Changes needed to make Winnipeg's vehicle-for-hire industry safe for Indigenous women, city meeting hears - Action News
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Manitoba

Changes needed to make Winnipeg's vehicle-for-hire industry safe for Indigenous women, city meeting hears

The City of Winnipeg held the first of three events where community members can share their concerns about the taxi industry. The first meeting focused on the voices of Indigenous women, girls and gender diverse people.

Meeting was 1st of 3 organized by the city to look at improving safety in industry

A yellow taxi sign is seen on top of a white car
On Wednesday, the City of Winnipeg held the first of three community meetings aimed at making vehicles for hire safer in Winnipeg. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

Two dozen people gathered at a Winnipeg community hall on Wednesday afternoonto listen to Indigenous women, girls and gender-diverse people share their concerns about the taxi industry with city policy makers.

"Take our stories seriously. Stop sweeping it under the rug," said attendee Nikki Komaksiutiksak.

The community meeting at Sergeant Tommy Prince Place on Sinclair Street was the first of three city-organized meetings aimed at making vehicles for hire safer for everyone in Winnipeg.

"We should all feel safe enough to call a company [and] use a service that they deliver without feeling like, are they going to take advantage of me? Are they going to take me somewhere? Is something going to happen to me?"saidKomaksiutiksak, who isexecutive director of the Tunngasugit Inuit Resource Centre in Winnipeg.

For years, Indigenous peoplehave shared stories of assault and harassment in Winnipeg taxis.

Because ofstories like those which span beyond Winnipeg the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls issuedcalls to action specifically for safe transportation.

At the resource centre where she works,Komaksiutiksak hears from Inuit who travel from northern communities for health care and saytheydon't feel safe using taxis or other public transportation but don't have other options.

"We have 17,000 Inuit that come to Winnipeg annually for medical trips from the north. [That's] 17,000 people accessing transportation," she said.

Earlier this year, the City of Winnipegvotedto introducea $250 fine fortaxi, limo and ride-hail drivers who sexually harass,insult, abuseor threaten a passenger.

But that's not enough for Komaksiutiksak, who wants to see the fine increasedand drivers who assault passengers criminally charged.

"Let's slap you on the hand and give you a $200finebut this person now has to live with this trauma for the rest of their life? That does not make sense to me," she said.

Sandra DeLaronde, an advocate for missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls and two-spirit people, agrees. The lives of Indigenous women, girls and gender-diverse people are not measured by dollars, she said, but if the fine was high enough, she thinks it could make an impact.

It's not the first time DeLaronde has advocated for safer taxis for Indigenous people. In the spring, she was one of two dozen people who addressed city council and convinced them to keep a code of conduct for drivers, and to implement the fines.

A woman stands outside, looking to camera
Sandra DeLaronde, an advocate for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, says it's time for the city of Winnipeg to take action to protect Indigenous women using vehicle-for-hire services. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

But it's timeto move beyond public engagementand into action, she says.

"We need to get past the point of telling our stories over and over again," she said. "There has to be belief that what we are saying is true."

City staff say they're already making changes in the industry, like giving new drivers mandatory cultural training. In the fall, they plan to meet with newcomer women and taxi drivers this fall to get more feedback.

Information from all three city-organized meetings will be compiled in a report in May, and city staff say it will have recommendations for how to make things safer for everyone.

Jessica Paley leads the MMIWG2S calls to action implementation team for the city. Like DeLaronde, she wants to see more action.

Jessica Paley leads the MMIWG2S calls to action implementation team for the city. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

She hopes the conversations held on Wednesday can inform the cultural trainingthe city nowoffers,and lead to it being expandedto all drivers, not just new ones.

"I think there needs to be more space for lived experience, creating empathy and general knowledge of MMIWG2s+ in general why it's important and how we got here."

Protecting Indigenous women using vehicle-for-hire services

2 years ago
Duration 2:36
The City of Winnipeg is holding three events where community members can come share their concerns about the taxi industry. The first was today, focusing on the voices of Indigenous women, girls and gender diverse people and the changes they want to see.

With files from Sam Samson