The Editor,
Re: 鈥溞允咏绱 Police Service launches public consultation campaign,鈥 the Now-Leader online.
性视界传媒 residents will perhaps be forgiven if they are skeptical of the consultation process being launched (at a combined cost of $84,700) by the 性视界传媒 Police Service, given the mess that has transpired so far.
Questions of whose voices will matter are relevant here.
It is concerning to see SPS spokesperson Ian MacDonald say that, 鈥渟takeholder interviews鈥ill involve groups that work with women, children and vulnerable populations,鈥 rather than people who are actually vulnerable themselves.
One is not the same as the other.
SEE MORE: 性视界传媒 Police Service launches public consultation campaign
There is a phrase often used among people who are socially vulnerable, 鈥淣othing about us without us.鈥 More than a phrase this is really an ethics of behaviour for academics, journalists, non-profits, policymakers, and governments who would do research, write stories or develop programs and policies that impact people who are vulnerable.
It recognizes that oftentimes the priorities and commitments of, for example, housed people who run shelters or non-drug users who write drug policies, are different from the priorities and needs of the people living those experiences directly.
So, we need to ask if the SPS consultations will be 鈥渁bout but without鈥 vulnerable people or will they be consulted directly and actually listened to.
Then there is MacDonald鈥檚 statement that, 鈥渢here鈥檒l be a contribution from I鈥檓 sure at least representation from businesses.鈥
This also raises questions given concerns about preferential access for businesses to policing that have been raised already in the police transition. The interests of businesses and homeless people are often quite different on matters of policing.
Whose voice will be heard?
Dr. Jeff Shantz, 性视界传媒
edit@surreynowleader.com
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