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Diverse communities hope to be better represented on Hamilton Police Services Board

Councillor Matthew Green's carding complaint against a Hamilton police officer, which was later dismissed, has highlighted tensions with diverse communities. Ken Mann/CHML

The president of the Afro Canadian Caribbean Association says upcoming appointments to the Hamilton Police Services Board must be made through an “equity lens.”

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Evelyn Myrie is hoping for a board that better reflects Hamilton’s diversity, as the city prepares to name two new councillors and a citizen appointee to the seven-member board.

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Myrie says “dysfunction” between the current board members and “tensions” between police and the African-Canadian community, in particular, are “troubling” and she adds that we must “bridge that gap.”

Myrie has specific candidates in mind for the citizen opening, ahead of a Nov. 30 deadline for applications.

She says there is “one professor in particular” and “other community business people” whom the group is urging to put their names forward for consideration.

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Myrie says the bottom line, for all boards and agencies, is that “the people who serve us and our community, must represent the people who live in our community.”

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