Actions and Commitments

Call to Action # 42 : Justice (25-42)

Ottawa aims to table legislation this fall making Indigenous policing essential

September 21, 2022
Minister of Public Safety Marco Mendicino rises during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Thursday, June 23, 2022. Mendicino is pledging to “work around the clock” to table legislation this fall declaring Indigenous policing an essential service. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang

SOOTODAY.COM: OTTAWA — Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino is promising to “work around the clock” to table legislation this fall that would declare Indigenous policing an essential service. 

Doing so would fulfil a commitment Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made years ago to First Nations leaders. 

Lennard Busch, the executive director of the First Nations Chiefs of Police Association, says as it stands,their policing services are treated as add-ons within the country’s existing model.  That’s why, he says, legislation is needed to formally recognize that First Nations policing is as necessary as a force such as the RCMP,which has a structure and operational baseline outlined in law. 

“It’s never soon enough for us,” he said in a recent interview. 

Earlier this month, a stabbing rampage in Saskatchewan left 11 people dead, including one of the suspects, and 18 others injured, many of them on James Smith Cree Nation. A second suspect died after being arrested days later. The event has amplified calls for more Indigenous-led policing.

Wally Burns, the nation’s chief, has been among the voices calling for tribal policing. 

There are 35 First Nations police services across the country, and Busch says he sees a growing demand for more, having fielded dozens of calls from communities and tribal councilsinterested in starting their own.  He says funding remains a major issue. Currently, a First Nations police service receives funding through a program created in 1991, in which costs are shared with the province. 

The Liberal government announced in 2018 that it would spend almost $300 million over five years on policing in First Nations and Inuit communities, saying at the time that represented a historic increase. 

Busch says that money helped fill staffing shortages.

The federal Department of Public Safety has flagged problems with the 1991 funding program. It published a report in February that found the amount budgeted for it has led to an underfunding of First Nations policing agreements, which has limited what kind of services officers could offer communities and heaped more stress onto existing staff. 

The report also concluded that around one-third of First Nations and Inuit communities have been unable to access this pool of money. 

The Assembly of First Nations has been advocating for reforms to First Nations policing. Former national chief Perry Bellegarde has said it was unacceptable that communities were expected to set up their own police services without a structure enshrined in law and sufficient funding. 

Busch said the process of setting up a force is complex and typically takes years. On top of the money needed to hire and retain staff, he says there is also a need for adequate funding to outfit officers with the proper technology. 

He said there is also no one-size-fits-all approach for a First Nation to follow if it wants to establish a force of its own, which is particularly difficult for those with smaller populations. “That is a very high-risk thing.”

Mendicino says the government is developing the legislation with Indigenous partners and that he spent the summer meeting about the coming bill.  “We’re very eager to table this legislation.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 21, 2022.