15 | O akville B eaver | T hursday,June 27,2019 insidehalton.com GNISOLC EROTS .ylppa yam stnuocsid rehtruF .ecirp lanigiro ffo %52 tsael ta fo ecirp decuder ydaerla na stneserper esidnahcrem decirp ecnaraelC .noitacol yb yrav yam noitceleS .sreffo rehto htiw denibmoc eb ton yam stnuocsiD .seuqehc oN .sesahcrup roirp ot stnemtsujda oN .detnuocsid eb ton lliw sdrac tfig yaB s'nosduH ro srettiftuO emoH .segnahcxe ro snruter oN .lanif era selas llA .ylno snoitacol gnisolc srettiftuO emoH ta dilaV MOC.SRETTIFTUOEMOH TA UOY RAEN NOITACOL EHT DNIF ESIDNAHCREM NOIHSAF FFO ECIRP DETEKCIT TSEWOL %06 !EROM RO .SEROTS TCELES NI ELBALIAVA WON SEOHS DNA ,SEIROSSECCA ,SGABDNAH ,NOIHSAF ECNARAELC .SRETTIFTUO EMOH ERIALC ETNIOP RO ,DRASSORB ,ELADKROY NI ELBALIAVA TON SI ESIDNAHCREM NOIHSAF SLIATED ROF EROTS RUOY TISIV ,NOITACOL YB YRAV STNUOCSID SECIRP LANIGIRO FFO %07-05 !EUNITNOC SGNIVAS ELBIDERCNI .ylno snoitacol gnisolc ni dilaV .ylppa snoitpecxe detimiL 16' cube van 20' cube w/ Lift-Gate 24'5 ton 11-15 seater van 12'carGo van 185 225 220 Local police have their own take on a controversial information-gathering tac- tic. Mostly known as card- ing in Canada, and official- ly the Collection of Identify- ing Information in Certain Circumstances, it's the practice of being stopped by police and requested to sup- ply identifying information generally with no charges laid. The practice has been labeled as racist with a 2010 report revealing statistical evidence young black men were far more likely to be targeted. A similar practice in the USA is known as stop-and-frisk. In 2017, Ontario passed a new provincial rule that banned carding outside of specific situations. Under the new rules police are still able to collect identifying information if they were looking into suspicious ac- tivities, which critics argue means police can still card at any time as long as they can say they are investigat- ing a particular crime. Rob Burton, chair of the Halton Police Board, made an emphatic statement about the practice during the June meeting. "For the public's benefit, bottom line is we don't do carding," said Burton. Discussion of the prac- tice and how it's conducted in the region came forward as a result of a mandatory report that shows the num- ber of times officer's en- gaged in the new way card- ing is done. The report showed only one instance of carding occurred in 2018 by Halton police that fell un- der the act. Deputy Chief of District Operation Nishan Duraiap- pah said the police had an information gathering sys- tem in place that does not fall into the acts reportingfall into the acts reportingf requirements that they feel works effectively and pre- dates the new rules. "We had always had the spirit in mind to mitigate risk for liability for the or- ganization well in advance in lieu of that, we created systems that were already efficient for sure," said Du- raiappah. Officers in the region make use of reporting fo- cused on occurrence re- ports and suspicious people and vehicle which are sub- ject to oversight of supervi- sors. Derek Davis, a superin- tendent with the Halton Re- gional Police Service said in 2015 the took a different ap- proach to information gath- ering. "We anticipated this so we actually changed the structure of how Halton po- lice collects information that would be the equiva- lent of what would be re- ferred to as a street checkferred to as a street checkf type proactive information gathering. We switched from the model that wasfrom the model that wasf problematic, which is un- verified interaction with a member of the public. We switched to a validated re- port-based system where it goes through supervisor re- view or it feeds in. We creat- ed a mechanism for our offi- cers to gather the informa- tion, have oversight in place on it and still be able to bring it into the system for investigative purposes," said Davis. Police Chief Stephen Tanner said it doesn't mean the Halton police aren't col- lecting intelligence. "The street gangs are not just in Toronto they're not just in Jane and Finch. We need to have creative ways to find the people involved in those. Theres a lot more work a lot more targeted work through the Criminal intelligence service of On- tario and Canada and a group now called CIROC which we can speak more to in camera at some point, which is operational intelli- gence around street gangs and organized criminals so we have to have a way to get to those people," said Tan- ner. 'BOTTOM LINE IS WE DON'T DO CARDING' - HALTON POLICE BOARD ROLAND CILLIERS rcilliers@metroland.com NEWS Deputy Chief Nishan Duraiappah of the Halton Regional Police said they had a policy in place that meant new regulations around carding had very little effect. Roland Cilliers/Torstar