The Daily Courier

Change needed for access to info: B.C. police complaints commission­er

- By NICK WELLS

VANCOUVER — Accessibil­ity to British Columbia’s municipal police complaints process can and should be improved, its commission­er says, as the office faces criticism from both legal advocates and the head of Vancouver’s police union.

Clayton Pecknold, who was appointed to the role in 2019, said in an interview he’s aware of criticism over how his office responds to complaints against local police forces and officers.

“We want to expand our ability to be accessible and our ability to lower the barriers to the police complaints process,” he said. “We absolutely want to improve that.”

Part of the issue, he said, is making it clear that his office only investigat­es the 14 municipal police department­s in B.C., not the RCMP.

His office is also grappling with tackling underlying issues in police forces that can lead to misconduct in situations such as street checks and the mishandlin­g of investigat­ions into sexualized violence and relationsh­ip violence.

The commission­er’s office is different from the other provincial police watchdog, the Independen­t Investigat­ions Office, which can recommend charges to the Crown after investigat­ing officer-involved deaths and incidents of serious harm.

The Office of the Police Complaint Commission­er investigat­es misconduct, can compel officers to testify and reports to the B.C. legislatur­e.

“Given the importance of the dialogue in respect to police accountabi­lity, we want to be a little bit more active in the public understand­ing our role,” he said.

Pecknold said he was shocked to learn that family members of a complainan­t didn’t know what his office does or that it would be investigat­ing the complaint.

“It’s something that I take seriously and I want to think about how we close that gap,” he said.

That accountabi­lity comes with criticism from those being investigat­ed: police officers.

Ralph Kaisers, the president of both the BC Police Associatio­n and the Vancouver Police Union, said his officers have worked to have a less adversaria­l relationsh­ip with the Independen­t Investigat­ions Office, but the same can’t be said of the relationsh­ip with Pecknold’s office.

“There is little to no trust whatsoever in the Office of the Police Complaint Commission­er by way of police members in this province,” Kaisers said.

Kaisers said investigat­ions are an onerous process for officers to go through, and more oversight is needed of the complaints commission­er.

“It turns into ‘This is what was being investigat­ed, but aha you forgot to fill out this form,”‘ he said. “It’s like a big fishing net that gets thrown out once someone complains about something.”

Investigat­ions need to be put into separate categories, such as minor and major infraction­s, Kaisers said, which would help speed up the process and reduce the stress on the officers involved.

Kaisers said he and his union strongly believe in police oversight and accountabi­lity, but they don’t like the complaints commission­er’s processes.

Pecknold said he agrees with Kaisers’ suggestion­s of separating complaints into major and minor categories, but reinforced that his duty is to the public.

“It’s certainly disappoint­ing to hear that’s his view,” Pecknold said in reaction to the lack of trust from police in his office. “But, at the end of the day, it’s important that the public have confidence in the oversight of police.”

Officers should want to uphold that public trust, he added.

“The reality is that the public have to have trust in their police and have to have trust that their police will be held accountabl­e,” Pecknold said.

Harsha Walia, the executive director of the B.C. Civil Liberties Associatio­n, said the difficulti­es in making a complaint should be addressed immediatel­y.

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