Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

PM wants to move 'very quickly' on anti-racism initiatives, minister says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jun, 2020 10:25 PM
  • PM wants to move 'very quickly' on anti-racism initiatives, minister says

Treasury Board President Jean-Yves Duclos says the prime minister wants to move "very quickly" to dismantle barriers that contribute to systemic racism.

The government is making modest progress at diversifying the federal public service, but there is more work to do, especially in the senior ranks, Duclos told a media briefing Monday.

More broadly, he said, the government can and should help others remove barriers to progress for Canadians of different racial backgrounds.

Duclos says it's about empowering everyone to see the obstacles that others are facing.

He rhymed off a list of areas, including education, public safety and Indigenous relations, where advances in equity can be made.

"As elected officials and, more generally, as citizens, we do have both the ability and the responsibility to help," Duclos said.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has already engaged his team "to work very quickly and very efficiently" in coming up with a way forward, he said.

The government has come under pressure to spell out what it is doing to counter discrimination and entrenched racism in federal agencies following the police killing of a Black man, George Floyd, in the United States and a spate of confrontations between police officers and Indigenous Peoples as well as racial minorities in Canada.

Federal officials recently delayed a comprehensive response to the many recommendations of a national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

Trudeau said Monday there had been "stacks of recommendations, of analyses, of reports on measures that can be taken" to address systemic racism, particularly against Indigenous Canadians.

"It is a question of picking which of those recommendations we should be moving forward with first," Trudeau said.

"And that's why we're working with Indigenous leadership and communities, working with the Black community, working with racialized Canadians to prioritize exactly what things we should do rapidly."

The federal government should immediately declare First Nations policing an essential service, rather than just a program, to ensure adequate funding and a legislative base, said Perry Bellegarde, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations.

Bellegarde echoed Trudeau in noting there had been many studies and reviews on justice to draw upon.

The lack of action on the various recommendations is what is "killing our people," he said.

As for the RCMP, Bellegarde advocates a zero-tolerance policy on excessive use of force.

"There are things that can happen immediately, short-term, within the existing systems that are there."

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau takes part in COVID-19 virtual pledging conference led by EU

Trudeau takes part in COVID-19 virtual pledging conference led by EU
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has taken part in an international pledging conference sponsored by the European Union to raise more than $11 billion for long-term COVID-19 vaccine research.

Trudeau takes part in COVID-19 virtual pledging conference led by EU

Metro Vancouver home sales down 39.4 per cent in April to near 40-year low

Metro Vancouver home sales down 39.4 per cent in April to near 40-year low
The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says home sales dropped by 39.4 per cent in April from a year earlier to hit an almost four-decade low.

Metro Vancouver home sales down 39.4 per cent in April to near 40-year low

More remains found as helicopter search turns to recovery

More remains found as helicopter search turns to recovery
After scouring a littered seascape with its NATO allies, a Canadian Forces warship formally ended its search for survivors Friday after its maritime helicopter crashed off the coast of Greece.

More remains found as helicopter search turns to recovery

Real estate firm Colliers International says about one in five surveyed commercial tenants requested April rent relief as the COVID-19 shutdown hits business activity

Real estate firm Colliers International says about one in five surveyed commercial tenants requested April rent relief as the COVID-19 shutdown hits business activity
Real estate firm Colliers International says about one in five commercial tenants surveyed requested April rent relief as the COVID-19 shutdown hit business activity. The company says that 21 per cent of the 7,100 retail, industrial, and office tenants in its managed portfolio across Canada requested relief, and close to half of that share indicated they could not afford to make their rent payment.

Real estate firm Colliers International says about one in five surveyed commercial tenants requested April rent relief as the COVID-19 shutdown hits business activity

Teachers in B.C. agree to new contract with provincial government

Teachers in B.C. agree to new contract with provincial government
B.C. teachers have voted to approve a new, three-year collective agreement with the provincial government. The deal with the B.C. Public School Employers' Association includes general wage increases of two per cent every year along with a mediated process on how to better support negotiations in the future.

Teachers in B.C. agree to new contract with provincial government

B.C.'s $1,000 worker benefit online today

B.C.'s $1,000 worker benefit online today
Finance Minister Carole James says thousands of people applied for British Columbia's $1,000 tax-free emergency benefit in the first minutes of the program going online today.

B.C.'s $1,000 worker benefit online today