RCMP receives $1.6M in provincial funding to tackle gangs and guns - Action News
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Saskatchewan

RCMP receives $1.6M in provincial funding to tackle gangs and guns

Earlier this year a crime response team was deployed for a trial period of 90 days. On Friday the RCMP and provincial government announced two permanent teams will be created in Saskatchewan.

New crime response teams will be operational by fall of this this year

Curtis Zablocki (left) and Christine Tell (right) in Regina announcing the creation of two permanent Crime Reduction Teams. (Tyler Pidlubny/CBC Saskatchewan)

Guns, drugs and gangs will be the focus of two new RCMPcrime response teams (CRTs).

On Friday Christine Tell, Saskatchewan's minister of corrections and policing, announced the province would be giving $1.6 million to the RCMPto hire 14 full time officers.

From February to May of this year the RCMPhad a CRT working in west-central Saskatchewan to showcase the efficacy and need for the teams. In that period the team made 181 arrests which led to 96 charges. Of those charged 26 were known to be gang members or associates, according to an RCMP news release.

"CRTs will focus on the reduction of rural crime by deploying resources where the greatest need exists," said Tell

The two locations identified as havingthe greatest needs arePrince Albert and North Battleford.

Assistant commissionerCurtisZablockisaid the teams will be able to redeploy wherever they're needed. He said the focus will be, "on taking drugs, firearms, stolen property, gang members and criminals off our streets and out of our communities."

CRTs were first deployed on 2017 to Onion Lake, Sask., to target drugs and gang activity in the community. Zablocki said while the team was deployed calls for service were reduced in the area.

However the teams will not specifically be addressing response times in rural communities. Zablockidid say that by having additional officers in the communities it could improve the amount of time it take for an officer to respond to a call, but ultimately that not the objective of the project.

"At the end of the day, aside from numbers or statistics; such as numbers of arrests or search warrants executed or quantities of drugs or firearms etc. seized it's really about having residents that then feel safe in their homes and in their communities," said Zablocki.

The CRTs are set to be operational by the fall of 2018.