Espanola town council votes to disband local police force and hire OPP - Action News
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Sudbury

Espanola town council votes to disband local police force and hire OPP

The small town police force in northeastern Ontario will soon be a thing of the past, with the last holdout, Espanola, deciding to switch to the Ontario Provincial Police.

Town expects to save $5 million over 10 years by cutting local police department

Espanola town council has voted to disband their municipal police force, which is marking its 60th anniversary, and hire the Ontario Provincial Police to protect the town. (Erik White/CBC )

The small town police force in northeastern Ontario will soon be a thing of the past, with the last holdout community, Espanola, decidingto switch to the Ontario Provincial Police.

Town council voted unanimously Tuesday night to accept a cost proposal from the OPP, expected to save the town of 5,000 people about $5 million over the next decade.

Councillor Ron Duplessisacknowledged that the decision is "divisive" and "contentious," but also that it shouldn't be "based on emotions."

"I know it was asked: 'Will we see a reduction in tax bills?' Not likely," he told council Tuesday night.

"But what the savings may do indirectly is not save them at cost on their tax bills this year or next year, but save the amount that we have to increase to provide these services and infrastructure."

Espanola town council says that at least some of the 20 people who work for the local police department will lose their jobs during the switch to OPP. (Erik White/CBC )

Several citizens spoke at the start of the meeting, all warning that disbanding Espanola police will see the town lose jobs and increased policing costs in the years to come.

"It's going to come back to haunt us," Jim Bailey told council.

"I think it's going to go sky high and I'm not really happy with that being a taxpayer inEspanola," Sheri Commission said at the meeting.

"I'm totally against going OPP."

Exactly when the changing of the guard will take place and how many of the 20 employees of the EspanolaPolice will move over to OPP is not yet known.

Espanola joins a long line of towns in the north that have moved over to the OPP in recent years including Wawa, Temiskaming Shores and West Nipissing, which is expected to disband its local police department later this year.