Review of street check policies arises out of B.C. police commissioner’s report
VANCOUVER — A man’s complaint about being stopped and asked if he was “Abdul” by two officers in New Westminster, B.C., has prompted a call for provincewide consistency on street checks from the city’s police board.
The officers’ alleged actions in July 2020 and the New Westminster Police Board’s followup to the case were featured as part of a key recommendation in the recent annual report from the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner.
Street checks should be consistent with cultural safety best practices and address the needs of Indigenous and racialized persons who may come into contact with the New Westminster police, said commissioner Clayton Pecknold in his report, which was tabled in the legislature.
Street checks are defined as any voluntary interaction between a police officer and a person that is more than a casual conversation, and which impedes the person’s movement.