Parliamentary Protective Service commits to anti-racism training - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Parliamentary Protective Service commits to anti-racism training

A Nova Scotia senator says the Parliamentary Protective Service has agreed to equity and anti-racism training for its staff after a coalition of black Nova Scotians reported being racially profiled during a recent visit to Parliament Hill.

'Every Canadian who comes to visit us on the Hill ... should be treated with dignity,' says senator

A Black woman with short hair is seen wearing glasses and a red blazer
Sen. Wanda Thomas Bernard filed a complaint with the Parliamentary Protective Service on behalf of a group of black visitors who said they were racially profiled during a visit to Parliament Hill on Feb. 4. (Dalhousie News)

The Parliamentary Protective Service (PPS) hasagreed to equity and anti-racism training for its staff after a coalitionof black Nova Scotians reported being racially profiled during a recent visit to Parliament Hill, says a Nova Scotia senator.

Sen. Wanda Thomas Bernard, a longtime social justice advocate,said her office complained to the PPSon behalf of the coalition, which wasinvited to Ottawa for a series of meetings with federal cabinet ministers on Feb. 4. The visit was to coincide with Black History Month.

The visitors said agovernment employee and a PPSofficer referred to them as "dark-skinned" before they were asked to leave the parliamentary cafeteria, even though they had the required passes to be in that area.

"They [PPS]determined that theofficer involved ... he's Francophone and had some discomfort around the term 'black' because that term means something different in the French language," Bernardsaid in an interview.

"So, his use of language was identified as the area of concern, and they've taken some steps to address that with him.

"However, they've also made a commitment to work specifically with my office in terms of looking at their overall training around equity and diversity and anti-racism issues."

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau apologized to a group of black youth for a racial profiling incident on Parliament Hill during a visit to Cherry Brook, N.S., on Feb. 21. Sen. Wanda Thomas Bernard (left) is seated next to the prime minister. (Adam Scotti - PMO/CPM)

The PPShas completed its investigation into the complaint and apologizedfor theincident.

Prime Minister JustinTrudeaualso apologized to members of the coalition during a private meeting Thursday at theBlack Cultural Centre in Cherry Brook, N.S.,which Bernard also attended.Trudeau acknowledged that anti-black racism remains a problem across Canada and that more needs to be done to address it.

There are discussionsabout making the PPS training an annual event, which Bernard said would be a good step toward addressing what she called a "systemic" issue.

"This is not the first time there's been incident of racial profiling on Parliament Hill," she said.

"Several of us have spoken out about incidents of racial profiling on Parliament Hill. I've had other visitorsfamily members even who've come to the Hill and had experiences."

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks to an audience at the Black Cultural Centre in Cherry Brook, N.S., on Feb. 21. (Jonathan Villeneuve/Radio-Canada)

Bernard said the incident on Feb. 4 started when an MP's staff member tooka photo of the group on a phone, sentit to security and asked for the group to beremoved from the cafeteria, alleging theywere being noisy anddisruptive.

"Those young people were told to wait in the cafeteria for the next series of meetings that they were having with MPs," Bernard said.

"The fact that an MP's staff would take a photo to lodge a complaint to have these young people removed from that space and to not see anything wrong with that, that's hugely, hugely problematic."

Bernard saidshe's pleased the PPShas committedto work with her office to address issues of unconscious bias, systemic discrimination and racial profiling.

"Every Canadian who comes to visit us on the Hill who has the appropriate visitors passes ... has the right, the absolute right to be there, has the right to be treated with dignity and respect, and has the right to feel that they are welcomed there and that they actually belong there," she said.