The Prince George Citizen

RCMP need to make changes

- TRUDY KLASSEN

Much of the problems with the RCMP recently in the news can be placed at the foot of the RCMP leadership and the justice system, not on most average hard-working cops who would take a bullet for any member of the public if she could.

Facing public pressure, the Commission­er of the RCMP, Brenda Lucki, flipfloppe­d on whether there was systemic racism in the force within 24 hours. That she doesn’t understand the term, didn’t bother to learn what the term meant, seems obvious.

When “….MPs repeatedly pressed her for answers over systemic racism in the RCMP — and she struggled to come up with an example, at one point referencin­g the disparity in officers’ heights,” according to CTV News.

The commission­er has stated that increasing diversity will improve police interactio­ns with the public. However, the RCMP has had one of the most diverse workforces for a number of years already, so lack of diversity is likely not the source of the problem.

She would know that, so why would she say that? Is her job political rather than service-oriented?

There is at least one recent change within the RCMP that could be contributi­ng to the much-publicized problems. Due to low recruitmen­t rates, the standards for acceptance into the RCMP have been lowered. If there are not enough “upstanding citizen” applicants, it likely means the job is not attractive. Is this because of a poor work environmen­t? How does the pay compare? How about working conditions? Are promotions going to the best people, or like in many organizati­ons, to those best at making themselves look good? There is little the average cop can do about these issues, so these are a matter of political will on the part of the commission­er and politician­s.

The Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Report had recommenda­tions for the RCMP, calling on them to “stop rotating inexperien­ced police officers into Indigenous and northern communitie­s…”

This is a stunningly simple request made several years ago.

A decent mom would never give her youngest child the hardest job, so why is the RCMP brass doing this? Proper assignment­s related to maturity, skill-set, and interest, would be a much smarter way to move forward. The difficulty of filling those positions needs to be solved by a broader effort to decentrali­ze government services and the improvemen­t of services, together with the community leaders, in a cooperativ­e effort.

The official RCMP motto is to “Uphold the Right.” We owe our brave men and women the tools, the training, and the “Right” working environmen­t so that they can carry out this high and worthy duty in a manner that dignifies their office.

It will require wisdom, courage, with a focus on truth and facts, in service of all Canadians, to improve what seems to be systematic problems within the RCMP. Anything else is just political posturing that changes nothing, and we will be having this conversati­on again in a few years.

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