The Mounties are known for “always getting their man,” but they might not always get their way — a situation that’s unfolding in Surrey, where the province wants the RCMP to hand over its responsibilities to the newly formed Surrey Police Service.

This hotly contested and highly controversial move by the B.C. government — the Surrey mayor is vehemently opposed and wants to retain the RCMP — has made its way to the province’s Supreme Court. The case will likely have implications on how the Canadian Constitution applies to police reform.

It will also raise questions of national and practical importance: Should the RCMP be involved in municipal contract policing? Or is that role better left to the municipalities under provincial policing models? These questions illustrate an ongoing struggle between modern police reform and the old guard.

  • Em Adespoton
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    224 days ago

    That’s some heavy spin on the situation. Surrey was the subject of a multimillion dollar campaign to get rid of the RCMP, which the previous mayor was a part of. When the citizens realized (too late) what was happening, they elected a new mayor on the platform of bringing back the RCMP, but the process was already in motion to replace them.

    Surrey was for years the largest RCMP detachment in Canada, but for the past 20 years, they’ve struggled to staff it. The situation is even trickier now, because it’s many of the same people who used to work for the RCMP who now work for the Surrey Police. Re-hiring people who quit the RCMP while still offering continuity to the city is not something that’s simple to do.

    I see this as being the Surrey/RCMP equivalent of Brexit.

  • @[email protected]
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    22 days ago

    From what I can tell, the RCMP provides a superior level of officer quality for the same price, or the same level of officer quality for a lower price. They have an economy of scale that provides them an operational edge over small municipal departments.

    Such a nation-wide org also - when paired with effective disciplinary system that can actually fire bad apples - makes for a much more “clean” system. In the states, any officer fired for cause can just go to the next town over and get hired there as a police officer. This way, bad apples can bounce around municipalities, continuing to be bad officers and destroying the very lives they were sworn to protect. This cannot happen with a national org - if fired from the RCMP, they’re not going to let you work anywhere else in the country. You are then incapable of becoming another police officer anywhere in the country.

    But the RCMP is not a blanket national org; it only covers a good chunk of the country, not all of it.

    We should make that all of it.

  • @[email protected]
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    20 days ago

    If the NDP are worried about losing this election, it needs to be shown to them that Mike Fucking Farnworth is the complete cause and the reason.

    Don’t say it’s an RCMP issue when the people of Surrey and the RCMP want them there.

    Enough with the sycophantic op-ed pieces. He’s dictating policy on a town and writing cheques for them to cash with the grace and poise of a pensioner’s dog shitting on your lawn.

      • @[email protected]
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        -224 days ago

        You’re not wrong there. You never thought you’d be wishing for John again.

        At least all the cruelty will be consolidated into one super party of suck, and the choice will be a binary one between stupid and mean.

        • SatansMaggotyCumFart
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          -324 days ago

          Nah, the Conservatives finally gained relevance because they are named the conservatives, they aren’t going to hitch their wagon to B.C. United’s shit show.