Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rift Widens Over Policing In Surrey: Third Member Jack Hundial Quits Mayor’s Safe Surrey Coalition

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jul, 2019 08:22 PM

    SURREY, B.C. - Fractures within a civic political party in Surrey, B.C., are widening with the resignation of a third member of the Safe Surrey Coalition in the last two months.

     

    Coun. Jack Hundial announced his departure Thursday, citing concerns about coalition leader and Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum's methods in the effort to replace the city's RCMP with a municipal force.

     

    He says in a statement that the mayor's decision to dissolve Surrey's public safety committee in favour of an interim Police Transition Advisory Committee was "the last straw."

     

    Hundial, a former RCMP officer, says his 25 years in law enforcement contributed to the party's election of seven of Surrey's eight councillors in last fall's civic vote, yet he has had just one, 30-minute conversation with McCallum about public safety since then.

     

    Hundial says McCallum's latest report on a municipal police force "will only make the criminals feel safer in Surrey."

     

    Hundial joins former coalition councillors Stephen Pettigrew and Brenda Locke in sitting as an Independent on council, while McCallum and five other councillors continue under the Safe Surrey Coalition banner.

     

    The coalition's election platform estimated the switch from RCMP to a civic force could be accomplished within a 10 per cent cost increase.

     

    But Hundial says McCallum's latest proposal cuts both the quality of current policing programs and the number of officers on the street.

     

    "I can never support any initiative that states Surrey needs fewer police officers at a higher cost," Hundial says in the statement.

     

    Hundial says the mayor's report was rushed through without an independent feasibility study and "does not adequately address the public safety reason for changing to a municipal police force."

     

    Since the municipal election, the RCMP has added provisions that could allow Surrey to have its own local police board within the federal force and Hundial believes the change should be examined "before rushing ahead" with a civic force.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued For Sex Offender Jonathan Cardinal Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Vancouver Police are asking for the public’s help in locating 29-year-old Jonathan Cardinal, a federal sex offender, after he failed to return to his halfway house in Vancouver on July 2.

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued For Sex Offender Jonathan Cardinal Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Supreme Court Of Canada Rejects Saskatchewan Hit-Man Murder Appeal

    Supreme Court Of Canada Rejects Saskatchewan Hit-Man Murder Appeal
    Joshua Dylan Petrin was a high-ranking drug trafficker when he asked two of his associates to "take care" of his right-hand man, who was planning to walk away from their criminal enterprise without his permission.

    Supreme Court Of Canada Rejects Saskatchewan Hit-Man Murder Appeal

    Former N.S. Mountie Sentenced To Decade In Prison For Theft, Cocaine Trafficking

    Former N.S. Mountie Sentenced To Decade In Prison For Theft, Cocaine Trafficking
    A former Nova Scotia Mountie has been sentenced to 10 years in a minimum security prison for stealing 10 kilograms of cocaine from an exhibit locker and arranging sales that earned him $100,000 in cash.

    Former N.S. Mountie Sentenced To Decade In Prison For Theft, Cocaine Trafficking

    Trudeau Announces $1.3 Billion In Federal Funding For Montreal Metro Extension

    Trudeau Announces $1.3 Billion In Federal Funding For Montreal Metro Extension
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government will invest $1.3 billion to help finance an extension of Montreal's metro system.  

    Trudeau Announces $1.3 Billion In Federal Funding For Montreal Metro Extension

    Man Found Not Responsible In Stabbing Of Priest At St. Joseph's Oratory

    Man Found Not Responsible In Stabbing Of Priest At St. Joseph's Oratory
     A man charged with stabbing a Catholic priest during a mass that was being streamed online from Montreal's St. Joseph's Oratory in March has been found not criminally responsible.

    Man Found Not Responsible In Stabbing Of Priest At St. Joseph's Oratory

    'Everybody's Baby:' Police, Family Reflect On Disappearance Of Tamra Keepness

    Retired police corporal Jim Pratt remembers standing on a road on the outskirts of Regina as a team of searchers walked through a yellow canola field.

    'Everybody's Baby:' Police, Family Reflect On Disappearance Of Tamra Keepness