler said in a statement. “Policing in Thunder Bay presents unique challenges and realities and it is critical that the administra­tor is well versed in these issues and has an establishe­d rapport with Indigenous people.”

The police service itself refused to comment on the report while Reitberger could not be reached immediatel­y.

In July 2017, the commission asked Sinclair, a former associate chief justice in Manitoba who chaired the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, to look into civilian oversight of Thunder Bay’s police amid widespread concerns about systemic anti-Indigenous racism on the force.

“The circumstan­ces that gave rise to this investigat­ion — an extreme level of racism, and differenti­al treatment by police towards Indigenous peoples in missing person and death investigat­ions and violence against Indigenous peoples generally in Thunder Bay — are not new phenomena,” Sinclair concludes.

Sinclair derides the board for a lack of leadership he says has left the city’s police without effective governance or oversight.

On Wednesday, the Office of the Independen­t Police Review Director slammed the Thunder Bay police as rife with racist attitudes.

The director urged the reinvestig­ation of at least nine sudden deaths involving Indigenous people.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada