Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Conservati­on officers to be issued carbines

- ARTHUR WHITE-CRUMMEY awhite-crummey@postmedia.com

REGINA The Ministry of Environmen­t is looking to buy 147 semiautoma­tic carbines for conservati­on officers in Saskatchew­an.

In a request for proposals posted this week, the ministry said the weapons are needed to keep officers safe, noting they often deal with “high risk individual­s, that are often armed.”

Assistant deputy minister Kevin Murphy said the carbines will help the ministry comply with a court decision related to the death of four Mounties in Moncton, N.B. The ruling said the RCMP had failed to properly equip the officers who were killed by Justin Bourque in June 2014.

Murphy said the ministry determined those same risks apply to conservati­on officers, who are often on the front lines of potentiall­y dangerous situations.

“In a number of cases, our offi- cers are encounteri­ng people who are armed with rifles, both regular encounters with the hunting public and in some cases the criminal element,” he said.

He mentioned a few cases where officers had to deal with people using prohibited magazines that held a large number of rounds.

Conservati­on officers currently carry a handgun, a shotgun, OC spray and handcuffs, according to Murphy. The department is looking to equip them with body armour, in addition to the carbines.

The carbines will use the AR action type and fire 5.56 x 45 mm NATO ammunition, according to the request for proposals. Murphy said that will ensure they’re compatible with weapons already used by the RCMP.

Eventually, each patrol vehicle used by conservati­on officers will be equipped with one of the carbines. The ministry is looking to acquire 15 by the end of this year, in order to move forward with a training regimen. Murphy could not confirm when the remaining carbines will be made available to front-line conservati­on officers.

“There is a significan­t amount of training that is required for an officer to undertake a weapon like this, and we will not do that until they are fully trained,” he said.

The prospect of conservati­on officers armed with AR-type weapons is of “grave” concern to FSIN Vice-Chief Heather Bear, who said some officers “disrespect” First Nations jurisdicti­on and have runins with hunters pursuing their treaty rights.

She said many in Indigenous communitie­s fear the officers. In Bear’s view, the carbines could create more intimidati­on and risk putting her people in a “vulnerable and unfair situation.”

“I really don’t understand why these conservati­on officers are needing to arm themselves,” she said.

“Those conservati­on officers are more high-risk, they put our people in harm’s way.”

But Murphy responded that, over the 20 years conservati­on officers have carried weapons, there has never been an instance where they’ve discharged a weapon in an incident with any member of the public.

“That shows that it’s safe and effective to deploy those tools, and this will only enhance that safety, not degrade it,” he said.

He said the carbines have nothing to do with the Protection and Response Teams the province rolled out last year to address rural crime, a decision Bear also criticized at the time. Those teams bring together RCMP, highway enforcemen­t officers, conservati­on officers and municipal police forces to increase the visibility of armed officers in rural areas.

Bear acknowledg­ed there’s been no history of shootings involving conservati­on officers. But she said that just proves there’s no reason for the ministry to bring in more firepower.

“When you’re out there hunting you’re there to hunt, you’re not there to create violence,” she said.

“It just scares me that they might want to hurt one of our fellas.”

Bear said the FSIN will be notifying all chiefs of the plan for the weapons through a communique. She said she had not heard about the decision prior to the tender showing up online.

Some First Nations leaders have good relationsh­ips with conservati­on officers, according to Bear, but she pointed to ongoing skepticism with the justice system over the Gerald Stanley case to explain the apprehensi­on over the carbines.

“I really don’t think we’re ready for someone to have that power behind the trigger yet, because of these tensions,” she said.

“It’s pretty darn scary, I’ll tell you.”

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