Child-porn policing underfunding 'an accounting issue,' Tory MP says - Action News
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Child-porn policing underfunding 'an accounting issue,' Tory MP says

A Conservative MP says opposition questions about $10 million in unspent funding for the RCMP's fight against child sexual exploitation are simply a bid to play politics with "an accounting issue."

Conservative Roxanne James says opposition MPs playing politics with lapsed money for exploitation fight

Unspent child exploitation funds

10 years ago
Duration 15:57
MPs Roxanne James, Peter Julian and Kevin Lamoureux discuss unspent money for RCMPs child exploitation program

A Conservative MP says opposition questions about $10 million in unspent funding for the RCMP's fight against child sexual exploitation are simply a bid to play politics with "an accounting issue."

CBC News reported Thursday that, over a five-year period, Canada's national police force withheld some $10 million in funds earmarked for its National Child Exploitation Co-ordination Centre and related projects, linchpins of the government's anti-child-pornography agenda.

On Friday, opposition MPs challenged the Conservatives to explain why the RCMP isn't spending its full budget in the fight against child sexual exploitation.

Roxanne James, the parliamentary secretary to Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney, called the opposition assertions "absolutely false."

"That member should not let the CBC do the research for them," James said in the House.

"Let me be clear. No funding for the protection of children from sexual predators has been cut. The RCMP did not spend the full budget allocated to the National Child Exploitation Co-ordination Centre due to human resources challenges stemming from the nature of work, and I think you can imagine the nature of work involved here, and high qualification standards."

James accused New Democrat MP Sadia Groguh, who asked the question, of playing games with her questions.

"The member opposite is simply trying to play politics with an accounting issue," James said.

Nature of work makes it hard to hire

A spokeswoman for Public Safety Canada said in an email Thursday night that the RCMP has created new jobs and invested in technology to try to spend the money.

"This [spending gap] was in large part due to human resources challenges, including selecting appropriate candidates, high attrition due to the nature of the workand high qualification standards," Josee Sirois said.

The funding cuts, made partly as an RCMP contribution to the government's so-called deficit reduction action plan, have occurred even as the number of child-exploitation tips from the public increase exponentially.

The systematic underfunding is highlighted in a draft report prepared for Public Safety Canada, and obtained through the Access to Information Act.

The document, dated November last year, says the RCMP failed to spend its full $8-million annual budget to catch online child abusers throughout the five-year period ending in 2013.

"RCMP expenditures fell short of allocations by an average of about $2,000,000 (or about 26 per cent) per year," says the partly censored document.

"RCMP program and Finance staff indicated that the RCMP's systematic budget reset and re-allocation contributed to this situation, which resulted in reduced resources available."

Officers see 'horrific scenes'

The report says the Conservative government's 2011 deficit reduction action plan, or DRAP, an initiative to chop $4 billion from government spending by this year, was partly to blame for the reduced spending to fight child porn.

Liberal MP Judy Sgrosaid the news came on the same day the government requested an additional $11 million for "partisan TV ads" through the supplementary estimates tabled in Parliament.

"[But] when it comes to stomping out child pornography, it is all about budget cuts," Sgro said.

James said she rejected the premise of the question, and pointed to an example of a 2014 investigation that turned up 200 million images of child pornography.

"The fact of the matter is that we have not cut anything. We have actually increased funding to our security agencies by one-third," she said.

"There has been difficulty retaining and recruiting individuals to work in this field. If you can imagine ... for a moment, the horrific scenes that officers have to weed through. I talked about it a moment ago:200 million images. That is the issue."

With files from Dean Beeby