Groups say DVBIA, Civil City actions discriminatory
by Pivot
Pivot Legal Society, VANDU and the United Native Nations have filed a Human Rights complaint against the Downtown Vancouver Business Improvement Association (DVBIA) and Geoff Plant in his role as Civil City Commissioner.
The complaint is filed on behalf of Vancouver’s street homeless population and alleges systemic discrimination by the Downtown Ambassadors program, which is run by Genesis Security and the DVBIA under the guidance of Geoff Plant.
“Our constituents have had some concerns about the program for a while,†said Pivot lawyer Laura Track, “However, the expansion of the program by Geoff Plant and the upcoming Olympics has pushed us to try to clarify the rules around private security guard conduct in relation to the homeless.â€
VANCOUVER - The DVBIA manages the Genesis Security Downtown Ambassador
program, and Geoff Plant, Civil City Commissioner, commissioned and
secured funding for the Downtown Ambassador program. Plant is also in
the process of expanding the Downtown Ambassador program to other
Business Improvement Associations.
“Geoff Plant knows the
populations that are getting ‘moved along’ by the Ambassadors,†said
David Dennis, Vice President of United Native Nations. “He’s
commissioned a panhandler study that surely says exactly what we
allege, that aboriginal people and disabled people are targeted by this
program disproportionately. He’s a lawyer, he knows that’s
discrimination.â€
The complaint alleges a number of behaviours it
calls discriminatory, including telling people who are sitting or
sleeping on the street to move along, regardless of location or
circumstances; telling people to stop searching for recyclables in
garbage cans; identifying particular individuals as undesirable and
telling them that they are not allowed within a particular geographic
area (“no go areasâ€); and following or staring at and taking notes and
photographs of individuals identified as undesirable.
The
Complaint asks the Human Rights Tribunal to award $20 to every person
affected by this conduct to a maximum of 1,000 people, and asks the
Tribunal to order the DVBIA amend their policies to prohibit all
discriminatory tactics. The complaint also asks the Human Rights
Tribunal to order Geoff Plant and the DVBIA to adopt an appropriate
procedure for receiving and responding to complaints the public may
make about the practices and conduct of security personnel funded by
the DVBIA.
For more information please contact:
Laura Track, Pivot Legal Society, 604-721-6349
David Dennis, United Native Nations, 604-868-4283
About Pivot Legal Society
Pivot’s
mandate is to take a strategic approach to social change, using the law
to address the root causes that undermine the quality of life of those
most on the margins. We believe that everyone, regardless of income,
benefits from a healthy and inclusive community where values such as
opportunity, respect and equality are strongly rooted in the law.
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