Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Top Mountie RCMP Defends Labour Bill, Cites Need For Swift Decision-Making

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jun, 2016 11:23 AM
  • Top Mountie RCMP Defends Labour Bill, Cites Need For Swift Decision-Making
OTTAWA — A federal labour bill excludes things like Mountie staffing levels and harassment issues from bargaining to ensure management can run the police force free of interference in key matters, says RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson.
 
The ability to adapt to the new realities of a diverse and growing Canada requires timely and innovative approaches to recruiting, training, deployment, promotion, conduct and discipline, he told a Senate committee studying the bill.
 
"The concern is that matters of significant public interest cannot wait the time it takes to resolve them through grievance arbitration," he said Monday. "Nor should they be subjected to a diffused or fragmented responsibility. So, that's why the exclusions."
 
But the top Mountie insisted that doesn't mean the issues in question will be completely off the contract-negotiation table.
 
The RCMP has long had joint committees through which members and staff relations representatives discussed pay and benefits, use of force, equipment purchases and conduct, he noted. 
 
"These committees were the source of important, positive change for the force," Paulson said. "That will continue. Frankly, it must."
 
Last year, the Supreme Court of Canada affirmed the right of RCMP officers to collective bargaining and gave the government time to create a new labour-relations regime. The legislation is a major step in building the system.
 
 
Some senators, including former Mountie Larry Campbell, say the bill concentrates too much power in the commissioner's hands.
 
Campbell suggested Monday striking the list of exclusions from the text and replacing it with a more general affirmation of management rights.
 
Paulson said the RCMP advised the government to include the list of exclusions in the bill to stave off possible criticism that management was "trying to pull a fast one" by hiding them.
 
"But instead of being seen as transparent, the list has drawn heat and light."
 
Paulson applauded a federal promise to appoint a panel of "eminent Canadians" to review controversial elements of the government bill if senators pass the legislation in its current form.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ottawa Looks To Loosen Restrictions On Changes To Sex Designation On SIN

Ottawa Looks To Loosen Restrictions On Changes To Sex Designation On SIN
Employment and Social Development Canada says, among other things, social insurance number holders wouldn't need a new birth certificate to change the sex designation on their social insurance record.

Ottawa Looks To Loosen Restrictions On Changes To Sex Designation On SIN

CIBC CEO Reiterates Non-Tolerance For Harassment After Lawsuit Comes To Light

CIBC CEO Reiterates Non-Tolerance For Harassment After Lawsuit Comes To Light
Diane Vivares, a former associate in the bank's equity markets group, is seeking more than $1 million in damages from CIBC World Markets and Kevin Carter, a former executive director at the bank.

CIBC CEO Reiterates Non-Tolerance For Harassment After Lawsuit Comes To Light

Energy Board To Release Ruling On Kinder Morgan Pipeline Expansion Thursday

The report will reveal whether the board supports plans to triple the capacity of the pipeline, which carries diluted bitumen from oilsands near Edmonton across southern British Columbia to Burnaby for export.

Energy Board To Release Ruling On Kinder Morgan Pipeline Expansion Thursday

Call Public Inquiry Over Mountie Monitoring Of Journalists: Tom Mulcair

OTTAWA — NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says a public inquiry should be called after it was revealed Mounties monitored two journalists in 2007.

Call Public Inquiry Over Mountie Monitoring Of Journalists: Tom Mulcair

Remembering Komagata Maru Over The Years By Indo-Canadian Community

Remembering Komagata Maru Over The Years By Indo-Canadian Community
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will give a full apology today (May 18) in the House of Commons for the Komagata Maru incident where the government in 1914 turned away a ship carrying hundreds of South Asian immigrants

Remembering Komagata Maru Over The Years By Indo-Canadian Community

Today, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Makes A Formal Apology For The Komagata Maru Incident

Today, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Makes A Formal Apology For The Komagata Maru Incident
The chartered vessel was carrying 376 Indian passengers, nearly all of them Sikhs, bound for what they thought would be a new life in Canada

Today, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Makes A Formal Apology For The Komagata Maru Incident