Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties

The Canadian Press, 06 Mar, 2016 12:01 PM
  • RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties
EDMONTON — A workplace investigation that followed the shooting of two Mounties in Alberta last year says the RCMP contravened Canada Labour Code health and safety rules.
 
Const. David Wynn and auxiliary Const. Derek Bond were shot on Jan. 17, 2015, during a struggle with a suspected car thief in a St. Albert casino, just north of Edmonton. Wynn died a few days later.
 
A review of the St. Albert RCMP detachment by federal Labour Department investigators says the portable radios assigned to Wynn and Bond failed to transmit and receive inside the casino and that a radio in a police cruiser could not transmit or receive from the officers.
 
The investigation also found that the RCMP did not have safe alternative communication procedures for situations where radios are known to fail or not transmit or receive messages clearly.
 
It also determined that Bond's actions that day appear to have exceeded the expected duties of an auxiliary RCMP officer.
 
Last October, Bradley Tetarenko, a health and safety officer, issued a "direction" to the RCMP to fix the contraventions by Nov. 13, 2015, and to ensure that they don't happen again.
 
"The said official delegated by the Minister of Labour is of the opinion that the following provisions of the Canada Labour Code have been contravened," reads the order obtained by The Canadian Press from Occupational Health and Safety Tribunal Canada.
 
The direction document orders the RCMP to ensure that equipment used by employees is safe under all conditions of its intended use. It also directs the RCMP to identify, assess and take measures to prevent hazards associated with its communications system.
 
 
The order also deals with auxiliary constables. It calls on the RCMP to ensure that activities of every person granted access to a workplace do not endanger their health and safety.
 
"(The) employer shall identify and assess the hazards associated with the activities of the auxiliary constables ... and take steps to ensure the activities of the auxiliary officers do not create a hazard for themselves or RCMP members."
 
The direction order was sent in October to Deputy Commissioner Marianne Ryan, commanding officer of RCMP in Alberta.
 
A month later the RCMP filed an appeal of the direction, which has not yet been heard.
 
RCMP national headquarters staff declined to comment on the appeal.
 
Staff-Sgt. Julie Gagnon said the RCMP on Jan. 16 approved changes to the auxiliary constable program after conferring with provinces, territories and municipalities.
 
The changes include no longer allowing auxiliary constables to go on ride-alongs with Mounties or to take firearms familiarization training.
 
The RCMP is also working on a new national training standard and policy for auxiliary constables, she said in an email from Ottawa.
 
The RCMP website says auxiliary constables are unarmed, unpaid, uniformed volunteers that participate in community events, school crime prevention, traffic control, ground patrols, search and rescue and parades.
 
There are about 1,600 auxiliary constables across Canada. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Halifax Pediatrician, 72, Faces Charges Of Possessing, Sharing Child Pornography

Halifax Pediatrician, 72, Faces Charges Of Possessing, Sharing Child Pornography
Halifax police said Dr. William Richard Vitale, 72, was arrested around 6:25 a.m. at a house in the 400 block of St. Margarets Bay Road where officers seized computer equipment.

Halifax Pediatrician, 72, Faces Charges Of Possessing, Sharing Child Pornography

Deaths Show Need For Dedicated Child Advocate In Nova Scotia, Conservatives Say

Deaths Show Need For Dedicated Child Advocate In Nova Scotia, Conservatives Say
Nova Scotia needs a dedicated child advocate after the deaths of at least 11 children under provincial care since 2004, including a 16-year-old girl found dead in a Halifax home over the weekend, the opposition Tories say.

Deaths Show Need For Dedicated Child Advocate In Nova Scotia, Conservatives Say

Hailey Dunbar-Blanchette Murder: Preliminary Hearing For Suspect In Deaths Of Alberta Father, Child

Hailey Dunbar-Blanchette Murder: Preliminary Hearing For Suspect In Deaths Of Alberta Father, Child
Derek Saretzky appeared briefly via closed-circuit television from the Calgary Remand Centre. He is charged with first-degree murder in the September deaths of Hailey Dunbar-Blanchette and Terry Blanchette.

Hailey Dunbar-Blanchette Murder: Preliminary Hearing For Suspect In Deaths Of Alberta Father, Child

Catholic Health Provider Cautious About Assisted Dying Ahead Of New Law

Catholic Health Provider Cautious About Assisted Dying Ahead Of New Law
An internal memo from a Roman Catholic health-care provider in Vancouver reminds its leadership team that physician-assisted dying violates the Catholic faith and until the law changes the service will not be provided.

Catholic Health Provider Cautious About Assisted Dying Ahead Of New Law

Lots Of Hurdles Before Feds Can Legislate Medical Assistance In Dying

Lots Of Hurdles Before Feds Can Legislate Medical Assistance In Dying
The highly anticipated report of a special joint parliamentary committee on medically assisted dying is far from the final word on the subject.

Lots Of Hurdles Before Feds Can Legislate Medical Assistance In Dying

Board OKs Plan For Man Who Beheaded Bus Passenger To Eventually Live On His Own

Board OKs Plan For Man Who Beheaded Bus Passenger To Eventually Live On His Own
Vince Li — who has changed his name to Will Baker — killed Tim McLean during a bus trip along the TransCanada Highway near Portage la Prairie in July 2008.

Board OKs Plan For Man Who Beheaded Bus Passenger To Eventually Live On His Own