Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. government sets November date for Surrey police transition

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Apr, 2024 03:15 PM
  • B.C. government sets November date for Surrey police transition

British Columbia's government has set Nov. 29 as the date when the Surrey Police Service will take over from the RCMP as the city's force of jurisdiction.

Solicitor General Mike Farnworth says Surrey RCMP will continue to operate and provide support after the official transition, although the Mounties will determine what type of support will be offered.

Farnworth says the transition is taking place under existing provincial and federal procedures and does not require any rule changes.

He says the province wants a "collaborative approach" that doesn't require one force giving up authority to the other.

Surrey Police Service Chief Const. Norm Lipinski says the force currently has 428 staff including 367 sworn officers, and hiring "will ramp up" in light of the transition date announcement.

Farnworth says there is an existing agreement to maintain 834 officers in Surrey between the RCMP and the municipal force, and the Mounties will redeploy as the Surrey Police Service hires more officers.

The police transition in Surrey has been an active battlefront between the province and the city's municipal government, with Mayor Brenda Locke elected in 2022 on a promise to retain the RCMP.

Locke and Surrey's city council earlier this year rejected an offer from the province to provide another $100 million to the municipal government on top of an original offer of $150 million for the added costs of transitioning to an independent police force.

Farnworth said after the rejection that the province would move ahead with the transition.

The municipal government is challenging the provincial order for the transition in the B.C. Supreme Court, saying the change in the Police Act places limits on voters’ freedom of expression.

Locke said at the time that court proceedings would begin on April 29.

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman found dead in South Vancouver

Woman found dead in South Vancouver
Police say a woman has been found dead in south Vancouver. An investigation is now underway in an area near the Fraserview Golf Course. 

Woman found dead in South Vancouver

Decline in home sales: GVREB

Decline in home sales: GVREB
Greater Vancouver's real estate board says there were about 24-hundred home sales in the region last month. It represents a 4.7 per cent decrease from the roughly 25-hundred sales recorded in March last year. 

Decline in home sales: GVREB

B.C. government targets 'profiteers' with legislation to bring in flipping tax

B.C. government targets 'profiteers' with legislation to bring in flipping tax
Finance Minister Katrine Conroy told the legislature that the tax is aimed at speculators who use housing only to turn a quick profit and it will make "profiteers think twice about a practice that inflates housing costs during a housing crisis."

B.C. government targets 'profiteers' with legislation to bring in flipping tax

BC Hydro wants more clean power to help meet demand, clean energy targets

BC Hydro wants more clean power to help meet demand, clean energy targets
BC Hydro is looking for more clean power to add to its grids as electricity demands are expected to increase by 15 per cent in the next six years. The Ministry of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation says the Crown power utility has issued its first call in 15 years and is looking to acquire about 3,000 gigawatt hours per year. 

BC Hydro wants more clean power to help meet demand, clean energy targets

Canadian man killed providing aid in Gaza was a military veteran with a young son

Canadian man killed providing aid in Gaza was a military veteran with a young son
A Canadian man killed along with six other aid workers in the Gaza Strip on Monday is a military veteran from Quebec who leaves behind a partner and a one-year-old son. Jacob Flickinger, 33, was one of seven people in a convoy of World Central Kitchen vehicles when it was hit by an Israeli airstrike in what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has described as a tragic mistake.

Canadian man killed providing aid in Gaza was a military veteran with a young son

Speed limiting devices to become mandatory on heavy B.C. commercial trucks

Speed limiting devices to become mandatory on heavy B.C. commercial trucks
The British Columbia Transportation Ministry says commercial trucks above a certain weight will soon be required to be fitted with technology to limit how fast they travel on provincial roadways.  The ministry says the "speed-limiter devices" will be mandatory on April 5 for commercial trucks weighing more than 11,793 kilograms and if they were built after 1994. 

Speed limiting devices to become mandatory on heavy B.C. commercial trucks