Provinces say Ottawa is leaving them in the dark about RCMP's future
Frustration is mounting in provincial and territorial governments that rely on the RCMP's services as they wait for Ottawa to come up with a plan for the beleaguered national police service.
Outside of Ontario and Quebec, the RCMP provides front-line policing services through contract agreements with the provinces and territories. Under those agreements, which expire in 2032, provinces and territories pay 70 per cent of the cost of the RCMP's services and the federal government covers the rest.
But a growing number of voices are calling for root-and-branch changes to the way the RCMP operates.
Almost exactly a year ago, the inquiry into the worst mass shooting in modern Canadian history criticized the RCMP's response to the crisis on almost every level and recommended an in-depth, external and independent review of the RCMP.
The Mass Casualty Commission's report said that review should «specifically examine the RCMP's approach to contract policing and work with contract partners, and also its approach to community relations.»
A few months after that report landed, the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (NSICOP), one of Canada's intelligence watchdogs, reported that the RCMP's federal policing responsibilities are being hindered by resource issues — including the force's focus on boots-on-the-ground contract policing.
The RCMP's federal policing responsibilities include financial crime, organized crime, international investigations and threats to national security.
«We're certainly calling on the federal government to examine the relationship between contract policing and federal policing inside the organization,» said NSICOP's chair, Liberal MP David McGuinty.
While the federal government has said