25 more RCMP officers recommended for Moncton region to address public safety concerns - Action News
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New Brunswick

25 more RCMP officers recommended for Moncton region to address public safety concerns

A leaked presentation reveals a recommendation to significantly increase the number ofCodiac Regional RCMPofficerspolicing the Moncton area. It calls for 25 more officers on top of the 147 now policing Moncton, Dieppe and Riverview.

Presentation calls for reviving traffic unit, increased focus on community policing

A police officer wears a vest that says police in front of crime scene tape.
A recommendation from the Codiac Regional RCMP calls for hiring 25 more officers and 18 more civilian members. (Shane Magee/CBC)

A leaked presentation reveals a recommendation to significantly increase the number ofCodiac Regional RCMPofficerspolicing the Moncton area.

The Codiac Regional Policing Authorityhas recommended adding 25 officers to the 147 it has now, as well an additional 18 civilian staff.The authority oversees the forcethat polices Moncton, Dieppe and Riverview.

The recommendationfollows rising concernabout public safety and a study looking at whether to switch to another police force forthe Moncton area.

The proposal isexpected to be presented publicly at the authority's Sept. 15 board meeting and would require approval bythethree municipal councils during budget deliberations this fall.

Don Moore, the policing authority board chair, declined to comment on the specifics before next week's meeting.

Don Moore, chair of the Codiac Regional Policing Authority board, says 'budget options' are being prepared related to the recommendation. (Shane Magee/CBC)

Moore said the policing authority is preparing different "budget options" for consideration by the communities.

Mayors of Moncton, Dieppe and Riverviewwouldn't comment Wednesday.

The recommendation was made at an Aug. 10 tri-community council meeting.The secretive meetings bring together council and staff from the three communitiesfor discussions of common issues, though the public is barred from attending.

The recommendation calls for 10 more members ofa community policing unit, 10 officers to revive the area'sdisbanded traffic unit and to increase visibility, and five focused on drug and property crimes.

The presentation says the civilians would include three court personnel, five investigation assistants, two analysts, three front desk/information processors, two communications positions, andthree positions at the operational communications centre which takes calls from the public and talk to officers.

The total cost of adding 43 positions was not given.

In July, Moncton council was told a single officer and their equipment costs $183,000, meaning 25 more officers wouldcost about $4.58 million.

The policing authority's 2022 budget was $39.2 million, with about 70.7 per cent covered by Moncton, 18.3 per cent by Dieppe and the remainder by Riverview.

In 2019,Statistics Canada reported that Codiachadone of the smallest contingents of officers per capitaandone of the largest percentage of officers nearing retirement.

Recently released crime statistics indicating the Moncton region has the third highest crime rateamong metropolitan areas in the country fuelled calls for more officers, though the region's crime rate was higher in 2019.

The number of officers has routinely been raised as an issue by Moncton Deputy Mayor Bryan Butler.

"We need more police officers," Butler said July 18.

He made the comments during a meeting on a public safety plan hat recommended more RCMPofficers in neighbourhoods following a series of community meetings in Moncton's west end.

People seated around an auditorium at Harrison Trimble High School in Moncton.
About 80 people attended a meeting in the Harrison Trimble High School auditorium in June where recommendations to address crime in Moncton's west end were outlined, including more RCMP officers in neighbourhoods. (Shane Magee/CBC)

The policing authority's recommendation to increase staffing stemmed fromconsultations that began last year with more than 80 individuals and organizations in the regionas part of developing a new strategic plan.

Moncton-based marketing and communications firmPortfolio Solutions carried out the consultations and produced a report.

The report sayscommon concerns includea lack of visibility of police officers, perceptions officers no longer respond to property crime, and lack of communication. There is also a concern aboutvigilante justice.

"In summary, the stakeholders engaged for this exercise believe strongly that the current police service in Greater Moncton lacks the visibility and community connectedness required to adequately deliver the policing services that residents and businesses are looking for," the report says.

Drugs, homelessness, mental health concerns

Organizations consulted indicated therising safety and security issues are due to increased drug availability, a growing homeless population, and a growing challenge with mental health problems.

"Others added that there is an impression that, even when RCMP come to a situation dealing with homeless or mental health challenged individuals, nothing happens and there is no followup," the report states.

The consultant's report says anecdoteswere given aboutbusinesses and residents that have stopped reporting problems to RCMP because police seem "uninterested in dealing with the situation or they just don't care."

Training at Depot, the RCMP's training centre in Saskatchewan, was temporarily halted during the early phase of the pandemic. (Rob Kruk/CBC)

It's unclear how readily the RCMP will be able to fill the Mountie positionsif the recommendation is approved.

Early in the pandemic, RCMP temporarily halted training at its Depot centrein Saskatchewan.

Manitoba's justice minister last month wrote a letter to the federal minister of public safety, who oversees the RCMP, expressing concern about vacant RCMP positions in that province.

"Recent information provided by the RCMP suggests that over the next two years it is unlikely that the number of new recruits will be sufficient to fill even retirement vacancies," the letter posted on Twitterstates.

Moore, the Codiac authority board chair, said he believes the RCMP would be able to fill new positions if they are approved.

He said the New Brunswick RCMP commanding officer hastold him and the three mayors that half the positions could be filled within three months, with the rest filled within a year as is contractually required.