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New Brunswick

Moncton wants more data before decision on keeping RCMP

Moncton councillorswant more information before deciding whether to keep the RCMP or create a new municipal force.

City to call for analysis of police workload

The front half of an RCMP cruiser
Moncton councillors say they want to better understand Codiac Regional RCMP's workload before making a decision on policing services. (Shane Magee/CBC)

Moncton councillorswant more information before deciding whether to keep the RCMP or create a new municipal force.

Councillors opted Monday to request an analysis of the Codiac Regional RCMP's workload.

Consulting firmPerivale + Taylor released a policing study earlier this month recommending the analysis.

The report estimated keeping the Codiac RCMPcould save Moncton, Dieppe and Riverview $130 million over 15 years.

Butthe consultants said they had challenges examining police workload as a result of internal RCMP systems tracking cases and officer deployment.

The next steps in dealing with the report was the topic of a portion of a council committee meeting Monday. A special committee with CouncillorsDaniel Bourgeois, Charles Lger and Bryan Butler will gather questions still unanswered ahead of further debate.

Lger called for the workload analysis, saying the consultants reported the information was available but could take six weeks to three months to complete.

"I think that the workload analysis is the crux of all of this, and we need to figure that out so that we can make informed decisions," Moncton Mayor Dawn Arnold said Monday.

A balding man wearing a dark coloured dress shirt and jacket standing in front of open doors with seating in the background.
Robert Taylor, vice-president of Perivale + Taylor Consulting, called for the analysis to get a better sense of police workload. (Shane Magee/CBC)

The analysis was something the consultants said would need to be carried out to know how many officers the RCMP or a new force needs to adequately police the region.

"Unless you know how much work there is, it's hard to say how many staff you need,"Robert Taylor, a vice-president of Perivale + Taylor, told reporters Oct. 5.

Taylor said the issue came down to the way the RCMP systems log cases and officer activity.

"We need every activity on the street to be logged into the system, as unless it's logged, we can't analyze it," Taylor said.

Arnold said she expects the RCMP will be cooperative with the workload analysis, pointing to a statement from the RCMP J Division assistant commissioner supporting the consultant's findings.

"We appreciate and accept the recommendations identified in the study,"DeAnna Hill said in the statement.

Moncton staff were recommending setting the Nov. 20 council meeting for a public debate ahead of the ultimate decision on policing.

However, several councillors appeared to want further information before then. Coun. Daniel Bourgeois proposed the information-gathering committee.

Butler raised the idea that the decision could wait until next year, even as late as March, to allow travelling to get more information. Butler didn't specify where he thought they might go.

Others seemed ready for a faster decision, though.

"I think we need to have some sense of urgency because the men and women who work at Codiac would like to know what our thought process is and where we're going,"Lger said.

The decision won't be made by Moncton alone, though it covers 70 per cent of the Codiac RCMP budget.

Dieppe and Riverview will also need to make decisionsabout the policing study.Mayors of both communitiesindicated earlier this month that they believed their councils may opt to stay with RCMP.

"I expect that there will be no major changes to our relationship with theRCMP," Dieppe Mayor Yvon Lapierre said in an interview Oct. 5.