![Amalgamated courthouse in Toronto 'significant barrier' to justice, critics say](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6426932.1650582133!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/new-toronto-courthouse-press-conference.jpg)
Amalgamated courthouse in Toronto 'significant barrier' to justice, critics say
CBC
Some advocates are slamming the Ontario government's move to amalgamate several courthouses into one downtown Toronto location, calling the move dangerous, unjust, and racist.
They say the province is ignoring a City of Toronto report that says shuttering courthouses in North York, Etobicoke, and Scarborough and creating the New Toronto Courthouse downtown will put a "disproportionately high" strain on Black, Indigenous, and other racialized communities.
Four representatives for Crown attorneys, legal professionals, labour unions, and race relations advocates held a news conference at Queen's Park on Thursday to call on Premier Doug Ford and Attorney General Doug Downey to stop the consolidation.
"We have heard time and time again that this amalgamation would represent a significant barrier to accessing justice services for the city's racialized communities," said Tony Loparco, president of the Ontario Crown Attorneys Association. He called on the premier, the attorney general, and their staff to read the city report.
The New Toronto Courthouse (NTC) is located on Armoury Street, near Queen Street and University Avenue. Construction began in 2018, and the exterior was completed in 2021. It's expected to be operational in 2023, according to the Infrastructure Ontario website. The province has said consolidating court operations into one location will save as much as $700-million over 30 years in lease fees.
But Dana Fisher, a local vice-president with the Society of United Professionals representing Legal Aid Ontario, said the amalgamation will mostly affect North York, Etobicoke, and Scarborough, which are "communities already facing significant socioeconomic disadvantages created by systemic forces of discrimination."
Fisher, who called the plan "unsafe, inefficient, and systemically racist," said lawyers working in courthouses see the challenges that already exist for people trying to get to court.
"Many are without child care or transportation, or they have precarious employment and must balance the risks of getting fired with the risks of getting arrested for missing court," she said.
"It will only get worse if this government goes through with its plan to close community courthouses."
Fisher said not only are there personal consequences for victims, witnesses, or accused persons who don't show up for court, there are effects on "the justice system as a whole."
"As individual impacts compound into systemic problems, people lose faith in the justice system, costs spiral out of control, and we see more people, disproportionately Black and Indigenous people, imprisoned for nonviolent offences."
Loparco said small businesses that have opened near existing courthouses will be shuttered. He also said the centralized location raises other concerns about cost and safety.
"Taxpayers will also be on the hook for the increased cost of police who will now have to take significant time off to attend downtown courts instead of patrolling their areas and then appearing in court when needed," he said.
"Eliminating these courthouses will also mean that both perpetrators and victims will be on the subway and at the courthouse, which may result in an increased risk of gang-related violence."
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