Penticton Herald

RCMP members will holster back pay

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Members of Kelowna’s RCMP detachment are going to share $1.1 million in retroactiv­e pay.

A reserve policing account will be used to cover the back payments, according to a report going to Kelowna city council on Monday.

The most recent pay agreement for RCMP officers expired on Dec. 31, 2014. The federal Treasury Board did not approve a new pay package, covering 2015 and 2016, until April 2017.

“We certainly anticipate­d this was coming and we’ve been putting money away annually in a reserve to cover these costs,” Rob Mayne, a city divisional director, said Thursday.

Salary increases for police through 2015 and 2016 were set at 4.8 per cent, with a total cost of $1.1 million, including regular and overtime pay, senior constable allowance and correspond­ing pension increases.

The Kelowna RCMP has about 170 full-time members, so the retro payments, including benefits, work out to about $6,500 per members.

Currently, the starting salary for an RCMP constable anywhere in Canada is $53,144, rising to $69,000 after six months service, and topping out at $86,110.

The salary range for an RCMP corporal is $86,621-$94,292, and for a sergeant it’s $95,153-$102,775.

The starting salaries for RCMP constables is lower than it is for most municipal police forces. The City of Calgary, for example, has a salary range for constables of between $69,680 and $104,021.

In Victoria, salaries for constables range between $68,447 and $112,000.

To protest such pay difference­s, RCMP officers on B.C.’s Sunshine Coast, and in Ottawa and Halifax, earlier this year covered up the distinctiv­e yellow stripe on their pant legs with pink duct tape or wore non-regulation pants.

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