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CBRM hiring consultant to look into reducing police costs

Cape Breton Regional Municipality has issued a tender for a study on how to cut its policing costs, but officials say the review is about finding efficiencies and it started long before defunding police became a popular rallying cry.

It was recommended in last fall's viability study done by Grant Thornton that said, among other things, that CBRM has more police officers than most other Canadian jurisdictions.

Chief administrative officer Marie Walsh said the community's low crime rate is a result of having higher police staffing.

"There is a balance because people feel safe in our community and it brings people to the community, but we are a little bit high on average [compared] to other communities," she said.

The viability study said CBRM has 200 police officers with a population of only 93,000. It said Halifax Regional Municipality has 175 per 100,000 population, while the national average is 188 per 100,000.

The municipality issued a tender looking for a consultant to examine various aspects of the force, the organizational structure, shift schedules, overtime and having civilians take over some police duties.

Tom Ayers/CBC
Tom Ayers/CBC

Walsh said civilianization wouldn't necessarily reduce staffing numbers, but it could lower costs.

"There's binding arbitration with the police and the increases have been more significant than the other unions at CBRM," she said.

For the last number of years, all policing cost increases have been due to staffing, Walsh said.

"We really haven't had increases for police around line items for operations, but the only thing really increasing at a rapid rate would be on the wage side," she said.

The review is intended to find efficiencies, she said, but as recommended in the viability study, cuts should not be so deep that they affect the low crime rate.

Review not motivated by calls to defund police

"We will be very cautious not to affect service delivery, because we have been very effective in terms of our police force and it has paid off in the crime rate," Walsh said.

The CAO said she wouldn't equate the review with recent calls to defund police.

"Is there a better way to do business?" she said.

"Are we paying police officers to do things that really should not be under their job description? And I think we need to have a close look at what they're doing and where are their resources best spent."

Acting police Chief Robert Walsh said he welcomes the review.

He said having civilians take over some duties can make policing more efficient, but overall staff numbers shouldn't be reduced because someone has to do the work.

Tom Ayers/CBC
Tom Ayers/CBC

"Police currently are the only 24/7 agency available to respond to people in crisis, so there is absolutely a need to continue to fund properly-trained police officers to de-escalate those situations appropriately and safely," he said.

The Cape Breton force recently civilianized positions in records management and criminal analysis. Delivering court summonses and forensic examination of computers are examples of other duties that could be civilianized, the acting chief said.

He also said the viability study's conclusion about staffing levels has been misconstrued.

The ratio of 200 officers to 93,000 population is equal to about 215 officers per 100,000, which is far above the national average.

Some officers subsidized

However, the acting chief said, CBRM only fully funds 167 officers. The others are funded at least in part by outside agencies, such as the provincial departments of education and justice and the Membertou First Nation.

That makes the ratio about 180 per 100,000.

"I don't think that we are overpoliced," the acting chief said.

The extra officers help CBRM maintain service expectations, he said.

Defunding may come up

People calling for defunding of police say some duties, such as social work, should be done by people with appropriate training.

The acting chief said some of that may come up in the review.

"I think that the review is primarily focused on trying to find efficiencies, but the defunding will likely be a consideration in the operational review," he said.

"I'm confident that whatever consultant is retained to conduct the review will have appropriate police background and expertise to understand those larger contextual issues that affect the profession."

CBRM's policing tender closes on Thursday and is expected to cost no more than $100,000.

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