The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘Be kind and take care of others, and have fun’

Brenda Lucki draws on more than three decades of experience as a Mountie

- BY JIM BRONSKILL

When she ran the RCMP’s training academy in Regina, Brenda Lucki told graduating cadets to make the communitie­s they serve better, to be kind and take care of others, to look after themselves and, above all, to have fun.

The new head of the national police force says she brings the same philosophy to the top job, drawing on more than three decades of experience as a Mountie.

“This is going to sound like a beauty pageant answer from the ‘70s, but I really wanted to serve the public, and I wanted to make positive change in the communitie­s where I served,” Lucki said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

“Honestly, that hasn’t changed, I can say, in 32 years.”

Lucki, 53, took the reins of the storied institutio­n on April 16, becoming the 24th RCMP commission­er and the first permanent female boss.

The Trudeau government has directed her to modernize and reform the RCMP’s culture, protect employees from harassment and workplace violence, and foster reconcilia­tion with Indigenous Peoples.

The government also wants Lucki to make the force representa­tive of Canada’s diverse population by embracing gender parity and ensuring that women, Indigenous members and minority groups are better reflected in positions of leadership.

“It is important that Canadians see themselves reflected in the people that police them,” says a newly released mandate letter to Lucki from Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, the cabinet member responsibl­e for the Mounties.

The letter says another priority will be implementi­ng measures to improve health and wellness in the RCMP after an auditor’s report found the force was failing to meet the mentalheal­th needs of its members due to a lack of resources, poor monitoring and meagre support from supervisor­s.

Lucki agrees with the push for change, but also staunchly defends the force. “There’s a lot of good things that we do every single day in the RCMP, and we need to celebrate that.”

For now, she is saying little about pressing agenda items like recreation­al marijuana legalizati­on, law enforcemen­t access to people’s emails and phone calls, and concerns about extremists returning from overseas.

At a news conference Monday with Goodale, Lucki signalled willingnes­s to consider the idea of a civilian board of management for the RCMP — a measure many have recommende­d over the years to provide general direction to the force and bolster public accountabi­lity. Goodale said the notion was under considerat­ion.

She was also quizzed by MPs on the House of Commons public safety committee, where one Liberal curious about harassment in the force asked how “a lady will tell the guys how to behave?”

“We do it all the time — it’s part of our makeup. Ask my husband,” Lucki quipped.

She inherits a force still grappling with ingrained problems of bullying and harassment.

A year and a half ago, her predecesso­r, Bob Paulson, delivered an apology to hundreds of current and former female officers and employees who were subjected to discrimina­tion and harassment dating back as far as four decades.

The words of regret came as the force settled class-action lawsuits stemming from allegation­s that cast a dark pall over it. Lucki is often asked if she’s going to fix the problem, a question that makes her bristle because she doesn’t think things are necessaril­y broken.

“People don’t come to work and say they’re going to bully somebody or harass somebody. It’s not that black and white. So we have to figure out what the root causes are and try to get to that,” she said in the interview.

“I need every employee in the RCMP to own that, and have the courage not only to be accountabl­e for themselves, but to have the courage to be accountabl­e to others, for others, and say, that’s unacceptab­le and take a stand. Because otherwise we won’t change.”

Asked if she has personally experience­d bullying or harassment, she answered obliquely.

“I would be remiss if I didn’t say that not everything has been perfect. But I think in general I’ve had a great career and I always say, whatever doesn’t kill you makes you stronger. So I think it helps me be a better leader and more empathetic. Of course, I’ve dealt with situations that weren’t completely comfortabl­e, but I’ve dealt with them.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? New RCMP Commission­er Brenda Lucki appears at a House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security in Ottawa on Monday.
CP PHOTO New RCMP Commission­er Brenda Lucki appears at a House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security in Ottawa on Monday.

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