Surprise Attack! Revolution carried through by small conscious minorities

Surprise Attack! Revolution carried through by small conscious minorities
Kabul in the Republican Revolution of 1973

Sunday, February 18, 2024

Niagara's new police chief outlines priorities, responds to community concerns about systemic racism (CBC Hamilton)

(from https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/hamilton/bill-fordy-new-chief-1.7115159)

Bill Fordy became chief of the Niagara Regional Police Service late last month

Every interaction a police officer has with a member of the public is "an opportunity to build a relationship with the community," Niagara's new police chief Bill Fordy says. 

To further build trust in the region, Fordy added that police need to be "open and honest" about sharing information, and acknowledge "if and when we make a mistake."

According to a local anti-racism group, Fordy and the police service as a whole, have work to do if they want marginalized people to trust them  — particularly when it comes to tackling systemic racism.

Fordy called out for 2020 comments on systemic racism 

Fordy became NRPS's deputy chief in 2017 after working in British Columbia for about 30 years. He took over from outgoing chief Bryan MacCulloch late last month. 

Niagara police have over 1,000 people on staff, and a $190.5-million budget for 2024. 

After the police board announced Fordy's appointment, the Niagara Region Anti-Racism Association (NRARA) issued a media release denouncing it alongside Erica's Embrace Support Services, another anti-racism organization. They criticized Fordy for a 2020 radio interview in which he said there was no data to suggest systemic racism was present within the Niagara police. 

Advocates including Saleh Waziruddin, an NRARA executive committee member, have said that comment ignored the force's own data which shows police used force against Black people at a disproportionate rate. In 2022, the reporting showed about 23 per cent of use of force incidents were against people officers perceived to be Black. The report notes 2021 census data shows about three per cent of people in the region are Black.  

Fordy told CBC Hamilton that since 2020, he's acknowledged "both inside and outside our police service, on numerous occasions, that within the institution of policing, inclusive of the Niagara Regional Police Service, there are systemic barriers that exist."

"There are systemic barriers that other people face that I haven't faced as a white male. So I openly acknowledge that that's a reality of today's world," he said. "Those discussions we had in 2020 certainly were a foundation for a great learning opportunity for me and as we look forward, I look to our organization to become more diverse and more reflective of the community we serve." 

Waziruddin said it sounds like Fordy has acknowledged barriers faced by police officers within the institution, "but I don't think that covers the racism of the police towards the rest of us."

"The magic words would be: 'There is systemic racism in the Niagara Regional Police Service.' That's the first step that Fordy can take," he said.

Advocates call for tangible police reforms 

As for how the police can address racism, Fordy said "all organizations need to continue to learn and need to continue to build bridges with equity-deserving groups."

He added that he thinks the NRPS is becoming more diverse. "We're looking inward to identify those barriers for equity deserving members, to try to eliminate those."

The NRARA has pointed to a number of recommendations they say police could implement to reduce racism including having officers wear body cameras, improving training and shifting some mental-health related calls to a civilian service. 

"Something's either anti-racism or it's public relations and the way you can tell the difference is if it's anti-racism, it actually has actions and resources and change," Waziruddin said. 

In an email, CBC Hamilton asked Fordy if the NRPS has implemented any of those recommendations, or plans to. 

Fordy said the service continues to have "fulsome conversations with members who represent all of Niagara along with continuous education on how to build upon and improve existing relationships."

Chief says police could more effectively work with social service providers 

Fordy said he thinks there's room to "more effectively" work with social service providers. He noted that often, police are the first to respond to calls when people are in distress. 

"As we look forward, my hope is that we'll be able to engage professionals so that people get the support they need and ultimately the police don't have to be a part of those interactions."

He said he would "love" for there to be an organization that could respond to calls for help that don't involve criminality and would work with governments and other agencies "to arrive there at some point."

Challenges ahead

As CBC Hamilton recently reported, experts say that because Niagara is on the Canada-United States border and accessible by various ports, it's a target for transnational crimes such as money laundering and human trafficking.

Fordy said policing international crime is a challenge that has required the NRPS to partner with provincial and federal agencies to share information and techniques. 

"We're looking to enhance our effectiveness in all those areas, whether it be human trafficking, car thefts, fraud, [which] we didn't investigate maybe in the same manner 15 or 20 years ago."

But Fordy says one of his first priorities as chief is close to home: the wellbeing of his own workers. He said the pandemic exhausted police officers and he wants to make sure they have access to tools supporting their wellbeing. 

"My number one priority is to make sure our people are good so that we can take care of the community and serve the community in a way that I would want my family or friends served."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Justin Chandler is CBC News reporter in Hamilton. He covers all sorts of stories but has a special interest in how public policy affects people. Justin covered current affairs in Hamilton and Niagara for TVO, and has worked on a variety of CBC teams and programs, including As It Happens, Day 6 and CBC Music. He co-hosted Radio Free Krypton on Met Radio. You can email story ideas to justin.chandler(at)cbc(dot)ca.

Sunday, February 4, 2024

Anti-racism association denounces choice of new NRP chief (St. Catharines Standard)

(from https://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/news/niagara-region/anti-racism-association-denounces-choice-of-new-nrp-chief/article_b8a6f7a3-03d4-5a49-a9f7-140db9ba6245.html)

Bill Fordy says his 2020 comments made about systemic racism in policing were made during "a snapshot of time" during unrest after murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police

2 min to read
Article was updated 


Thursday, January 25, 2024

Niagara Region Council Blocked #Palestine #Ceasefire Motion

Niagara Region Council Blocked #Palestine #Ceasefire Motion From Agenda - and Even Blocked Any Debate on Removing it! 

The Delegate Speeches That Were Blocked Are Being Uploaded to

YouTube Playlist:

https://shorturl.at/SY158

Please Keep Checking Back For More Videos

Hypocrisy + Double Standards = Anti-Palestinian Racism by Niagara Elected Officials

Several #Niagara Region Councillors say tonight's resolution in support of Palestine has no place because it's outside the Region's mandate or will be divisive and harmful. 

But the Region already supported Israel and Ukraine, yet Palestine support is out. 

This is a double standard and hypocrisy that can only be explained as racist. 

Two of these Councillors have been outspoken against racism but like so many humanitarian concern ends sharply when it comes to Palestinians.

Lincoln Councillor Rob Foster told the St. Catharines Standard that the Region shouldn't be dealing with international conflicts. 


St. Catharines Councillor Laura Ip, who chairs the Region's Diversity Equity Inclusion Advisory Committee, made a blog post saying the resolution in support of Palestine has “no place” on Regional Council. 

https://lauraip.ca/2024/01/23/support-for-israelis-and-palestinians-living-in-niagara-motion-january-25-2024-council-meeting/


St. Catharines Mayor Mat Siscoe, who is also a Regional Councillor, told former St. Catharines Mayor Walter Sendzik in an interview on CKTB 610AM the motion has nothing to do with the Regional mandate and will be divisive so shouldn't even be on the agenda.


But just over a year ago all three voted to voluntarily sanction themselves from Russia in support of Ukraine, which had nothing to do with the Region's mandate and did nothing to help Ukraine or Ukrainians and which I delegated against. 

Yet Councillor Ip criticized the Palestine motion as having  “no weight or bearing on what will actually happen,” a clear double standard for all three voting for the Ukraine motion and even allowing it.


St. Catharines City Council passed a resolution in support of Ukraine supporting military escalation, which I also delegated against. 

Niagara-on-the-Lake unanimously passed such a resolution. 

These motions were divisive too and had nothing to do with municipal mandates, a clear double standard by Mayor Mat Siscoe.


Just a little bit up the highway from Niagara, Mississauga and Brampton City Councils UNINAMOUSLY passed resolutions supporting a ceasefire in Palestine. 

If it's relevant for these two Ontario cities why is it not relevant for Niagara?


The Region already stepped firmly into the Israel-Palestine conflict when Chair Jim Bradley issued a statement October 11 in solidarity with Israel and Niagara's Jewish residents, lighting the Region's headquarters in the colours of the Israeli flag. 

But despite getting nearly 100 emails asking him to also light up in the colours of the Palestinian flag for the nearly 500 residents of Palestinian descent there is not a word, even though so many disproportionately more Palestinians are being killed by Israel (including children sheltering in UN schools). 

This is a double standard and lack of basic humanity.



The same day Mayor Mat Siscoe sent St. Catharines Councillor Robin McPherson (of my ward) to speak on behalf of the City of St. Catharines at a pro-Israel rally. 

The City of St. Catharines already took a position and condemned one side of the violence, but when it comes to calling for a real, binding ceasefire to END the violence it's suddenly off-mandate and divisive.


But the Palestine resolution DOES have to do with the municipal mandate because it calls for removing the cap on Palestinians so they can be reunited with their families in Niagara. 

These refugees will need services from the Region, which has been recognized by Council when it came to Ukrainian refugees. 

This cap is causing panic and stress in the race to get approved to safety.

Councillor Ip repeated the misleading statement from Minister Marc Miller that there is no “hard cap” on Palestinian refugees when his own ministry's news release on January 9th said it's even worse: the program expires even before 1,000 people if they aren't approved by next year.


Why is this a divisive, hateful issue as two Councillors said? 

Because so many don't recognize the basic humanity of Palestinians.

Palestinian lives don't matter and are disposable to too many. 

This is also a bandwagon attack on Palestine solidarity. 

We see:

* A Hamilton MPP who is a Black woman with a disability excluded from the legislature she was elected to for refusing to jump on this bandwagon.

* Calls for deporting anyone expressing support for Palestine.

* Fines, arrests, police brutality for protesters supposedly protected by the Charter.

Condemning a resolution in support of Palestine as out of bounds is part of the same crackdown on solidarity with Palestinians and complicit with anti-Palestinian racism and ongoing settler colonialism. 

You can't acknowledge that you are on Indigenous land and be silent when Palestinians are suffering the same colonial settler violence. 

You can't be anti-racist except when it comes to Palestinians.


Friday, December 15, 2023

Dec. 15 Niagara letters: Greater spending on Niagara transit needed (St. Catharines Standard letter to the editor)

(from https://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/opinion/letters-to-the-editor/dec-15-niagara-letters-greater-spending-on-niagara-transit-needed/article_f367ee1f-9f7b-5637-83bc-58a50a5e5f1a.html)

Regionalization of public transit has improved service and more spending is needed, says reader

1 min to read
Article was updated 

Invest more in transit

Re: Transit a 'pig in a poke,' Letters, Dec. 11

The above is misleading because it suggests Niagara Region Transit's budget is increasing because of hiring staff, and says, “Let taxpayers see the expenses line by line,” when they already can in extensive reports.

Transit should be where we invest more money and expand services.

The letter writer says making transit regional was supposed to improve service. It has. OnDemand reaches places without a regular bus, and co-ordinating between cities saves riders lots of time.

But this is not enough. As a rider told regional council at its Nov. 30 budget meeting, we need to “break out of the cycle of underinvesting to keep the loudest voices happy.”

Instead, council is looking to make dangerous cuts, and the transit commission is looking to cut paratransit and OnDemand, which are used by the most vulnerable people who have no other option.

Saleh Waziruddin


Thursday, December 7, 2023

Letter to Niagara Regional Council against making rules for delegating more difficult

 Dear Councillors,

The current procedural rules already make it very difficult if not impossible to delegate effectively because by needing to submit a delegation by the Friday morning before a Regional Council meeting we don't know of key developments happening before we can submit our delegation. Key committee meetings, reports, and proposals may not happen until closer to the Regional Council meeting on the Thursday after the deadline to submit a delegation.

The new rule changes from the Procedural By-law Review Committee amending Section 13.5 make delegating more difficult by moving the deadline for delegating in extenuating circumstances further back two days. If it's an extenuating circumstance we might not know until the afternoon of the meeting.

There should be a normal, not extenuating, opportunity for people to request delegating to Council up to and including the afternoon of the Council and Committee meetings so that we don't have to play guessing games of what will happen in the days before the meeting to figure out what our delegation content will be. Normalizing delegation requests closer to the meetings help make delegations better informed and prepared when requesting to speak to Council.

Thank you,

Saleh Waziruddin in St. Catharines