Wednesday, February 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Rural Communities To Vote On Whether Alberta Should Pay For School Police

The Canadian Press, 13 Mar, 2016 01:26 PM
    EDMONTON — A rural community wants the NDP government to directly pay for the cost of police officers who work in Alberta schools.
     
    Sturgeon County is to present a resolution to the Alberta Association of Municipal District and Counties this week that calls on the province to provide dedicated funding for school resource officers.
     
    Coun. Susan Evans said some rural school boards and municipalities that have been sharing the cost are struggling to pay for the program.
     
    "Because the funding isn't sustainable and not predictable from year to year you never know if that program is going to be there," she said in an interview.
     
    "A school has to make a choice either to fund student safety or education."
     
    School resource officers mentor students, teach anti-drug courses and online bullying prevention and enforce the law, mainly in high schools.
     
    Many rural communities depend on RCMP for these officers. In Edmonton and Calgary the officers are city police.
     
    Evans said the officers benefit students, families and their communities.
     
    The lack of direct funding represents a downloading of the province's responsibility to fund safe and secure schools onto communities and school boards, she said.
     
    Alberta Justice Minister Kathleen Ganley said the province already spends more than $500 million for municipal and provincial policing services throughout the province.
     
    "Our main priority is ensuring front line officers are available to keep Albertans safe," she said in an email.
     
    "Under the current model, smaller municipalities are permitted to fund enhanced resources, such as school resource officers, that will benefit their communities."
     
    In 2013 the association that represents Alberta's police commissions said inadequate funding was limiting the placement of police resource officers in schools.
     
    The Alberta Association of Police Governance passed a motion calling on the former Progressive Conservative government to take action.
     
    Former justice minister Jonathan Denis responded with a letter in 2013 saying he supported the idea in principle, but, "given the current fiscal climate of restraint the province is not planning to provide financial assistance in the foreseeable future."
     
    The government at the time said it was up to municipalities and police to decide how to best spend their funding. 
     
    The Alberta Association of Municipal Districts and Counties represents 69 communities in rural areas.
     
    Evans said she believes the resolution will receive solid support when it comes to a vote. 
     
    "I think other communities feel the same way," she said. "It is time to recognize the value of this program."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Burnaby's Indo-Canadian RCMP Officer Paul Pabla Charged With Drunken Driving

    Burnaby RCMP detachment said constable Harinder Paul Pabla is accused in two incidents -- both of which took place while he was off-duty

    Burnaby's Indo-Canadian RCMP Officer Paul Pabla Charged With Drunken Driving

    Two Indo-Canadians To Be Tried For Surrey Teen Maple Batalia’s Murder At SFU Campus

    Two Indo-Canadians To Be Tried For Surrey Teen Maple Batalia’s Murder At SFU Campus
    Batalia, 19 at that time, was fatally shot at Surrey Simon Fraser University campus on September 28, 2011.

    Two Indo-Canadians To Be Tried For Surrey Teen Maple Batalia’s Murder At SFU Campus

    B.C. Court Tosses Roy Fraser's Appeals Of First-And Second-Degree Murder In 2009 Kamloops Killings

    B.C. Court Tosses Roy Fraser's Appeals Of First-And Second-Degree Murder In 2009 Kamloops Killings
     Convicted murderer Roy Fraser has lost an appeal of his first- and second-degree murder convictions for two slayings near Kamloops, B.C.

    B.C. Court Tosses Roy Fraser's Appeals Of First-And Second-Degree Murder In 2009 Kamloops Killings

    B.C. Court To Rule On Whether Site C Protesters Can Be Removed From Tent Camp

    A judge is expected to rule this morning on whether to grant BC Hydro an injunction to remove people protesting the Site C dam project from a tent camp near Fort. St. John.

    B.C. Court To Rule On Whether Site C Protesters Can Be Removed From Tent Camp

    Court Acquits Mom Maria Shepherd Who Admitted Killing Stepchild Based On Faulty Forensics

    Court Acquits Mom Maria Shepherd Who Admitted Killing Stepchild Based On Faulty Forensics
    The decision in favour of Maria Shepherd, of Brampton, Ont., came after a short hearing at the urging of both Crown and defence.

    Court Acquits Mom Maria Shepherd Who Admitted Killing Stepchild Based On Faulty Forensics

    Nova Scotia Couple Honoured For Marriage That Has Lasted 80 Years

    Nova Scotia Couple Honoured For Marriage That Has Lasted 80 Years
    Bill and Bertie Nickerson have been married 80 years and still live in the same brick house he had built for them following their marriage in 1935.

    Nova Scotia Couple Honoured For Marriage That Has Lasted 80 Years