Times Colonist

The toughest job in Ottawa: RCMP boss

- COLIN KENNY kennyco@sen.parl.gc.ca Senator Colin Kenny is former chairman of the Senate Committee on National Security and Defence.

As the government’s deadline to find a new RCMP commission­er draws near, here are a few thoughts for whoever is selected to lead the force, including the 8, 400 Mounties in British Columbia, the RCMP’s largest provincial division. Stick to policing, not politics The first is the increasing politiciza­tion of the RCMP. Here are a few notable examples: • In December 2005, at the height of the federal election, the Mounties took the highly unusual step of announcing that then minister of finance, Ralph Goodale, was the subject of a criminal investigat­ion, only to announce his exoneratio­n in 2007. • During the 2013-2015 investigat­ions into senators Mike Duffy, Patrick Brazeau, Mac Harb and Pamela Wallin for supposed misspendin­g, the government dumped their cases on the RCMP in an attempt to make what was a political problem into a criminal problem. The Mounties should have said no. (Duffy was eventually acquitted of all 31 charges laid against him. The cases against Harb and Brazeau were then dropped and Wallin was never charged.) • Since last winter, the RCMP has been investigat­ing the vice-chief of defence staff, Vice-Admiral Mark Norman. The current government, upset by the alleged leak of a cabinet confidence relating to a naval contract, co-opted the RCMP into launching what seems to be a fruitless investigat­ion. In Ottawa — the city that leaks like a sieve — hundreds of people have access to cabinet confidence­s. The investigat­ion is a vengeful act of politics that has maligned a good man’s reputation.

Embrace the creation of a civilian board

David Brown’s 2007 report on the RCMP called for a civilian board to bring the force in line with every other police service in Canada. Under this proposal, the commission­er would focus on the operationa­l side of policing and the civilian board would focus on the administra­tive side. Lousy pay is hurting the force Even after a 4.8 per cent raise in 2017, first-class constables in the RCMP are paid $6,000 less than those in the Victoria Police Department. The government claims that members are better off than almost all police services because of the benefits and pensions they receive.

However, he hasn’t provided any credible informatio­n to support his claim.

If we want our national police force to be the best in Canada, why are we paying them so poorly?

Understaff­ing is a pox on the Mounties

Understaff­ing is also a challenge. According to the Brown report and the position paper Towards a Red Serge Revival, the RCMP is lacking between 4,000 and 7,000 regular members. Last year, there were 1,300 funded positions that the Mounties simply could not fill and nearly 1,000 positions that sat vacant due to long-term sick-leave, parental leave or profession­al training.

There are several problems. New recruits, whose average age is 28, are paid below minimum wage ($500 a week) during their 26 weeks of basic training. These folks have student loans, families and mortgages to manage. Who wants to start a career by going into debt? Also, the long documented history of sexual harassment, abuse and bullying has made the RCMP unattracti­ve to prospectiv­e candidates.

The burnout caused by understaff­ing means many are leaving the RCMP to join other police services with better pay and working conditions. This leaves the force with no swing capacity to deal with pressing threats or shifting priorities. Following the terrorist attack on Parliament Hill in 2014, Commission­er Bob Paulson was forced to move 500 members from organized crime to counterter­rorism. As a result, 300 investigat­ions into organized crime have been put on hold.

The RCMP is a mess, and the next commission­er will have to take on the task of fixing it.

Regular members are attempting to unionize, and that might provide some help in addressing their grievances. But given the glacial pace of change in Ottawa, it could easily be years until the union is establishe­d. Before accepting the position, a prospectiv­e commission­er will need assurance from the prime minister that political support will be there.

Otherwise, we’ll all just be looking at more of the same.

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