Washing ceremony marks settlement of Canadian Tire racial profiling complaint
VANCOUVER — An Indigenous woman in British Columbia who filed a human rights complaint along with her father against Canadian Tire says she’s relieved the case has been settled years later and hopes it will help others avoid the same thing.
In a settlement agreement with Richard and Dawn Wilson, a third-party security company at a Canadian Tire store in Coquitlam acknowledges its former employee contravened the human rights code against racial profiling and discrimination when they searched Richard Wilson’s bag in 2020.
The store itself admits a former employee made derogatory comments when told about what happened and Canadian Tire Corp. acknowledges it did not forward a complaint to the Coquitlam store for weeks, and only did so after the employee no longer worked there.
Representatives from Canadian Tire, the store itself, and Blackbird Security are participating in a traditional Heiltsuk washing ceremony, a form of restorative justice that will acknowledge the harm of racial profiling.


