N.S. premier commits to inquiry's call for review of policing services - Action News
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Nova Scotia

N.S. premier commits to inquiry's call for review of policing services

Premier Tim Houston said his government is committed to a call from the Mass Casualty Commission for a community-wide process to discuss the future of police services in Nova Scotia.

'We have to do a fulsome review [and] have that discussion with Nova Scotians,' says Tim Houston

A man with short grey hair wears a blue blazer and blue tie with a light blue shirt.
Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston says his government will participant in a joint committee that would oversee action on the recommendations from the Mass Casualty Commission. (CBC)

Premier Tim Houston sayshis government is committed to a call from the Mass Casualty Commission for provincewide discussions onthe future of policeservices in Nova Scotia.

"The goal is safer communities," the premier told reporters at Province House in Halifax on Friday.

"We have to listen to Nova Scotians, but what it will certainly entail is the training and preparation of law enforcement officers. It will certainly entail a look at response times and allocation of resources to make sure that there are those there to protect us when we need them."

The premier, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other government officials were on hand in Truro for the release of the commission's final report Thursday. The commission examined the events during and leading up toApril 18-19, 2020, when 22 people in rural Nova Scotia were shot dead by a gunman later who was killed by police.

The call to discuss the future of policing in Nova Scotia is one of 130 recommendations in the report, more than half of which focus on the RCMP and policing services.

Houston said the government will take the time to figure out how to do the review, something that would include hearing fromthe public, "particularly in the rural areas."

'Every option is on the table'

An increasing number of rural municipalities in the province have expressed concerns about theavailability of RCMP officers and the high cost of the service. Mark Furey, a former RCMP officer and justice minister with the former Liberal government, asked his department in 2020 to review policing service models in the province, which could include the establishment of a provincial police force.

Justice Minister Brad Johns put that work on holdpending the outcome of the Mass Casualty Commission.

"I think every option is on the table," Houston said Friday when asked if the review would look at the future of the RCMP in Nova Scotia.

"That's why we have to do a fulsome review [and] have that discussion with Nova Scotians, have those discussions at the government level."

Houston said the commissioners clearly saidit's up to elected officials to act on the recommendations and he discussed that with Trudeau and federal Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicinowho was alsoin Trurothis week.

"I know they're committed, we're committed, we all want safer communities."

Opposition leaders focused on accountability

When it comes to implementing recommendations of the commission, Houston said the place to start would beappointing a committee to oversee changesand provideupdates to the public. The commission has said that body should include representatives of the provincial and federal governments, the RCMP, municipal police forces and "those most affected and key communities."

NDP Leader Claudia Chender said her caucus would work tomake sure governmentsfollowthe commission's advice.

Chender said the commissioners called for a change in howcommunity safety is viewed andfunded,includingaddressing gender-based violence.

"The commissioner [on Thursday] went out of his way to say every so often we have a mass casualty, but every day we deal with the awful impacts of gender-based violence and that it's long since time we take that seriously," she told reporters at Province House.

Calls for increased community safety often result only in increased budgets for law enforcement, said Chender, adding that the report makes clear that that must change.

Liberal Leader Zach Churchill said his party is also focused on recommendations related to violence prevention and intimate partner violence.

"How do we identify those problems earlier on and how do we stop them from escalating?"

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