Montreal

Public consultations into systemic racism, discrimination begin in Montreal

The hearing follows 20,000 signatures being gathered last summer demanding a public consultation on what they say is systemic racism and discrimination against visible minorities and others in various sectors of city life.

Moderators asked for calm as members of the public shared their experiences, asked questions

The general information session of the public consultation will continue Thursday evening. (Livestream/ocpm.qc.ca)

When she was only four years old, Tiffany Callender became the target of a racist incident in a Montreal restaurant, and despite that having been in 1986, she said the city hasn't changed much since then.

She told her story at the first meeting on systemic racism and discrimination in Montreal Wednesday night.

She was joined by Balarama Holness — the two are credited with spearheading the initiative to gather 20,000 signatures last summer, demanding the public consultation.

The night served as a general information session from the Office de consultation publique de Montréal (OCPM) and was followed by a question and answer period.  

Facing a packed room of about 150 attendees, organizers said the meeting would continue with another session Thursday evening.

"We are ecstatic and happy to empower Montrealers," Holness said. "We are happy to ensure that our city becomes more inclusive, more diverse."

After statements by Holness and Callender, representatives from the city spoke, then the floor was opened to a question and answer period.

Balarama Holness, the former Projet Montréal mayoral candidate for the borough of Montreal North, was one of the people who spearheaded the initiative to demand the public hearings. (Antoni Nerestant/CBC)

Attendees took the microphone and presenters had to occasionally interject, to ask for a calmer tone as people delivered impassioned statements about their experiences.

Linda Gauthier, the head of the Regroupement activistes pour l'inclusion Québec (RAPLIQ), a coalition of disability rights groups, said that nowhere in the documents handed out by the city are people with visible disabilities explicitly mentioned; even though they suffer discrimination for how they look.

Holness replied that any time discrimination is mentioned in the documents, people with disabilities are included in that.

Natasha Luttrell, who is deaf and advocates for the deaf community in Quebec, asked what would be done to make sure the deaf community has access to services in Montreal.

She also said that the consultations themselves weren't accessible to the deaf community, because the English interpreter was using American Sign Language (ASL) and the French interpreter was using Quebec Sign Language, which she said many people wouldn't understand.

The hearing lasted for more than three hours and ten more are planned between now and October. A final report will be released at an unspecified date after that.