Last updated: August 20, 2010 1:41 pm
Citizens against police brutality
Copwatch group aims to hold police accountable
Members of Copwatch, a non-profit and volunteer-based organization that works to stop police violence in Winnipeg, meet once a month to organize committees and schedule events like weekly patrols.
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WINNIPEG (CUP) — March 15 is International Day Against Police Brutality, and Winnipeg Copwatch is ready to make sure citizens know about it.
The non-profit and volunteer-based organization has scheduled a march to be held on Saturday, March 13 in Winnipeg in solidarity with the victims of police brutality.
“I think the very idea of cop watching” — monitoring police conduct at all times —“has generated conversation,” said Alex Paterson, member of Winnipeg Copwatch.
The city’s Copwatch members meet once a month to organize committees and schedule events like weekly patrols, where volunteers record the conduct of police on the streets of a given neighbourhood. Through the police brutality march and other events, the group hopes they can successfully advocate for the full democratization of the Winnipeg Police Service (WPS).
“There is no direct mechanism for a community or neighbourhood (in Winnipeg) to review the actions of a police officer themselves,” said Paterson.
Last year, Manitoba made significant amendments to its Police Services Act and passed legislation that outlines policing duties, resulting in the Manitoba Police Commission, a civilian-led board that will be responsible for the hiring and firing of the police chief, administering police budgets and working to uphold accountability. The commission will be set up this year but has yet to be implemented. Its members will be appointed.
Copwatch maintains the commission must be elected like city council in order to be fully accountable.
“What we emphasize is that the institutional channels aren’t set up for citizens to have control of the WPS,” said Paterson.
However, the WPS believes it is making great efforts to reach out to communities in the city.
“We’re always supportive of initiatives to make the WPS more transparent,” said Cst. Jacqueline Chaput, public information officer for the WPS. She added the police put out regular media releases made available to the public and to the press. She believes that beat patrols and uniformed police that patrol sidewalks are helping to bridge the gap between the police and the community.
“We are a very visible presence (in Winnipeg’s downtown) and can address and take a pro-active approach to crime in those neighborhoods,” she said.
Sel Burrows, a 66-year-old civic Winnipeg activist, agrees.
“The police can only do so much,” he said. “The community itself must make clear what its standards are.”
Burrows and his wife have set up Powerline, a volunteer-run telephone line in Winnipeg’s North and South Point Douglas neighbourhoods, that is meant for non-emergency calls that require investigation, like a neighbourhood house suspected of drug trafficking. Calls made to the Powerline remain anonymous and are passed on to the Public Safety Investigations Branch of Manitoba Justice, who will then conduct an investigation if warranted.
Burrows sat on the Police Advisory Board, a citizen-based board meant to make recommendations to the WPS, which was disbanded last year in favour of the police commission.
Although Copwatch advocates for the democratization of police, they are less clear on suggesting what that should look like.
“There are a lot of democratization models that have been proposed . . . but it’s more important to point out that there is currently no citizen participation in thinking about or making decisions about how the police function in our society,” said Shelagh Pizey-Allen, a Copwatch member.


