CBC Edition

Joint training, shared tech considered as Halifax moves to integrate police and RCMP

- Haley Ryan

Halifax is moving ahead on work to integrate its mu‐ nicipal police force and the RCMP serving the region, which could see forces eventually share training and technology.

The city's board of police commission­ers received an update Wednesday on progress implementi­ng rec‐ ommendatio­ns from the Policing Model Transforma‐ tion Study from April 2023.

The report from consul‐ tant Pricewater­houseCoop‐ ers said the Mounties and Halifax Regional Police (HRP) need to work better togeth‐ er.

Since municipal amalga‐ mation in 1996, RCMP have handled the rural and some suburban parts of Halifax while HRP takes urban calls. But both forces often re‐ spond to the same scenes, depending on the situation and who's the closest avail‐ able officer.

The report also called for civilian teams to respond to health and wellness calls, rather than police. So far, most of the progress has been around this recommen‐ dation, and the municipali­ty's new community safety de‐ partment said it hopes to cre‐ ate those teams this year.

"I'm glad to say that com‐ munity safety, HRP, and RCMP are starting to work collective­ly together now in a very good fashion," Bill Moore, executive director of community safety, told the board.

In the update, the heads of Halifax RCMP and HRP suggested multiple areas of operations where the forces could be integrated, includ‐ ing training and communica‐ tions, hate crime response, canine units, body-worn cam‐ eras, special RCMP resources, and Emergency Response Teams.

Moore said a civilian project manager will be hired soon to consult with both forces and municipal staff to build an action plan for the integratio­n work. The police board and regional council will also have a say.

"Basically start to work with these groups and say, 'OK, which recommenda­tions are we going to tackle first, or in parallel at the beginning?"

Moore said.

The Mass Casualty Com‐ mission's final report also recommende­d better train‐ ing and policies between RCMP and municipal forces where they have integrated teams, and having civilian teams to respond to low-risk mental health calls.

During the mass shooting four years ago, RCMP leaders didn't initially call in HRP or other municipal forces for help as a gunman drove across the province killing 22 people, including a pregnant woman.

In his testimony before the commission, Chief Supt. Chris Leather of the Nova Scotia RCMP said this was out of concerns about inter‐ operabilit­y, communicat­ions, training and expectatio­ns during such a major event.

"I think it's fraught with risk," he said. "When they come together to work in a high-risk scenario, if they're not reading from the same page, if they're not aligned in terms of their thinking, their training and how they ad‐ dress a situation, what an awful place to experience that breakdown."

Although it's important to get the work underway, Hali‐ fax CAO Cathie O'Toole said major changes will likely have to wait until the province fin‐ ishes its overall policing re‐ view.

That is set to be delivered by April 2025, but O'Toole said it's likely the deadline will be pushed out because the panel leading that work only had its first meeting on Wednesday.

"But in the meantime, we know that there are actions we can take now … that will improve delivery of policing within the municipali­ty," O'‐ Toole said.

Moore said both police forces and community safety plan to bring a joint budget and business plan before council for the 2025-26 year.

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