Montrealers demand public hearings on systemic racism - Action News
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Montreal

Montrealers demand public hearings on systemic racism

A dozen young people descended on Montreal City Hall Friday, to deliver 20,000 signatures on a petition demanding public hearings on what they say is systemic racism and discrimination against visible minorities and others in various sectors of city life.

More than 50 young people spent 3 months collecting 20,000 signatures on petition

This group of young people, known as Montreal in Action, delivered the petition to Montreal City Hall Friday. (CBC)

A dozen young people descended on Montreal City Hall Friday, each carrying stacks of papers containing thousands of signatures 20,000 in all who signed a petition demanding public hearings on what they say is systemic racism and discrimination against visible minorities and others in various sectors of city life.

"Twenty thousandMontrealerssaid that the job that the current Montreal administration is doing in regards to inclusion and regards to diversity and regards to living togetheris inadequate," said BalaramaHolness, the former Projet Montralmayoral candidate for the borough of Montreal North,who spearheaded the initiative.

Under city regulations, the city is compelled to hold hearings on the subjects of any petition signed by at least 15,000 citizens.

'We need to be included'
Elvira Rwasamanzi, a community activist, said she spent months collecting signatures for the petition because 'we need to be included in the society.' (Elias Abboud/CBC)

Some 50 people spent the last threemonths gathering those 20,000 signatures.

"I'm a minority myself," said Elvira Rwasamanzi, who told CBCNews she went to work "for the bigger cause, for everybody, for my kids, for my brother, for my sisters, for my friends."

"I think we need to be included in the society," she said.

As CBC reported in its Real Talk on Race project in 2016, visible minorities makeup about 31 per cent of the population of Montreal, but just 11 per cent of the City of Montreal's workforce.

Visible minority hiring is even worse in the city's police service (SPVM). According to the SPVM's2016 annual report, the latest to be published, just 8.5 per cent of its officers identify as Indigenous or as members of a visible minority.

City's roundtable criticized

Mayor Valrie Plantecampaigned on a promise to make her administration more representative of Montreal's diversity. However, she's been criticized for failing to name any visible minorities to her executive committee.

Last March, Plantecreated a roundtable to address discrimination and diversity issues, appointing some 15 people from various backgrounds to look at ways to make the City of Montreal's workforce more diverse, to combat racial profiling, to encourage diversity among business leaders, in politics and in culture.

However, Holnesscalled the administration's roundtable underfunded and ineffective.

"Twenty thousand Montrealerssaid this is the new roundtable," Holness said of the petition.

The city clerk will now verify the names on the petition to determine whether the petition is receivable under the city's rules. (CBC)

The work of the roundtable is continuing, said YoussefAmane, a spokesperson for the city's executive committee, in a text message to CBCNews Friday.

"Our administration is continuing its efforts to make our city more representative of diversity," Amanesaid.

He said the city's clerk will now study the petition to determine whether it is receivable and the steps that will follow.

With files from CBC's Elias Abboud