Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police chiefs embrace crisis response changes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Aug, 2020 09:15 PM
  • Police chiefs embrace crisis response changes

Police chiefs say they support closer collaboration with crisis workers to help prevent tragedies when their officers confront people dealing with mental health issues.

Peel Regional Police Chief Nishan Duraiappah says sending two police officers to such calls allows only the option of transporting the person in need to a hospital.

He told MPs on the House of Commons public safety committee today that dispatching an officer and a crisis worker, on the other hand, allows the response team to get a better sense of what will help the person.

Waterloo Regional Police Service Chief Bryan Larkin says law enforcement agencies are criminalizing homelessness, addiction and other issues that should be dealt with in other ways through a model focused on public health.

Larkin, who is on the drug advisory committee of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police, points to the association's recent call for the decriminalization of personal drug use as an example of a constructive approach.

The public safety committee is studying systemic racism in Canadian policing in response to widespread concern over how police treat Black and Indigenous people.

Photo courtesy of Missisauga News

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds eye details to trace flyers' contacts

Feds eye details to trace flyers' contacts
As Ottawa and airlines talk about contact tracing, federal officials are trying to sort out how much information companies should provide, and how the data should flow.

Feds eye details to trace flyers' contacts

Canada signs deals to get COVID-19 vaccines

Canada signs deals to get COVID-19 vaccines
Canada is negotiating deals with pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and U.S.-based biotech firm Moderna to secure millions of doses of their experimental COVID-19 vaccines, in case either is approved for wide-scale use.

Canada signs deals to get COVID-19 vaccines

Fisheries industry getting financial support

Fisheries industry getting financial support
The federal government has announced details of a $469-million program aimed at helping Canada's fish harvesters deal with the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Fisheries industry getting financial support

Lebanese-Canadian group raises money for Beirut

Lebanese-Canadian group raises money for Beirut
Lebanese-Canadians who watched in horror as an explosion tore through Beirut turned their attention to fundraising on Wednesday, saying it was one of the few things they could do to feel useful from the other side of the world.

Lebanese-Canadian group raises money for Beirut

WE controversy hits Trudeau's support: Poll

WE controversy hits Trudeau's support: Poll
Nearly half of Canadians would support an election being called if the federal watchdog finds Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to have violated the Conflict of Interest Act again over the WE charity affair, a new poll suggests.

WE controversy hits Trudeau's support: Poll

Feds free up billions for COVID-19 retrofits

Feds free up billions for COVID-19 retrofits
The federal government is moving ahead with plans to make it easier for provinces and territories to spend billions of dollars on infrastructure projects to address the challenges posed by COVID-19.

Feds free up billions for COVID-19 retrofits