Cape Breton Post

One police watchdog proposed

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Plans are in the works to create a single, civilian-led agency to police the police in Atlantic Canada, though a debate is brewing on whether bigger changes are needed to build trust in the region’s law officers.

Senior government officials in the four provinces have confirmed the plan is to expand Nova Scotia’s Serious Incident Response Team into a regionwide investigat­or.

“We definitely agreed this is a concept worth recommendi­ng to our respective government­s,’’ said Michael Comeau, deputy minister of justice in New Brunswick.

He said four deputy ministers of justice met in early June and came to an agreement in principle, though cabinet ministers and premiers have yet to sign off on the plan.

In Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Justice Minister Andrew Parsons described the idea as the one his government is leaning towards, noting his province is looking for ways to save money.

“One of the big drawing points of an Atlantic SiRT team is that there are economies of scale that could be achieved there,’’ he said.

In Nova Scotia, Justice Minister Mark Furey said the idea is a way to use expertise his province has developed. In Prince Edward Island, Justice Department official Gordon Garrison said his government already uses the Nova Scotia-based agency and he said he favours the creation of a regional body.

However, some observers say the four provinces should go beyond cost considerat­ions and make bigger changes to strengthen civilian oversight of the police.

The existing watchdog in Nova Scotia has a mandate to investigat­e cases that involve death, serious injury, sexual assault, domestic violence or other matters of “significan­t public interest’’ that may have resulted from the actions of a police officer, and to decide if charges should be laid.

John Sewell, a former mayor of Toronto and an author on police issues, said if the Atlantic provinces want to expand SiRT, they should also give it the ability to make recommenda­tions on how police can improve their performanc­e.

He says that even if SiRT investigat­ors conclude no criminal wrongdoing occurred, they should have the ability to state if police conduct was “reasonable,’’ and make recommenda­tions for changes. The existing SiRT model doesn’t have that option.

“I think the agency should be looking at what happened and make some proposals in regards to what happened, so that it doesn’t happen again,’’ said Sewell.

Other observers say there’s a need for a wider reform of the powers and transparen­cy of each province’s police commission­s, which look into questions of misconduct or poor performanc­e by police.

“We should look at the special investigat­ions unit in the wider context of police complaints, discipline and education,’’ said Kent Roach, a law professor at the University in Toronto.

A recent review of Ontario’s police oversight system by Justice Michael Tulloch made 129 recommenda­tions, including a suggestion to hire more investigat­ors without police background­s and ensuring investigat­ions occur in a timely fashion.

However, the head of Nova Scotia’s Serious Incident Response Team, Ron MacDonald, said he believes that if a single SiRT agency is created in the region, it should continue to focus solely on criminal wrongdoing.

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