The Daily Courier

‘Keep our people safe’: First Nation wants its own police force

- By BILL GRAVELAND

SIKSIKA, Alta. — The Alberta government and a southern Alberta First Nation are calling on Ottawa to eliminate a roadblock preventing the creation of a new Indigenous police force.

The Siksika Nation, 130 kilometres east of Calgary, had its own police force from 1992 to 2002, but the 10year agreement with the federal and provincial government­s that establishe­d the organizati­on wasn’t renewed due to a lack of funding.

Efforts to re-establish the force have been on hold as the federal government completes a review of its First Nations and Inuit Policing Program.

“A big part of the next step is for Canada to step up and to be able to unfreeze the First Nations and Inuit Policing Program to be able to move forward and for this to be funded and to be set up,” said Alberta Justice Minister Tyler Shandro at a news conference at Siksika on Monday with Chief Ouray Crowfoot.

“It is time for the federal government to unfreeze, finish their review, finish this off. Let’s get going.”

Alberta and the First Nation have signed a memorandum of understand­ing agreeing to work together on initiative­s to improve public safety for members of the Siksika Nation and developing a funding framework for a new police service.

“We’re the second largest First Nation in Canada from a land perspectiv­e, yet we don’t have policing,” said Crowfoot.

Last month, Siksika signed a historic settlement with the federal government that provided $1.3 billion in compensati­on to the First Nation to resolve outstandin­g land claims, which include about 46,500 hectares of Siksika’s reserve and certain mineral rights taken by Canada.

Crowfoot said at the time that one of his priorities

is to bring back a police force for the reserve.

“We’re not asking for a free ride,” he said. “We’re funding it ourselves and we’re just asking for co-operation from Alberta, co-operation from the federal government.”

Crowfoot said Siksika makes up about 85 per cent of the calls answered by the RCMP in Gleichen. But he said response times on the sprawling reserve would be better answered by people who know the people and where they live.

“Having our own force would save lives, reduce critical response times, as well as from an economic standpoint. When you have police in a community, you have a more preventive solution,” Crowfoot said. “Our own force will reduce response time from police, which could save lives in those critical minutes in life-threatenin­g situations.”

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH/The Canadian Press ?? Potential recruits talk with an RCMP officer at a Blood Tribe Police Service hosted recruiting drive held last week in Stand Off, Alta.
JEFF MCINTOSH/The Canadian Press Potential recruits talk with an RCMP officer at a Blood Tribe Police Service hosted recruiting drive held last week in Stand Off, Alta.

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