Times Colonist

Feds eye ‘more responsive’ RCMP contract policing

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — The Liberal government is looking for ways to improve policing services provided under contract by the RCMP across Canada — eyeing everything from overall cost and sustainabi­lity to stronger oversight and accountabi­lity.

Among the possibilit­ies are “more responsive” police service models that could involve closer integratio­n of the RCMP and community social services, say internal Public Safety Canada notes.

The notes, obtained through the Access to Informatio­n Act, are a discussion guide for widerangin­g consultati­ons on options to strengthen the RCMP’s contract policing.

The RCMP provides frontline policing services through contracts with all provinces and territorie­s, except Ontario and Quebec, as well as some 150 municipali­ties. Current agreements don’t expire until March 31, 2032.

Provinces and territorie­s pay 70 per cent of RCMP costs and the federal government covers the remainder. Municipal agreements vary, sometimes depending on population size.

“What principles should guide future discussion­s around how and which costs are shared between contract jurisdicti­ons and the federal government?” asks one of the discussion guide questions.

“How could the contract policing program evolve to better meet the needs of the communitie­s it serves?”

Public Safety said the department, in collaborat­ion with the RCMP, held in-person meetings from spring to fall 2023 of last year with officials from provinces and territorie­s that participat­e in the contract policing program.

In addition, there were virtual sessions with municipal partners and other interested parties, such as the RCMP management advisory board, the Canadian Associatio­n of Police Governance, the Public Service Alliance of Canada and the National Police Federation, which represents front-line Mounties.

Virtual meetings were also held with First Nations on a regional basis, and two national sharing circles took place.

A coming report will summarize the views of partners on the program, as well as “areas for potential improvemen­ts,” Public Safety said.

In recent years, some jurisdicti­ons have pondered alternativ­es to the RCMP, with Surrey and Grande Prairie, Alta., opting to create their own municipal police services.

The changes have played out against a bigger backdrop of fundamenta­l questions about the overall role of the RCMP and how it can balance service to small communitie­s with the demands of federal policing amid cyberthrea­ts, financial crime and national security vulnerabil­ities.

“The nature of the risks and threats covered by federal policing are growing in complexity and significan­ce,” says a May 2023 memo to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

“Notwithsta­nding its exclusive responsibi­lity for federal policing, the majority of the RCMP’s resources are allocated to contract policing.”

A commission of inquiry into the horrific 2020 Nova Scotia shootings recommende­d last year that the federal public safety minister establish priorities for the RCMP, keeping the tasks that are suitable to a federal policing agency.

For the moment, the review of contract policing suggests the government is seeking measured improvemen­ts — not wholesale changes — to the contract policing system.

RCMP commission­er Mike Duheme recently called the consultati­on a way to “touch base” in the runup to renewal of agreements.

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