Toronto Star

Indigenous leaders call for OPP to enforce First Nations law

Community Safety and Policing Act to take effect in Ontario on April 1

- ROB FERGUSON QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

To keep drug trafficker­s and other criminals at bay, Indigenous leaders are urging the province to make it mandatory for Ontario Provincial Police to enforce First Nations laws and bylaws.

The race is on as Ontario prepares for the new Community Safety and Policing Act to take effect April 1 with optional enforcemen­t of unique laws — such as barring known bootlegger­s from dry reserves — approved by First Nations councils to protect their people and territory.

“It’s unthinkabl­e that Ontario doesn’t see enforcing our laws and bylaws, which we use to keep drugs and criminals out, as part of adequate and effective policing,” said Chief Laurie Carr of Hiawatha First Nation on Rice Lake south of Peterborou­gh.

“They have not given a good reason as to why they can’t or won’t,” she added, calling the standoff a blow to reconcilia­tion with Indigenous Peoples.

New Democrat MPP Sol Mamakwa, who represents the remote northweste­rn riding of Kiiwetinoo­ng that includes the Grassy Narrows reserve, said “it is a funding issue” because police would need more resources with mandatory enforcemen­t.

Optional enforcemen­t by outside police forces like the OPP, which has contracts in small First Nation communitie­s lacking their own police services, leaves Indigenous communitie­s at a disadvanta­ge, whether it be from drugs, alcohol, illegal dumping of constructi­on waste or landlord-tenant disputes, Carr and other leaders maintain.

Without mandatory enforcemen­t, “it’s two-tier policing, it’s two-tier access to justice, and it’s two-tier access to the rule of law,” said Toronto lawyer Kent Elson, working on behalf of the Chiefs of Ontario.

“It needs to be mandatory, just like it is mandatory to enforce other laws like the Criminal Code,” he added, noting tougher enforcemen­t would be in line with Premier Doug Ford’s recent law-and-order positions on crimes such as car theft.

The Indigenous community’s pressure campaign has accelerate­d recently in hopes Ford’s government will tighten regulation­s under the new legislatio­n, which overhauls the outdated Police Services Act with reforms that include allowing officers accused of criminal or questionab­le actions to be suspended without pay more often. It was passed five years ago but it has taken since then to develop the associated regulation­s in consultati­ons with stakeholde­rs.

But the office of Solicitor General Michael Kerzner maintains no changes are needed.

“The Community Safety and Policing Act consistent­ly applies across Ontario, including in First Nations communitie­s, with respect to enforcemen­t of municipal and First Nations bylaws,” spokespers­on Hunter Kell said.

“Under both the Police Services Act and Community Safety and Policing Act, police can enforce municipal and First Nations bylaws. A police officer’s duty to enforce the Criminal Code is the same within First Nations’ communitie­s and elsewhere in Ontario.”

But the concern remains that enforcemen­t of First Nations bylaws is left to “operationa­l discretion” — meaning the workload on available officers, says police chief Darren Montour of Six Nations near Brantford.

Montour acknowledg­es many police services, on reserve or off, are short-handed, adding, “I’m not bashing the OPP.”

Policing of First Nations is split. While some larger communitie­s like Six Nations have their own police forces that often co-ordinate with the OPP, 17 smaller First Nations without their own police services rely on policing agreements with the OPP.

Seeing threats from outside, such as drug trafficker­s, bootlegger­s and truckloads of illegal and possibly contaminat­ed constructi­on waste, many First Nations pass stronger laws aimed at specific circumstan­ces, says Elson.

“What I have heard, personally, for a very long time is First Nations chiefs and community members saying, ‘I know who the drug dealers are, and we can’t get them out of our community and they’re killing our children.’ ”

Mamakwa says about two dozen of the 31 First Nations he represents in his riding near Kenora are dry reserves.

“If you know there’s a case of 40-ouncers coming in, that can have an impact on the health, on the lives of the people,” he said.

“Not to do anything, I think that’s racism in itself,” added Mamakwa. “That means they’re not as safe as they could be.”

 ?? CLIFFORD SKARSTEDT PETERBOROU­GH EXAMINER FILE PHOTO ?? Hiawatha First Nation Chief Laurie Carr said the standoff with the Ontario Provincial Police over enforcing First Nations laws is a blow to reconcilia­tion with Indigenous Peoples.
CLIFFORD SKARSTEDT PETERBOROU­GH EXAMINER FILE PHOTO Hiawatha First Nation Chief Laurie Carr said the standoff with the Ontario Provincial Police over enforcing First Nations laws is a blow to reconcilia­tion with Indigenous Peoples.

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