Ontario Pushes Bail Reform—But For Black Communities, It’s Giving “Too Little, Too Late”
- Emma Ansah
- Canada
- June 17, 2025

Toronto, ON – Ontario is turning up the volume on its call for bail reform, and at first glance, it sounds like a win for public safety. But for Black folks—especially in the GTA—it’s giving major side-eye energy. Because when you’ve been over-policed and under-protected for generations, talk of “tightening up bail” hits different.
🧱 What’s Going Down?
Premier Doug Ford and his government have been pushing the federal Liberals to make it harder for repeat violent offenders to get bail. After several high-profile cases involving gun violence and individuals out on bail, the narrative is clear: crack down hard, and crack down fast.
But here’s the twist: the people most affected by bail decisions aren’t the ones you see splashed across the 6 o’clock news. They’re disproportionately Black, Indigenous, and poor—sitting in jail not because they’re dangerous, but because they can’t afford a lawyer or a few hundred bucks.
⚖️ Let’s Talk Facts
- Black Ontarians are disproportionately denied bail, often based on racialized risk assessments and biased perceptions of “dangerousness.”
- According to the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, two-thirds of people in Ontario jails haven’t even been convicted. They’re in on remand—waiting for trial.
- The longer you sit in jail awaiting bail, the more likely you are to plead guilty, even if you’re innocent. That’s not justice. That’s systemic oppression with legal paperwork.
💭 So, What Does This Mean for Us?
This push for reform is being painted as a crackdown on crime. But without anti-racist safeguards, it could turn into just another way to funnel more Black bodies into cells.
Let’s keep it real: we do need safer communities. Gun violence and repeat offenders are real problems. But if the solution is built on a system that already treats Black people as guilty until proven innocent, the “reform” becomes a trap.
📣 Black Voices Are Pushing Back
Groups like the Black Legal Action Centre and Justice for Black Lives are calling for bail reform that includes:
- Bias training for judges and prosecutors
- Community-based bail programs
- Support for mental health and housing—so people aren’t being criminalized for being poor
Because you can’t fix a broken system by doubling down on the parts that broke it.