We will no longer hold people for CBSA
(Canada Border Services Agency);
nor will CBSA ask us to.
They're aware of everything that's been going on,
and they understand that this
is not activity we will participate in.
We're just here to say that we think that the termination of the Memorandum of Understanding
and the directives that
Transit Police have submitted to
are a step in the right direction,
and we just want to ensure
that information sharing does not occur
between Transit Police and CBSA
and that we have oversight of these directives.
We're really glad to see these reforms
to hopefully make it so that folks without status
can access transit with less fear
of being reported to CBSA and deported.
The point that we want to bring up
is that we still have
tens of thousands of people in this region
who actually can't afford the bus fares.
Who structurally, because of low wages,
because of the welfare rates,
because of the high rents,
cannot afford to pay for transit,
which is a fundamental human right
and a basic public service that people rely on.
Those people, which includes many migrant workers
who are working often for very low wages
still don't have access without fear
to our public transit system.
They're still gonna have skytrain police with guns
being paid over $100,000 a year at a cost
to taxpayers of $32 million a year
checking their busfares.
And we'd really like to see
the Transit Police out of fare enforcement.
I want to start by acknowledging that we're here
on un-ceded Coast Salish territories,
and thank you for the opportunity to speak.
First of all I want to start by
congratulating everyone in this room
who has been part of making possible
the recent encouraging developments,
which is the termination of the Memorandum of
Understanding between Transit Police & CBSA.
All of us here have spent
hours and hours advocating on this issue.
And we do so because we care
very very deeply about this issue,
and we see it affecting our communities.
I think about Lucia Vega Jimenez,
who committed suicide and died in CB(S)A custody.
She was initially turned over to CBSA by Transit Police
in part because Transit Police officer Jason (Schuss)
believed that she wasn't originally from Canada.
And not only did she get a ticket for lack of fare,
but she was then detained by Transit Police,
and actually driven to the holding centre
by Transit Police, to do CBSA's work.
It was Lucia's tragic death that spurred a movement
within the community over 10 months ago.
In May and in June, conversations
among members of various groups
began to look at and to challenge Transit Police policy
in light of what became known to us in Lucia's death.
This includes groups like Mexicans Living in Vancouver,
who are here today;
BCCLA, who is here today;
Sanctuary Health, No One Is Illegal, Rainbow Refugee,
and many other organizations.
As we are witnessing all across this continent,
people are questioning the role of police,
and the impact of policing
on marginalized communities.
From police inaction
on missing murdered Indigenous women,
to police impunity being raised by
the Black Lives Matter south of the border,
or the killing of Naverone Woods.
Migrants without permanent legal status
are some of the most vulnerable
members of our community.
They're often vilified in the media,
but migrant workers and non-status people
are the ones taking care of our children,
growing our food, serving us food,
growing our food,
building our homes, pumping our gas.
Refugees are fleeing war, persecution and
unimaginable and horrendous levels of violence,
often escaping paramilitaries
and arriving here seeking some level of safety,
only to question whether they can ride transit safely,
just to get to and from work
like Lucia was doing.
So in memory of Lucia Vega Jimenez and the
thousands of other migrants in our community,
public transit should not be a border checkpoint.
There are far too many lives at stake.
(Next speaker) Lucia is just one of the cases.
I hear many cases around the time
I remember since 6 years ago,
about immigrants that were sent back just because
they didn't have a fare in the skytrain.
Immigration didn't look at them when
the Olympics were starting
and they were needed in order to construct
and create infrastructure that we didn't have;
but once that was done, they didn't matter.
So I heard a lot of members that were sent back.
I heard hard working people that was contributing
enormously to this country sent back.
I heard people that was in risk sent back.
People with humane cases sent back.
Over a $2.50 fare.
I want to congratulate everybody in this room
for working to end the Memorandum of Understanding
between CBSA and the Transit Police.
That's an important step,
and as has already been said, that's a first step.
I personally as a transit user,
and I think many of the people in the room,
would like to get clarity about
what that process is going to look like,
and how we're going to ensure that there is adequate
separation between CBSA and the Transit Police.
We need to keep in mind the real realities
of what criminalizing, scrutinizing, racially profiling, detaining and deporting people,
of how all that stuff affects them.
This is real, these policies are very very real.
People are being deported, people are fearful,
people are going as far
as Jimenez and my uncle went.
(same speaker continues) We're happy about
some of the changes you've made,
some of the concessions,
but we need to see that they're implemented.
We are all gonna hold you to it,
and we just want to see the end
of detentions and deportations.
So please, to everyone here,
and to everyone who couldn't be here,
but who's still involved,
and who cares about this issue,
let's keep fighting, let's keep pushing for
the end of detentions and deportations,
and let's ensure that public transportation
is not a border checkpoint. Thank you.
[APPLAUSE]