Prairie Post (East Edition)

RCMP wants to remind provincial government of their worth to Albertans

- By Ryan Dahlman

There has been a lot of discussion recently about talks with the Alberta government doing more work in trying to establish a provincial police force and replace The Royal Canadian Mounted Police from law enforcemen­t in Alberta.

The RCMP are now examining the situation and are finding out what is happening with the government’s plans.

In 2019, the Alberta government set up a task force called the Fair Deal Panel to study opinions of Albertans from all walks of life, and get their thoughts on how they feel about their place in Confederat­ion.

“The Fair Deal Panel’s mandate is to listen to Albertans and their ideas for Alberta’s future. The Panel should focus on ideas that would strengthen our province’s economic position, give us a bigger voice within Confederat­ion, or increase provincial power over institutio­ns and funding in areas of provincial jurisdicti­on,” read a Nov. 9, 2019 letter from Premier Jason Kenney which listed “establishi­ng a provincial police force by ending the Alberta Police Service Agreement with the Government of Canada” as something to consider.

In the Fair Deal Panel’s Report, there were a total of 25 recommenda­tions given to the Province. Recommenda­tion 14 was “Create an Alberta police service to replace the RCMP.”

Brian Sauvé, President of the National Police Federation (NPF) says they learned of the seriousnes­s of the official plan to initiate talks and organizati­on of a provincial police force in May 2020. The National Police Federation launched its website (https://www.keepalbert­arcmp.ca) and Facebook page (Under@KeepAlbert­aRCMP) in January of 2020.

“The National Police Federation learned about the Fair Deal Panel Report when it was made public in the summer of 2020. That said, the National Police Federation was voted for in mid-2019 and constitute­d officially in January of 2020,” explains Sauvé in an interview with Prairie Post. “We are the RCMP’s first ever labour union, and we are still in growth mode. Once we learned the details of the Fair Deal Panel, we started to map out our strategic approach, which is all fact- and data-driven. In October 2020, the NPF engaged Pollara Strategic Insights to conduct a survey of 1,300 Albertans with broader and more representa­tive participat­ion within RCMP-policed communitie­s.

“This caught our attention because we keep our ears close to the ground. We’ve also been facing a similar situation in Surrey, B.C., so we’re applying some of our lessons learned there to Keep Alberta RCMP. So no real surprise element, really. We want to make sure that our voice, which represents over 3,500 RCMP Members across the province, is heard. Again, once we learned the details of the Fair Deal Panel, we started to map out our strategic approach, which is all fact and datadriven.”

Sauvé says that in October 2020, the NPF engaged Pollara Strategic Insights to conduct a survey of 1,300 Albertans with broader and more representa­tive participat­ion within RCMP-policed communitie­s. Pollara’s key findings revealed that: 81% of respondent­s living in RCMP-policed communitie­s are satisfied with current policing; 70% are opposed to the Fair Deal Panel’s recommenda­tion to create provincial police service; 77% are concerned with costs associated with a transition; and 93% want a detailed accounting of the costs and impacts associated with a transition.

In other words, Sauvé isn’t sure why this is being persued by the government.

“Only 1 in 5 respondent­s supported replacing the RCMP, and when it came to ranking priorities, Albertans ranked creating a new provincial police service in 14th of 15th places – practicall­y dead last,” explains Sauvé. “The big take-away: Albertans simply do not want this transition.”

According to the Fair Deal Panel’s findings “the RCMP in Alberta perenniall­y struggles with having enough RCMP officers to adequately staff smaller municipali­ties. Posting officers in a small communitie­s, then relocating them anywhere in Canada, is a disincenti­ve for many applicants. Indeed, in 2006, Alberta created the Alberta Sheriffs to help with traffic enforcemen­t, surveillan­ce, communicat­ions, and security at the courthouse and the legislatur­e. However, in many small towns, sheriffs have become the backbone of local law enforcemen­t when RCMP staffing is inadequate. In 2011, then Premier Ed Stelmach renewed Alberta’s contract with the RCMP for 20 years, from April 1, 2012, to March 31, 2032. The contract contains a terminatio­n clause, which allows the agreement to be terminated on March 31 of any year by either party, giving the other party at least twenty-four months’ notice. In other words, Alberta could, when this report is issued, terminate its agreement with the RCMP effective March 31, 2022. The contract could be terminat-ed even earlier if the federal government concurred.

Alberta pays $262.4 million annually for RCMP service, with the federal government paying $112.4 million annually. If Alberta canceled the agreement and created its own new provincial police service, the current federal contributi­on would have to be fully or partially absorbed by the province and municipali­ties.

33 " Municipali­ties will be responsibl­e for $15.4 mil33 lion of policing costs in 2020, and $60.3 million in 2023. The total contributi­ons from small and rural municipali­ties will be $200.6 million by 2024."

Sauvé acknowledg­es that money is always a key factor in these sorts of large-scale decisions, and even more so given the current economic situation in Alberta. He says when Finance Minister Travis Toews delivers Alberta’s 2021 Budget next week, Alberta taxpayers will be able to see, in concrete terms, Alberta’s public finances when Sauvé describes as “are in very bad shape” right now. He believes that “makes now a uniquely bad time to embark on unnecessar­y and costly pet projects that don’t improve the status quo of RCMP policing in Alberta.”

RCMP members in Alberta serve more than 1.7 million Albertans, through 117 RCMP detachment­s across 47 municipali­ties and 21 First Nations communitie­s.

All of the Provincial Policing Service Agreement statistics between the RCMP and government were unavailabl­e.

In terms of overall costs, NPF figures show that Alberta currently pays $262.4 million for its RCMP service, with the federal government paying $112.4 million annually in a 70-30 per cent split.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada