Nova Scotia RCMP will apologize to African Nova Scotian community for street checks - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia RCMP will apologize to African Nova Scotian community for street checks

The apology will be made in 2024 following community consultations, according to a news release issued Tuesday.

Apology will be made in 2024 following community consultations

A group of people stand in front a library holding a sign that says
A march against street checks was held in Halifax in 2019. The Nova Scotia government banned the practice that same year. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

Nova Scotia RCMP will apologize to the African Nova Scotian community next year "for the harm caused by the historical use of street checks," according to a press releaseissued Tuesday.

In an interview with CBCon Wednesday, Assistant Commissioner Dennis Daley, commanding officer of the Nova Scotia RCMP, said the apology was "long overdue."

"I've done some inquiries as to why the apology wasn't done and in my mind, it was a missed opportunity to do right," Daley said.

Street checks, which were banned in the province four years ago,involvedpolice officers interacting with or observing someone and then recording personal or identifying information about themina database.

A formal review by criminologistScot Wortleyin 2019revealed Black people were street checked at a rate six times higher than white people in Halifax. That report was prompted by a 2017 CBC News investigationthat showedBlack people were three timesmore likely to be street checked in Halifax than white people.

Halifax Regional Police issued an apology for street checks in 2019.

Nova Scotia RCMP commanding officer looking to diversify the force

1 year ago
Duration 9:13
The commanding officer for the Nova Scotia RCMP says as part of his apology to Black Nova Scotians for the past use of street checks, he wants to diversify the force. Dennis Daley says members of the Black community are telling him that's key to stemming systemic racism in the ranks.

Community consultations are being organized in African Nova Scotian communitiesahead of the apology. One was held Monday night in Gibson Woods, N.S.,and another one is scheduled for Sept. 28 in Hammonds Plains.There will be 14 consultations that the RCMP say will help "inform an action plan that will follow the apology."

The consultations are being hosted by locals and attended by members of the Nova Scotia RCMP's senior leadership team, the news release said.

A steering committee was formed "to provide guidance and support." It is made up of RCMP employees and 11 community members.

Vanessa Fells, formerly of theAfrican Nova ScotianDecade forPeopleofAfrican Descent Coalition, is one of the community members on the committee.

Fells said while an apology for street checks is long overdue, it's not necessarily too little, too late.

"I'm a firm believer that an apology without any real actions or policies to change things are just words," shetold CBCNews in an interview on Tuesday.

Creating an action plan

Fells said the community consultations are about getting information and feedback that will help shape an action plan.

"So the whole purpose is that when the apology happens, the action plan will already be ready. Theywill already have built one," she said.

Fells says the committee will meet up at least once a month. She said it's very important that people living in the communities where these consultations are taking placeshow up and let their voices be heard.

Daley said he's hoping to learn more about interactions people have had with police.

"What I have learned to date from inviting young Black males into our steering committee isthey do not have positive interactions with police, so it is really my hope this is an opportunity to work toward rebuilding the fractured relationship that exists," Daley said.

"I really want to make this right."

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check outBeing Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of.You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)

With files from Tom Murphy