Medicine Hat News

RCMP union pans Sask. marshals plan, says money should go to Mounties

- JEREMY SIMES

The head of the union representi­ng Mounties says Saskatchew­an’s plan to start a new police service is not the answer to address rising crime.

Brian Sauve of the National Police Federation says the province should instead direct dollars it plans to spend on the Saskatchew­an Marshals Service to the RCMP.

The federation recently launched an online campaign criticizin­g the proposed marshals service, saying it’s something most people don’t want and it won’t immediatel­y solve policing issues.

“The big thing is nobody knows what it’s going to do,” Sauve said this week.

“Police associatio­ns are sitting back and saying, ‘Well, why are we spending money on something new when we can reinvest in infrastruc­ture and services that are really well provided, well resourced and already have the infrastruc­ture in place?’

“(Residents) don’t want some brass ring that may plug a hole, and we don’t know what that hole is.”

The province announced in the fall of 2022 that it was creating the marshals service to enhance public safety, particular­ly in high-crime areas. Officers would locate high-risk offenders and investigat­e farm thefts. They would also assist RCMP and other police agencies.

The province has hired a chief marshal, who plans to oversee about 70 officers by 2026.

Saskatchew­an has spent $7 million to initiate the service and says it will cost $20 million per year once the team is operationa­l. It has not outlined other startup costs.

Sauve said the Saskatchew­an Party government could fund 100 additional RCMP officers with $20 million per year. He said the average Mountie costs a little less than $200,000 per year,noting the federal government covers 30 per cent.

“That would be the thing that would satisfy a lot of folks in Saskatchew­an and that would satisfy a lot of police officers in Saskatchew­an, who have been under-resourced and underfunde­d for a long time.”

Assistant Commission­er Rhonda Blackmore, who is commanding officer of the RCMP in Saskatchew­an, has questioned what the plan means for the force.

She said in August there’s an opportunit­y to provide additional funding to RCMP, noting violent crime has risen.

“I do think there is potential for some repetition from the marshals, given some of the mandates that we have heard they’re going to be doing, functions that the RCMP is already doing,” Blackmore said.

The province has said it’s looking for officers who are “fairly experience­d” to join the marshals.

It said it has also heard from residents who have concerns about long RCMP response times.

Sauve said the province could start to address response times by funding a study that would inform it on how to reposition resources.

“You really need to have some solid data, evidenceba­sed decision making to be able to say this is how we’re going to move our way forward,” he said.

“Let’s figure out how we can do it better versus throwing darts at a dartboard and guessing that this is going to happen.”

The federation commission­ed an online survey in November, which found 81 per cent of respondent­s were satisfied or very satisfied with RCMP.

About two-thirds of respondent­s said they haven’t heard of the marshals and 52 per cent said $20 million in annual funding should be spent to increase RCMP services.

Pollara Strategic Insights conducted the poll between Nov. 2 and 13, surveying 1,006 Saskatchew­an adults through a randomly selected online sample. The polling industry’s profession­al body, the Canadian Research Insights Council, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

The survey also said 60 per cent of respondent­s were opposed to the marshals not immediatel­y having an oversight body. The province’s deputy minister is to act in place of a police board to oversee operations until boots are on the ground.

“This means that politician­s will have access to police informatio­n that should not otherwise be accessible to government­s and politician­s, impeding the independen­ce of such a law enforcemen­t agency,” says the federation’s website.

Sauve said police services need to be independen­t from government.

The federation had a similar campaign when the Alberta government was looking at creating a provincial police force.

In August, the province said it was no longer formally pursuing a police service but that the idea wasn’t dead.

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