Yukon gov't supports opposition motion to hire more police - Action News
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Yukon gov't supports opposition motion to hire more police

The Yukon government and the Official Opposition are on the same page when it comes to policing resources in the territory with both saying the territory needs more front-line officers.

RCMP need more resources to tackle drug trade, organized crime, says Yukon Party MLA

Three police investigators behind police tape and a pickup truck near a building.
RCMP investigators at the scene of what police called a suspicious death, in Whitehorse in February. (Chris Windeyer/CBC)

The Yukon government and the Official Opposition are on the same page when it comes to policing resources in the territory with both saying the territory needs more front-line officers.

The governing Liberals supporteda motion tabled on Wednesday by Yukon Party MLA Brad Cathers, which "urges the Yukon government to increase resources and funding to the RCMP to support the hiring of additional front-line police officers."

The motion does not specify how much more money should go to police, nor how many more officers should be hired.

Cathersargued that Yukon's population has grown in recent years, along with rates of drug crime and property crime, and police funding has not kept pace. He said drugtrafficking and organized crime aregrowing problems.

"Going after the illegal drug dealers responsible for selling these illegaland often toxicdrugs, and profiting from the harm that it causes to their fellow citizens requires police actions," Cathers said in the legislative assembly.

"Part of the solution is that the RCMP need more resources."

A man stands speaking in a territorial legislature.
'Going after the illegal drug dealers ... requires police actions,' said Yukon Party MLA Brad Cathers as he tabled the motion on Wednesday. (Vincent Bonnay/Radio-Canada)

Justice Minister Tracy-Anne McPhee responded by suggesting the Yukon Party's motion was cynical and irresponsible, as the party had voted against the last territorial budgetwhich included more funding forRCMP.

"Clearly, public safety and the public trust in the RCMP are incredibly important, but to use this Legislature's time to debate such an issue when if I did bring in such budget increases they would be ultimately not supported," McPhee said.

"So, puzzling, yes. Irresponsible? I would say yes."

The territorial budget tabled earlier this yearincludedan additional $3.5 million per year in core funding for the police.Some of the funding was togo toward 7.5 new full-time staff positions, including some front-line officers. Some of the money would also go toward new equipment or training.

Police tape on a dark street
Fourth Ave. in Whitehorse was closed off during a police investigation in February. (Chris Windeyer/CBC)

Catherssaid his party voted against the territorial budget not because of the RCMP funding, but because "the Official Opposition typically votes against the government on budget bills since they are confidence votes."

The oppositionmotion ultimately passed on Wednesday, with all Liberal and Yukon Party MLAs votingin favour; while the three NDP MLAs voted against.

NDP Leader Kate White said she'd rather see more money go toward health care, housing, education, and social programs.

"We can't police our way out of the societal failures that government after government after government has created here in the territory and in Canada as a whole," White said.

"More police isn't the answer to poverty reduction; more police isn't the answer to homelessness; more police is not the answer to trauma. So we have to figure out a better way than just looking at policing."