Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. requests more info on Surrey police shift

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jan, 2023 05:24 PM
  • B.C. requests more info on Surrey police shift

VICTORIA - The British Columbia government needs to know more before it decides on an "unprecedented" request to revert to RCMP policing in Surrey in a decision that affects the whole province, the public safety minister said.

Mike Farnworth told media at the B.C. legislature his staff have reviewed submissions from those involved in the ongoing transition to a municipal force, and the director of police services has determined additional information is required.

The policing transition in Surrey is complex, involving the largest RCMP detachment in Canada, and requires an in-depth analysis before a decision is made, he said.

"Surrey made the decision to move to a municipal police force, Surrey’s making a decision to move back to the RCMP. My role as minister is to ensure that there is a proper and safe plan to do that, and that means ensuring safe and adequate and effective policing, not just in Surrey, but in the region and the province."

Farnworth said his staff have been looking at submissions from the City of Surrey, the Surrey RCMP and the Surrey Police Service to identify gaps and determine what's accurate when it comes to details around costs and human resources.

The request for the city and RCMP to provide more information includes questions about the number of employees required to "re-staff" the detachment and around the potential "demobilization" of the municipal force, the minister said.

"I would like to see it done as expeditiously as possible," he said of the analysis.

"But also, it needs to be thorough."

The transition to municipal policing was thrown into disarray by the election of Mayor Brenda Locke last fall, who campaigned on maintaining the RCMP.

Her defeated predecessor, Doug McCallum, had initiated the previous plan to scrap the Mounties.

The new Surrey city council voted in December to send a plan to Farnworth requesting to keep the RCMP, saying that would save $235 million over five years.

The Surrey Police Service followed up with its own report calling on Farnworth to reject that plan, saying halting the transition would mean firing 375 employees, dissolving two police unions and accepting "unrecoverable" costs of $107 million.

Locke responded to Farnworth's announcement Thursday, saying "the province needs to do the right thing and confirm the city has the right to this decision," adding she does not "believe the province's reason to delay its decision is justified."

"The inability to make a timely decision is unfair to (Surrey Police Service) and RCMP officers and their families," Locke said in a statement, adding the timeline for the decision also affects the city's work on its 2023 budget.

Locke said the city and the RCMP each submitted plans that clearly and thoroughly provided "all the necessary details" to demonstrate their ability to keep the Mounties "in a more cost-effective and timely way" than continuing with the municipal force.

It's natural, she said, to want more information as plans are put into effect, but it is "a waste of time to continue to do that work prior to the province's decision."

MORE National ARTICLES

Police seeking video following shots fired at a South Surrey residence

Police seeking video following shots fired at a South Surrey residence
On Wednesday,  just after midnight, Surrey RCMP received the report of shots fired at a residence in the 12700-block of 27A Avenue. Police attended and located evidence consistent with a shooting. The residence was occupied at the time of the shooting, but thankfully, no one was injured.

Police seeking video following shots fired at a South Surrey residence

Canadian city pays tribute to Moosewala, plants a tree

Canadian city pays tribute to Moosewala, plants a tree
Brampton was a second home to Moosewala, who went there in 2016 as an international student, and soon became a behemoth in the music industry delivering chart-topping hits. Punjab police recently arrested gangster Deepak Tinu, one of the main accused in the murder case. 

Canadian city pays tribute to Moosewala, plants a tree

Police acting as 'social workers' at risk: officer

Police acting as 'social workers' at risk: officer
Sgt. Steve Addison said the stabbing death of RCMP Const. Shaelyn Yang in Burnaby, B.C., this week has highlighted the fact that officers are increasingly ending up in potentially dangerous situations.  

Police acting as 'social workers' at risk: officer

David Eby to be declared B.C.'s NDP leader

David Eby to be declared B.C.'s NDP leader
There's no word on when Eby will be sworn in as premier, but outgoing Premier John Horgan says he fully supports him and accused Appadurai's campaign of resorting to tactics of "thuggery." Eby, the former B.C. attorney general and housing minister, says he will also lay out plans today for his first 100 days in office.

David Eby to be declared B.C.'s NDP leader

First rain in over a month dampens southern B.C.

First rain in over a month dampens southern B.C.
Rain is expected to continue through Saturday and into next week and shishalh Nation Chief Warren Paull anticipates the Sechelt area could receive as much as 35 millimetres from the expected round of systems, but says much more is needed.

First rain in over a month dampens southern B.C.

Surrey RCMP warn of high potency batch of Fentanyl circulating in North Surrey

Surrey RCMP warn of high potency batch of Fentanyl circulating in North Surrey
Surrey RCMP is warning the public of a batch of high potency Fentanyl circulating and reminding people using street drugs to take appropriate precautions.  There is high potency Fentanyl circulating in the North Surrey area, which increases the risk of overdose. 

Surrey RCMP warn of high potency batch of Fentanyl circulating in North Surrey