Victoria, Esquimalt ordered to hire more police officers - Action News
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British Columbia

Victoria, Esquimalt ordered to hire more police officers

The province has ordered the hiring of six new officers at VicPD, the force serving Victoria and the neighbouring suburb of Esquimalt. The order applies to last year's budget settling a convoluted dispute between the two municipalities.

VicPD 'struggles' with some aspects of crime prevention with current strength, province says

Victoria council's Thursday morning committee of the whole meeting saw discussion of the provincially ordered increase to VicPD's number of officers. (Chek News)

Victoria's 2019 police budget has already been a point of contention for some time.

As if that wasn't enough, another wrinkle may have arisen in last year's budget.

The province has ordered the hiring of six new officers at the Victoria Police Department, which serves Victoria and the neighbouring suburb of Esquimalt.

The order applies to the 2018 budget, settling a dispute between the two municipalities.

Last Thursday, VicPD Chief Del Manaksaid the force would have to make staff cuts if an increaseto its budget for this year wasnot approved.Councillors rejected a request by VicPD for an increase of around six per cent.

Unique arrangement

VicPD has an arrangement unique among all municipal police forces in B.C.

Serving Victoria and Esquimalt since 2002, the force is funded by the two municipalities and both their councils must approve its budget. Victoria pays for more than 80 per cent ofthe budget and Esquimalt pays the remainder.

A middle-aged south Asian man wearing a shirt and tie, and a police jacket.
Victoria police Chief Del Manak said the department hopes the project will be approved within three months. (Chek News)

A framework agreement guarantees certain levels of service to both communities. In the event of a disagreement between the two, the province may intervene.

The currentdispute first arose in January2018,when Victoria approved the hiring of six more officers while Esquimalt did not. The province was then asked to intervene.

Preventative work 'a necessity'

Summarizing the debate that led to provincial involvement, B.C.'s acting director of police services,Tonia Enger, in a letter to mayors Lisa Helps of Victoria and Barb Desjardins of Esquimalt, said there was not enough communication about how the police force was serving Esquimalt.

She said there may have been a struggle to demonstrate a return on Esquimalt's investment in the force. She also found police resources are being increasingly spent on mental health and addiction matters and proactive police work.

"In my view, such work is not a 'nice to have,' but is in fact a necessity," Enger wrote. "Strategies that seek to engage the public, build relationships, reach out to vulnerable groups and thereby prevent crime are central to Canadian policing."

She noted that the force has not had a permanentincrease in authorized strength since 2010.

She said consultants found that "VicPD struggles to meet the resource pressures associated with high violent crime case loads, growing population and increasing complexity of crime."

'This is how it'sgonnabe'

Minister of Public Safety Mike Farnworth defended the director's decision at the legislature.

"There is an agreement with a mechanism to resolve disputes," Farnworth told reporters.

"In a nutshell, you could saysometimes the kids can't play in the sandbox and dad has to come in and say this is how it's gonna be."

Minister of Public Safety Mike Farnworth said the order was in keeping with provincial responsibilities. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

Victoria councilheard the news Thursday morning at a committeeof the whole meeting.

City solicitor Tom Zworski told councillors that since they have already asked VicPD to resubmit its 2019 budget, they couldrenew that request, this time with six additional officers accounted for.

Coun. Jeremy Loveday said council has already asked for a resubmitted budget twice.

"That request still hasn't been honoured," Loveday said. "Right now, all we can do is speculate, and that doesn't feel like good governance."

The province has ordered the hiring of six more officers at VicPD, which has a unique arrangement to police the municipalities of Victoria and Esquimalt. (Victoria Police Department/Facebook)

VicPD Chief Del Manak said he was pleased with the ruling.

"The workload demands placed on the VicPD officers aretremendous and they need support to be able to carry out their duties and keep their communities safe,"Manaktold reporters.

For the 2019 budget, VicPD sought a $3.24 million increase to its approximately $55 million budget. Victoria council wants the increase capped at $1.56 million.