Close X
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

94% of Surrey police vow not to join RCMP: union

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2022 03:14 PM
  • 94% of Surrey police vow not to join RCMP: union

SURREY, B.C. - The union representing members of the fledgling Surrey Police Service says its officers and civilian workers have "no intention" of joining the RCMP, should the municipal force be scrapped.

A statement from the Surrey Police Union says 94 per cent of its members have signed a pledge to refuse to apply to, or join, the Mounties, if newly elected Surrey Mayor Brenda Locke makes good on a campaign promise to cancel the city's switch from the national police force to a municipal one.

The union says it issued the statement after a media interview quoted Locke as saying she is working on a plan with the RCMP to ensure police union officers and civilian staff will be "cared for" if the municipal force can be disbanded.

The union says 275 of its 293 front-line officers have signed a statement rejecting any jump to what the pledge card describes as a "toxic" RCMP work environment that includes "a lack of local decision making, instability with regards to staying in Surrey and an absence of accountability."

Union president Rick Stewart says Locke's suspected hiring plan "shows no regard" for the will of the union members.

Transition to the Surrey Police Service has been underway since 2021 after former mayor Doug McCallum won provincial approval to form the municipal force, which he argued will be more responsive to local issues.

The union says, following Locke's latest comments, its members voluntarily signed a pledge that includes the statement "I joined in good faith to contribute to Surrey, yet a highly divisive political climate is directly impacting my personal and professional lives."

"The attraction of working for a Surrey-based municipal police force remains as one of the main factors behind our successful recruitment thus far," Stewart says of members who left jobs in other police detachments to work in the city.

He says Locke's plan doesn't address those concerns.

“If Mayor Locke truly wants to take a people-centric approach to policing, we remain open to collaboration, transparency and accountability in support of the best interests of Surrey residents," says Stewart.

MORE National ARTICLES

A divide in Chinatown over Vancouver's new mayor

A divide in Chinatown over Vancouver's new mayor
Fred Kwok, chair of the Chinese Cultural Centre in Chinatown, said Sim's background made immigrants feel he was representative of the community. But what was more important was how his election platform resonated in the neighbourhood, with his promises of more police and a city hall office in Chinatown.

A divide in Chinatown over Vancouver's new mayor

B.C. heat to be replaced by rain, dusting of snow

B.C. heat to be replaced by rain, dusting of snow
Environment Canada predicts the rain and snow will begin Friday afternoon and continue through Saturday as a colder air mass sweeps across the province. The weather office says nine temperature records were set Wednesday across the province, including four on Vancouver Island.   

B.C. heat to be replaced by rain, dusting of snow

Canadian citizenship for 300,000 people by March 2023, Indians to benefit

Canadian citizenship for 300,000 people by March 2023, Indians to benefit
The Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) memo recommends that it process a total of 285,000 decisions and 300,000 new citizens by March 31, 2023.

Canadian citizenship for 300,000 people by March 2023, Indians to benefit

Quebec dad, Kamaljit Arora, charged with murder absent from court

Quebec dad, Kamaljit Arora, charged with murder absent from court
Kamaljit Arora, 45, was charged on Tuesday with two counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of his daughter Anzel, 13, and son Aaron, 11, in the Montreal suburb of Laval. He also faces one count of assaulting his wife by strangulation.

Quebec dad, Kamaljit Arora, charged with murder absent from court

Vancity to offer carbon footprint credit card

Vancity to offer carbon footprint credit card
The Vancouver-based credit union says all Vancity Visa credit card holders will be offered the data, which will also include how their spending-linked emissions compare nationally and which purchases have the highest environmental cost. Vancity says it is partnering with climate-focused German fintech ecolytiq to offer the carbon calculator.

Vancity to offer carbon footprint credit card

Charge laid as Trudeau marks B.C. officer's death

Charge laid as Trudeau marks B.C. officer's death
Shaelyn Yang, 31, who police say was partnered with a city employee when an altercation broke out at a park in Burnaby, east of Vancouver, and she was stabbed on Tuesday.    

Charge laid as Trudeau marks B.C. officer's death