Toronto Star

Ontario to consult the public on carding

Mayor John Tory delayed reform until after province reviews the police practice

- DEBRA BLACK IMMIGRATIO­N REPORTER

With the Black Lives Matter protest that blocked traffic on the Allen Expressway this week still fresh in the minds of many, the provincial government has announced plans to begin public consultati­ons on street checks, or carding.

The consultati­ons — which will be held with community organizati­ons, policing partners, academics, civil liberty organizati­ons as well as asking the general public for online participat­ion — are to begin in August. Toronto Mayor John Tory had pledged in June to reform carding in the city, but then decided to delay any action until the province reviewed the controvers­ial police practice and set up province wide regulation­s.

Community Safety Minister Yasir Naqvi announced in June that the provincial government planned to review the practice often called street checks outside Toronto.

“Our government takes the protection of human rights very seriously and has been clear that we have zero tolerance for racism or marginaliz­ation, including any form of discrimina­tion based on skin colour, background, religion or gender,” said Naqvi in a news release. “We stand opposed to any practice where police stop individual­s without reason, cause or for clear policing purposes.”

The consultati­ons will develop new rules so the practice of street checks is “right-based and properly carried

“We stand opposed to any practice where police stop individual­s without reason, cause or for clear policing purposes.” YASIR NAQVI COMMUNITY SAFETY MINISTER

out, protecting individual charter and human rights, strengthen­ing public accountabi­lity and allowing for a consistent and clearly defined approach for police,” the Ontario government’s release said.

The practice of carding in the GTA has been extremely controvers­ial, with many activists criticizin­g it as a form of “racial profiling.”

Regional meetings with community organizati­ons, academics, policing partners and civil liberties organizati­ons are supposed to begin later in August. And members of the general public will be welcome to attend all of the meetings. Dates and times of those consultati­ons are to be announced shortly.

The government has also launched an online questionna­ire for members of the public, who have had experience­s with carding or street checks, to weigh in and provide feedback.

The consultati­ons will examine a number of issues, including the circumstan­ces when police may ask an individual for informatio­n; the rights of those being asked for their informatio­n; how to enhance accountabi­lity mechanisms and training requiremen­ts as well as data collection and retention.

Many policing authoritie­s believe street checks, if done properly, are a necessary and valuable tool for police. But the issue has been fraught with controvers­y in the GTA. A Toronto Star investigat­ion in 2012 showed a disproport­ionate number of black residents were being carded by police. After the investigat­ion the Toronto Police Services Board began working on carding reform.

A new carding, or “community engagement,” policy was voted in by the board in April 2014, but gathered dust because former police chief Bill Blair refused to write procedures to implement it. A watered down policy was passed a year later. Blair suspended carding in January.

Toronto’s new chief of police Mark Saunders has defended carding as a valuable investigat­ive tool, but has said he will end “random” stops. Fewer than one in 10 carding interactio­ns is the result of “intelligen­celed policing,” according to analysis done by the Toronto Police Service. With files from Patty Winsa and Betsy Powell

 ?? MELISSA RENWICK/TORONTO STAR ?? Black Lives Matter protesters marched this week. Critics and activists call the practice of carding a form of racial profiling.
MELISSA RENWICK/TORONTO STAR Black Lives Matter protesters marched this week. Critics and activists call the practice of carding a form of racial profiling.

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