Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Surrey Asks For Vancouver's Help With Replacing RCMP With Municipal Police Force

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Dec, 2018 01:21 AM

    SURREY, B.C. — Surrey has asked for help from Vancouver's city staff and police force as it moves forward with a plan to replace its RCMP detachment with a municipal police service.


    Mayor Doug McCallum says in a news release that the Vancouver Police Department is internationally recognized as a best-practice, evidence-based force and Surrey hopes to create a similar model.


    He says Surrey wants a municipal police service that takes a leading-edge approach to preventing and solving crime and social issues that impact its communities.


    The city says it has put forward a request for technical assistance from Vancouver and its police department, and the cities will now work to develop a partnership agreement.


    It says it wants to draw on Vancouver's knowledge of legal and financial issues related to policing, while learning from the police department's expertise with strategic planning, developing a transition plan and building an operational policing model.


    Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart says his city and police board are interested and willing to explore a formal partnership to support Surrey's transition.



    "It is important we do all we can to fight crime across the region," he says.


    The release says Vancouver's deputy city manager Paul Mochrie will work with Surrey's general manager of policing transition Terry Waterhouse to develop a draft partnership agreement.


    This will allow for the efficient and effective delivery of policing services as Surrey transitions to a municipal police department, it says.


    "What Vancouver and its police department bring to the table are experience and knowledge that will help us create, in short order, a police department that meets the needs of our city and ensures the safety and security of all Surrey residents," says McCallum.


    At the first city council meeting after his election this fall, McCallum and Surrey's eight councillors voted unanimously to begin working toward development of a municipal police force and termination of the city's RCMP contract.



    McCallum has said he believes the switch to municipal policing can be accomplished within the next two years at a cost of about $120 million.


    Surrey RCMP have said their officers will remain on the job throughout any changes and noted that statistics show crime has declined in the city over the past decade, including violent offences and property crimes.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    1 Man Dead Following Daytime Shooting In Surrey, Homicide Team Called

    1 Man Dead Following Daytime Shooting In Surrey, Homicide Team Called
    Homicide detectives are investigating a shooting that left one person dead in Surrey, B.C. today morning.

    1 Man Dead Following Daytime Shooting In Surrey, Homicide Team Called

    A Night of Community Achievements & Excellence

    The 9th Annual spectacular event took place on September 14, 2018, and was attended by over 700 guests in attendance.

    A Night of Community Achievements & Excellence

    Two Elderly Women In Hospital After Separate Vancouver Home Fires

    VANCOUVER — Two elderly women are in hospital, one with minor burns and the other suffering from smoke inhalation, after separate fires in Vancouver on Saturday.

    Two Elderly Women In Hospital After Separate Vancouver Home Fires

    Professor Fights Ban Amid Debate On Academic Freedom At B.C. University

    Professor Fights Ban Amid Debate On Academic Freedom At B.C. University
    VANCOUVER — A professor who has taken a stand against the publication of research in journals that aren't peer reviewed says he has been suspended from the campus of the university where he works in the Interior of British Columbia.

    Professor Fights Ban Amid Debate On Academic Freedom At B.C. University

    Surrey Woman Seriously Hurt In Newton Hit-And-Run

    Surrey Woman Seriously Hurt In Newton Hit-And-Run
    On November 22nd at approximately 7:00 am the Surrey RCMP responded to a report of a pedestrian struck at the intersection of 64 Avenue & 134 Street. 

    Surrey Woman Seriously Hurt In Newton Hit-And-Run

    Delta Police Ask Public To Help Identify South Asian Man In Connection With Act Of Vandalism

    On October 27, 2018, the manager of a restaurant in the 9200 block of 120th Street reported that a customer had cut a cultural canvas near the washroom in his business, causing an estimated $2,500 in damages.

    Delta Police Ask Public To Help Identify South Asian Man In Connection With Act Of Vandalism