Pubdate: Thu, 27 Jan 2005 Source: Hour Magazine (CN QU) Copyright: 2005, Communications Voir Inc. Contact: http://www.hour.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/971 Note: Comments at Author: Stephanie O'Hanley FINES FOR THE DISENFRANCHISED Ticket Him When He's Down A neighbour introduced Jean-Sebastien to cocaine. The then 25-year-old bike messenger became an addict. Paranoid and ashamed, he left Montreal and his job for Toronto, where he learned how to squeegee and survive on the street. For four years Jean-Sebastien lived on the streets of Toronto and Montreal, trading his cocaine habit along the way for an addiction to crack cocaine. Not long after Jean-Sebastien started squeegeeing, laws were passed and police started giving out tickets. "I didn't pay attention," he says. "I was on the street. Why give me tickets when I'm trying to survive instead of stealing and killing?" Community groups working with society's most vulnerable in Montreal want to know whether the rash of tickets being doled out to homeless and marginalized people amounts to discrimination. To prove the city is criminalizing homelessness, the groups spent a year and a half collecting hundreds of tickets issued to homeless and marginalized youth for "petty crimes" like jaywalking, tossing a cigarette on the ground or sitting on a concrete block in a park. Last fall, the Reseau d'aide aux personnes seules et itinerantes de Montreal (RAPSIM) and the Table de concertation jeunesse/itinerance du centre-ville asked the Quebec Human and Youth Rights Commission to hold public consultations. Whether that will happen is a decision that will be made by mid-February at the latest. "Discrimination is alive and well in Montreal," says Table spokesperson and Cactus Montreal staffer Roxane Beauchemin. Unable to pay the tickets they are given, some youths end up at Bordeaux Prison - - "the school for criminals" as Beauchemin calls it. And that messes up their progress, since jail time means a loss of access to social services like drug rehab, housing and the job programs meant to get them on their feet. Lost too are friends and a sense of belonging. Going to jail makes them feel more defiant toward police, and, worst of all, some find a new sense of belonging at Bordeaux, where organized crime gangs look for new recruits, says Beauchemin. According to a police report, last summer officers in the Ville-Marie borough handed out some 600 tickets to homeless youth and squeegee kids despite Station 21 having had two officers assigned to educating people about the consequences of breaking laws. "Police are there to apply the law and bylaws," says Johanne Paquin, a commander at the Montreal Police Service's "Op South." The new approach, based on prevention, education and enforcement, includes warnings before tickets: People receive tickets only when caught a second time. The third time around police will seize the tool used to commit the infraction - for instance, squeegee punks would lose their squeegees. Arrest is a last resort, Paquin insists. ooo While in Toronto, Jean-Sebastien met a girl he'd known on the street in Montreal and fell in love. The couple moved back to Montreal and Jean-Sebastien vowed he'd get them both off crack. One night, a police officer caught the couple smoking in an alley. "He didn't search [us]," Jean-Sebastien says. "All he wanted to do was give us a talk. By telling me 'you're worth more than that, I can tell you're smarter than that' he built up my self-esteem. That's when I decided we're getting off the street." The relationship didn't last, but it produced a child, an 18-month-old son of whom Jean-Sebastien has custody. Now clean and in school finishing Grade 9 before heading for vocational training, Jean-Sebastien never imagined the tickets would come back to haunt him. Last August, a bailiff knocked on his dad's door. "They wanted to seize everything," Jean-Sebastien says. He asked to do community service, but Montreal municipal court officials wouldn't wait for him to finish school, he says. No one told him he could fight the tickets in court. They were knocked down from $5,000 to just over $3,200, and he was ordered to sign a repayment agreement for $50 a month. "I find it ridiculous, and it's kind of hard for the baby," he says. Jean-Sebastien is battling other demons: During his time on the street he says he became suicidal, and a hospital psychiatrist labelled him a paranoid schizophrenic. While he fights to get that label removed, he is seeing a psychologist, a psychiatrist and two social workers. ooo Public consultations don't happen often, says Robert Sylvestre, the human rights commission's spokesperson. Reserved for "matters of great importance," in the last 20 to 25 years the commission has held public consultations only a few times: Once on racism in the taxi business, another on relations between police and racial minorities, and a third on violence against gays and lesbians, Sylvestre says. Consultations aren't about blame, he says. "Sometimes you have to check out an entire system," Sylvestre explains. In the end, the commission only makes recommendations, Sylvestre says. But he stresses, "In the three big inquiries of [public] consultation, these recommendations brought forward many changes." Horror stories like Jean-Sebastien's are common enough, but they anger downtown independent city councillor Louise O'Sullivan, who until she quit Mayor Tremblay's party was the city's executive committee member for social services. "Sometimes you don't have to break the rules, but bend the rules a little," she says. "We have to shepherd [homeless youth]. They often have psychological problems and [drug] dependency problems. We need to create programs to help keep them off the street." O'Sullivan says she'll table a social services plan for dealing with street gangs and incivilities at next week's Ville-Marie borough council meeting. For her part, Commander Paquin thinks that what's needed is a team made up of police, street workers and social workers ready to intervene. "It takes people in the field who share the same goal and vision," she says. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)