Wednesday 6 November 2024

Frustration boils over as Fredericton business owners meet with city, police about downtown crime

 

Frustration boils over as Fredericton business owners meet with city, police about downtown crime

City of Fredericton says it will create a community safety task force

Close to 300 people crowded into a meeting room at Fredericton's Crowne Plaza hotel on Tuesday to share what they say are growing concerns about crime, drug use and homelessness in the city's downtown.

That's more than twice the number of businesses owners and other stakeholders who attended a similar meeting last year, according to the City of Fredericton.

The meeting came on the heels of a recent fire that destroyed a long-standing sporting-goods store on Queen Street, MacTavish's Source for Sports, which police say was set deliberately.

While Tuesday's event wasn't open to the media, many participants were eager to speak to reporters afterwards to expression their frustrations.

A man with short hair and glasses looks at the camera with a slight smile. Adrian Butts says he's had break-ins and theft at his downtown properties. (Allyson McCormack / CBC)

Adrian Butts owns various commercial buildings in the downtown area and says he has experienced problems such as break-ins and theft.

"Just on Friday, we had one of my commercial buildings [broken into], entered and burgled, with significant damage," he said. 

"One of my tenants went bankrupt because their clientele will no longer come downtown or come into the building because of an unsavoury element there. My truck was robbed two weeks ago," Butts said.

A man with salt and pepper hair and a beard smiles at the camera, while wearing a black sweater. Matt Savage, owner of Savage's Bicycle Centre, says it's a daily struggle to deal with the issues in the downtown. (Allyson McCormack / CBC)

Matt Savage, owner of Savage's Bicycle Centre, said the recent fire at MacTavish's was the final straw.

"We're seeing issues of homelessness, mental health, addiction … it's a downstream issue. So there's larger issues at play here.

"But day-to-day, it's difficult. Our staff are being assaulted ... thank goodness our customers keep coming. But it's a struggle daily."

WATCH | Business owners describe challenges of working downtown:
 

More than 200 people showed up to talk about crime in downtown Fredericton

The city and local police hosted a meeting Tuesday to talk about issues relating to public safety in downtown Fredericton. Business owners and other stakeholders got a chance to share their concerns about what’s happening in their community.

Jenn Tuttle owns The Nest Yoga and Sequoia, a natural goods store. Both are located downtown. Tuttle said they're having issues when it comes to safety, which has forced them to lock their doors on occasion. 

"We're experiencing people coming into the stores and harassing our staff and making them feel quite uncomfortable. We're experiencing theft. We do have a lot of security measures in place. However, that doesn't always deter people from stealing."

A blonde woman with glasses on her head smiles at the camera, wearing a tan trench coat.  Jen Tuttle owns two businesses downtown. She says she's concerned for the safety of her staff. (Allyson McCormack / CBC)

Police Chief Gary Forward said the "sheer number of business owners, employees that came out was indicative of some of the frustration that I think the business community and residents are experiencing."

In terms of policing, Forward said there's a recruitment issue that should be addressed within the next year, through a satellite of the Atlantic Police Academy. 

Forward said the pilot project will allow them to train 10 to 12 new officers.

By this time next year, he said they hope to have "the people that we need in place to go after a number of the proactive programs that we have, including the school resource officers or community liaison officers and even get back to an increased area of visibility through a beat patrol or full patrols or bike patrols."

A woman with brown shoulder length hair looks to her right, with closed mouth, wearing a poppy and a brown blazer. Mayor Kate Rogers talked about expanding the work of the community safety services unit, made up of uniformed security officers who patrol trails and other areas. (Shane Fowler / CBC)

Mayor Kate Rogers said there was a lot of openness at the meeting and that she could "feel the concern, the frustration and the exasperation" in the room. 

She said it was an opportunity for the city and police to share what they have been working on to address the problems.

This includes expanding the work of the community safety services unit, made up of uniformed security officers who patrol trails and other areas and the use of public safety cameras, Rogers said after the meeting.

She also said a new community safety task force will "bring community stakeholders together, a small group to put together a list of action items that we want movement on from other orders of government." Recommendations are expected in the spring.

Meanwhile, business owners say they look forward to any improvements.

Tuttle "would love to see Fredericton downtown in particular be a place that we feel safe again. That's what I would like to see."

Clarifications

  • The City of Fredericton has clarified that the number of people at Tuesday's meeting was closer to 300.
    Nov 05, 2024 7:46 PM AT

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Allyson McCormack is a producer with CBC New Brunswick, based in Fredericton. She has been with CBC News since 2008.

 
 
 
33 Comments
 
 
 
David Amos  
Content Deactivated

 "While Tuesday's event wasn't open to the media, many participants were eager to speak to reporters afterwards to expression their frustrations."
 
Surprise Surprise Surprise 
 
 
 
 
james bolt
What's stopping you all from hiring Mall cops?



Terri-Lynn Bee
Very sorry this has happened to your business. This has got to stop. Intimidation by bottom feeders. I know there isn't a "one size fits all" solution, however, something has got to give. Far too much criminal activity taking place today. Here in Fredericton and well beyond. There is no deterrent to commit crime in Canada, as our laws lean toward to the offenders, not the victims affected. Slaps on the wrist isn't a thing any longer. JMHO



Lou Bell
Somewhere along the line , and if the staus quo continues or gets worse ( Liberals and Greens push for more safe injection sites ) , then there'll no longer be a downtown where legit businesses can operate . Illegal pot stores and safe injection sites will be the order of the day. And we taxpayers will be forced to foot the bill for all the collateral damage .



Lorelei Stott
those poppies I don't think I like them, I'm more old school I think, some things should perhaps just stay humble not fluffy IMO anyway



stephen magee
People will need to stand and defend what they own because if you think the cops or want to be politicians will help good luck with that Deer Island had it under control after the burned beat and put the lowlife off the island.



Lou Bell
From what the Mayor is saying , status quo . And you know what the definition is of one who keeps repeating the same mistakes over and over without making any changes .

Terri-Lynn Bee
Reply to Lou Bell
That's sounds close to the definition of insanity. "Doing the same thing over & over, expecting a different result." Laws & penalties need an overhaul. Gotta start somewhere.

SarahRose Werner
Reply to Terri-Lynn Bee
Who's going to enforce these laws and penalties if there aren't enough police officers?



Lou Bell
The Liberals and Greens want more safe injection sites , much like what happened in Vancouver . Continued until businesses put the pressure on the city to smarten up and do the job they were elected to do .



Lou Bell
When is this mayor going to step up , take responsibility for what's happening in her city , and do something about it . Blaming anything and everything on others , and especially the provincial government is ridiculous . She complained because other places in NB were getting all the Doctors and her city wasn't . Total incompetence in doing the job she was elected for .



Lorelei Stott
our future got a little brighter last night in north america, hoping for a trickle effect of tough on crime

hs fisher
Reply to Lorelei Stott
nothing has changed here



Tom Gordon
I think the city should have police officers walking the beat downtown daily.

SarahRose Werner
Reply to Tom Gordon
What police officers? According to the article, the city is still waiting for the officers to be trained.

Tom Gordon
Reply to SarahRose Werner
The City of Fredericton does already have a police force and are trained. The 10-12 new officers to be hired are not the issue.



Ronald Miller
Once Poilievre is elected the homeless and drug problems will be gone.

hs fisher
Reply to Ronald Miller
not even close



Ronald Miller
This is an issue from coast to coast and the only way to fix it is to remove who is running our country, that election can't come soon enough.



Ronald Miller
This is not new news. Charles Leblanc (a close friend of mine) has been raising the alarms on this issue for a while now.

Ronald Miller
Reply to Ronald Miller
Bobby, didn't enough people make fun of you yesterday, you are back for more today. You keep on shining.



Tom
Businesses should just say screw the downtown, move to other locations as shop owners will never be afforded safety and security for themselves or their customers. The Police are just a few blocks away from ALL downtown locations so what are they doing? There are too many bleeding hearts that say garbage like "the punishment suits the crime". There is no punishment and that is the crime!

Terri-Lynn Bee
Reply to Tom
Exactly 💯 no one is deterred from doing the unthinkable as a matter of fact. Scary. What a train wreck Canada's become.



Dave Kliveland
Shut down the river stone enablers.



Dennis Atchison
The Great Gatherings of 2012, 2014 and 2016 all offered integrated systemic solutions to this challenge ... and yet no one in position of authority and action (municipal government, business community) participated in the process, or integrated the solutions created. So ... nice to see the community coming together ... but it is over ten years later and so much could have happened in the interim to have avoided this moment in time. So it goes ... though it makes me (and others) sad. And even before the Great Gatherings, the Community Group on Homelessness in around 2008 or so offered their solutions, with a spokesperson from Calgary invited to share how their City solved much of their homeless problem (called the Inverted Model ... spend 60 to 80K on housing and supports saves 180 to 220K in municipal expenses). Again, solutions not integrated into the Municipal Plan or Council policy/actions. So it goes ... but there should be no surprises by this point in time.



MR Cain
A good start bringing the business community together to work on the safety task force.

Sarah Brown
Reply to MR Cain
A good start is to charge the culprits for the thefts, vandalism, property damage and illicit drug use

MR Cain
Reply to Sarah Brown
The punishment suits the crime. Not sure about illicit drug use.

Fred Dee
Reply to MR Cain
need to deal with the crime.... zero tolerance for drug usage!!

MR Cain
Reply to Fred Dee
Any ideas? Should we arrest them, put them in jail? How long should they stay? Then what? A little more thought please.

Dennis Atchison
Reply to Fred Dee
Does this include ALL drug usage ... like the cocaine problem which never makes the news??? Other drugs which do not make the news?

Tom
Reply to MR Cain
Of course they should be arrested and put in jail. To the best of my knowledge vagrancy is still a crime, along with theft and arson and the list goes on.

Ronald Miller
Reply to Dennis Atchison
Lock'em up. That Minto jail can't be built fast enough in my opinion

MR Cain
Reply to Tom
Vagrancy is no longer a crime in Canada, as it was removed from the Criminal Code in 2019. The Supreme Court of Canada struck down the legislation in 1994, finding it to be too broad and a violation of personal liberties.

So, how long should they be incarcerated on the taxpayer's dime? When they have served their time, what then?  


 

Drug-related problems cost of doing business in downtown Fredericton, store owners say

Fredericton police say calls for service have gone up in the past year

Business owners in downtown Fredericton say they are increasingly frustrated with a rise in break-ins, theft, vandalism, open drug use, litter and damage to their properties.

Those concerns will be the focus of an upcoming invitation-only meeting with the Fredericton Police Force on Nov. 5.

Adam Peabody, executive director of Downtown Fredericton Inc, which represents the business community, said the instances of theft, vandalism and harassment have trended "from an irritant to an area of significant concern."

And, he said, "We can say anecdotally … that it seems to be fuelled in large part by drug use and addictions."

Gary Forward, who took over as police chief in September, said police have seen a 30 to 40 per cent increase in socio-economic-related calls in the past year, related to living rough, drug addiction and wellness checks

A clean shaven man with short hair, dressed in a police uniform, sits at a desk in front of a window. Fredericton Police Chief, Gary Forward says police often get calls about unwanted individuals, property damage, theft and drug use, and he understands the frustration businesses feel. (Submitted by Sonya Gilks)

Drugs such as fentanyl and crystal meth are having a "significant impact" on the community because of "their highly addictive nature," along with the low cost and increased availability, he said.

"Those three things are catastrophic when it comes to invading and impacting the community, especially with something like a drug addiction."

Businesses compassionate, but also frustrated

Mike Babineau owns and operates several Fredericton restaurants, including three in the downtown. He said his staff have found people stealing from the restaurant, hiding in the washrooms and causing damage to the interior and exterior of the properties. 

A man with brown hair, a beard and glasses smiles at the camera with fall leaves and a building in the background. Mike Babineau says he cares about people but he also has an investment to worry about, as well as the health and safety of his employees. (Allyson McCormack / CBC)

He has increased security, lighting and staffing levels to deal with increased crime and said that there is a monetary cost, as well as an emotional one.

And while no one has been physically assaulted, staff members have been verbally assaulted "on multiple occasions."

Babineau said he always leads with compassion and he cares about people, but he also has an investment to worry about and the health and safety of his employees, who include teenagers.

According to Peabody, most downtown businesses have fewer than 10 employees, which makes it hard for them to handle what he calls the "pervasive and repetitive level of criminal activity."

"There's also a psychological impact of being concerned of how they can maintain a safe and secure environment for their customers, for their employees and operating in our community at large."

A man with glasses, a beard and a ball cap smiles at the camera in front of a black barbershop. Chad McGarity, owner of The Warehouse Barbershop, says he deals with a lot of theft, open drug use and overdoses at his new Smythe Street location. (Allyson McCormack / CBC)

Chad McGarity, owner of The Warehouse Barbershop, recently relocated to the bottom of Smythe Street. He said he's struggling with daytime thefts, open drug use and overdoses outside his business.

He keeps a sharps disposal container on hand and collects the waste himself. In the three months at this new location, he estimates he's picked up roughly 100 needles from his property. 

McGarity said he empathizes with the people he sees on the streets. He said he often gives out money and meals and gets to know them on a personal level. But he's struggling. 

A security car turns into a driveway with two people in the background turning a corner with one person on foot and the other on a bicycle. The City of Fredericton's Community Safety Services unit responds to people loitering outside a Brunswick Street business on a recent day. (Allyson McCormack / CBC)

Asking people to move along when they're blocking the barbershop entrance can be nerve-racking.

"Of course we're very friendly because we don't want to make anybody angry, but it's our investment, our livelihood," McGarity said.

'You can't hang out anywhere'

Forward said police often get calls about unwanted individuals, property damage, theft and drug use, and he understands the frustration businesses feel.

Police responded to 64 overdoses last year, he said, and as of Oct. 1 this year, they had already responded to 76. They've also responded to more than 90 calls for syringe recovery and disposal.

But Forward said there are limitations to what his officers can do.

"I think, also, the community needs to understand that police can't arrest someone for simply being homeless or living rough, and we certainly can't arrest somebody for being addicted to drugs or possessing prescribed drugs."

Syringe covers, a balloon and a lighter lay on the ground with fall leaves and a fence in the background. Needle covers and other garbage from drug use are a common site just a few steps away from the sidewalk in Fredericton's downtown. (Allyson McCormack / CBC)

Chris Nason has been living rough in Fredericton for the past decade. He understands there are "a lot of bad apples in the homeless crew," but wants business owners to know there are a lot of good people who are also struggling.

Nason has always lived in Fredericton. In a former life, he had a home of his own, a wife, a son and a daughter. But for a myriad of reasons, he is now unhoused. 

"I had a couple of low-rental places but they were taken away as quick and as easily as I got them."

Nason has used the men's shelter from time to time, but prefers the independence of living in the woods, where he said no one bothers him — unlike when he spends time downtown. 

"You can't hang out anywhere. You stop somewhere on the street and there's about three different security companies that come around and tell you to move along. Like I say, well, 'Where do you suggest I move along to, so that you're not going to follow me down the road 5 minutes later?'"

A man with a hat, scarf and brown jacket grins at the camera with fall leaves and a shopping cart in the background. Chris Nason says he sees new faces in the homeless community every day and wonders where they're all coming from. (Allyson McCormack / CBC)

Nason said he has seen an unbelievable increase in the number of people living on the streets. 

"Every day I see new faces in town, and you wonder where they're all coming from," he said. "It seems like at least by the week, there's at least a half a dozen or dozen new people that you haven't seen before."

All of these concerns will be part of the conversation at the annual Business Community Engagement Session on Nov. 5. The meeting is in partnership with the city and Fredericton Police Force, and will include members of the Chamber of Commerce, Business Fredericton North and Downtown Fredericton Inc.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Allyson McCormack is a producer with CBC New Brunswick, based in Fredericton. She has been with CBC News since 2008.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices



63 Comments

 
Dee MacDonald
Something is bringing them here, as noted by Chris Nason, could it be one of the 4 programs set up, one being Fredericton in all of Canada giving away free drugs causing the influx of people?



Inger Nielsen
more unhoused to come unless our new housing MLA pulls a trick out of their hat like victory houses



Rich Hatfield
This can all be fixed with a $40 million pool.



Jack Bell
I'm surprised the feelings police didn't change the title from:

"Drug-related problems cost of doing business in downtown Fredericton, store owners say"

to:

"Diversity is our strength and businesses look forward to the opportunity to expand their clientele to include nomadic persons experiencing altered perception."

Mark O'Brien
Reply to Jack Bell
Perhaps you might like to ask thoe business leaders why they dont utter a statement that has nothing to do with social problems?!

Societies have many diverse social problems and needs like good child care for example. Your objection to diversity would have you sweep society's needs undeer the carpet? You only take care of one of your needs despite the diverse needs you and everyone has because of some objection to a noun? Now that you've banned pronouns and nouns will you go after verbs to reflect your own unactivity? Bad verbs! Next we'll get their accompices the adverbs!

MR Cain
Reply to Mark O'Brien
The business leaders should be collaborating on solutions and work with the cops.



Tom Gordon
Higgs had one great idea maybe the Liberals should jump on, to pass a law letting law enforcement pick people up that can't help themselves and put them in treatment centres whether they want to be there or not. Stop the giving away of free drugs. Send the homeless that are coming to Fredericton after being kicked out of other cities back to where they came from.

MR Cain
Reply to Tom Gordon
We have already gone through this and the cops don't even want anything to do with it. What do we do with the homeless that are from Fredericton? Sending people back to their place of origin does not solve the problem, just gives it to someone else.
 
 
 
William Murdoch 
Check out Charles LeBlanc
 
 
 
 
 
 

'Everything is on the table,' Fundy Shores mayor says as communities question RCMP service

 

'Everything is on the table,' Fundy Shores mayor says as communities question RCMP service

Neglect of duty alleged in half the complaints about RCMP in New Brunswick over 8 years

Police and Public Trust, a project of the CBC News Atlantic investigative unit, scrutinizes the largely off-limits police complaint and discipline systems across the region. Journalists are using access to information laws and, in some cases, court challenges to obtain discipline records and data.

Darrell Tidd kept hearing about break-ins in his community.

It was the summer of 2023, just a few months after the municipality of Eastern Charlotte was created in southwestern New Brunswick. 

This swath of Charlotte County runs from the west boundary of New River all the way to the ferry to Deer Island and includes St. George and Blacks Harbour — home to about 7,700 people, by Tidd's estimate.

The municipality's new government, including Tidd, the Ward 6 councillor, was hearing from residents whose camps were broken into. Tidd felt the RCMP response was inadequate.

"What's at stake is nobody feels safe in their communities," he said in an interview with CBC News from St. George. 

The province's public safety crime dashboard shows crimes against people rising between 2018 and 2022. Crimes against property also went up.

At a council meeting in July 2023, Tidd made a motion: to look at dropping the RCMP and adopting an alternative. 

Eastern Charlotte wasn't the only community expressing concern about the RCMP's policing.

That July, the RCMP issued a statement warning residents against vigilantism after a car and home were burned on Deer Island. The island technically isn't part of Eastern Charlotte, but many consider it part of the community, Tidd said.

A smouldering pile of rubble. The pile of rubble left by a fire on Deer Island in July 2023. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

Island residents told CBC at the time they were frustrated by crime, including thefts, that often happened at night after the ferry stopped running.

No Mountie is stationed on the island full time, which makes it difficult for an officer to respond quickly from the St. George detachment on the mainland.

Tidd worried something similar would happen in Eastern Charlotte.

"We don't want to see vigilante justice and something drastic happen in this community," he said. "That's why we're saying we need more community-based policing here."

Those concerns were echoed by complaints members of the public made about the RCMP across all of New Brunswick from 2015 through 2022.

The most common complaint during those eight years was neglect of duty, representing half the more than 2,600 allegations in the data reviewed by CBC.

Overall, 50 per cent of the allegations in the database were found to be unsupported, a CBC analysis found.

Complaints from the public

Some allegations about neglect of duty were from people complaining the RCMP didn't do a thorough investigation. Others were from people upset they called and no one phoned them back.

A complaint in 2016, found in the database sent to CBC, was from a person who called 911 in the Blackville area in central New Brunswick. Their reason for calling isn't clear, but the person said they were told the RCMP would be dispatched.

"The RCMP never showed up and the complainant has not heard from the RCMP since," says the complaint.

The word police, written in white, uppercase letters, is seen on the back of an officer's black jacket. CBC obtained and analyzed eight years of complaints about the RCMP in New Brunswick, finding half of the more than 2,600 allegations related to neglect of duty. (Photo illustration: Duk Han Lee/CBC)

A complaint made in the Hampton detachment in 2018 described a person calling the RCMP five times to report thefts from vehicles and people looking in their vehicles.

"He has never seen a police car make a patrol in any of the reported incidents," the data provided by the RCMP said. The complaint was informally resolved.

Another complaint in 2021, in the St. Stephen area, was found to be supported after a person complained that a constable failed to do a proper investigation by not obtaining or reviewing security camera footage.

The data was obtained through the access to information system as part of CBC's ongoing Police and Public Trust project, which takes the public inside the often-opaque systems of police complaints and discipline across Atlantic Canada.

"As far as the percentage, it doesn't surprise me," Tidd said. "That would be probably in line with what we're hearing in the community."

A man in a black jacket looks ahead at the camera, with a bridge and autumn leaves in the background. Eastern Charlotte Coun. Darrell Tidd says people don't feel safe in his community. (Karissa Donkin/CBC)

'Enough is enough'

Next door to Eastern Charlotte, Fundy Shores Mayor Denny Cogswell was dealing with similar issues. The new municipality covers about 370 square kilometres and includes Prince of Wales on the outskirts of Saint John and Pocologan farther west.

Cogswell estimated there were 10 to 12 break-ins this past spring in the New River and Pocologan areas, which had a population of more than 800 people as part of the Lepreau Parish in 2021, according to Statistics Canada.

"The community was getting frustrated and said enough is enough," Cogswell said.

A foggy community on a body of water is shown. Concerns about crime began in Fundy Shores after petty crime, such as thefts and break-ins, started to feel more common, according to Cogswell. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

Conversations with the RCMP led to a public meeting last summer. Cogswell estimates more than 100 people attended.

The message from residents, he said, was that they wanted to see a greater police presence given the area's vast territory. He believes it's a managerial problem within the RCMP.

"It's not the boots on the ground," Cogswell said. "There's just not enough of them. They're doing the best they can with what they have, and I think something more has to be done politically and up the ladder."

The RCMP fielded a number of questions at the meeting and residents left optimistic, Cogswell said. After another meeting in September with Kris Austin, the public safety minister at the time, Cogswell said he heard from residents who were seeing police patrolling the community. One woman said it was the first time she'd seen a police car in the 10 years she lived in New River.

According to the RCMP statistics, the Lepreau area has seen 307 occurrences to date this year, compared to 273 over the same period in 2023.

In Musquash, there have been 103 occurrences so far, up from 90 in the same period in 2023.

'Everything's on the table' with policing, mayor says

Cogswell continues to be optimistic, but is still concerned by how long it could take for the RCMP to show up after a call. 

"Everything's on the table," he said. "We'll do what needs to be done or what we can do within those boundaries, legal-wise, to protect the citizens of Fundy Shores. 

"I'm really hopeful that the RCMP will be the ones to do that, not only for costing-wise, but I think they can provide a good service if needed. But the problem is we're just not seeing it as much as we should be."

What an alternative might look like is unclear. The previous government ruled out creating a provincial police force to replace the RCMP, citing high costs.

WATCH | What we learned from eight years of complaints about the RCMP in New Brunswick:
 

Data shows concern about level of RCMP service in New Brunswick

Eight years’ worth of complaints about the New Brunswick RCMP show half fell into the category of neglect of duty.

The municipalities of Carleton North and Hartland pitched the provincial government on creating a western New Brunswick police force. It was rejected by the province earlier this year for a number of reasons, including cost and the challenge of hiring local officers.

Residents in Carleton North and Hartland were frustrated by similar issues as Eastern Charlotte and Fundy Shores: concerns about crime and the visibility of the RCMP for the $3 million combined the two municipalities were paying for the service.

RCMP leadership met with municipalities

Leadership within the New Brunswick RCMP met with several municipalities at a Union of the Municipalities meeting in Fredericton this fall. 

One of the RCMP's takeaways from that meeting was that municipalities aren't necessarily displeased with the RCMP officers on the ground. They just want to see more of them, according to RCMP spokesperson Cpl. Hans. Ouellette.

A man in an RCMP uniform looks off camera. Cpl. Hans Ouellette, a spokesperson for the New Brunswick RCMP, says at least 40 of the promised 51 frontline officers have been hired. (Ed Hunter/CBC)

"We understand that there's concern there and we actually, to be quite honest with you, I really appreciate that people have had these opinions because it means that people are actually interested in what the police are doing … and they're concerned about public safety, which we are as well," Ouellette said.

Fifty-one new front-line officers were promised for New Brunswick in 2023, and Ouellette said between 40 and 45 had been hired as of October.

With a growing population and lots of rural area to cover, it's not possible for police to be everywhere at once, Ouellette said. That's why the police use intelligence-led policing, where police rely on data analysis to make decisions on how to use its resources. Calls are also triaged, with priority on emergencies.

"We go to where the crime is," Ouellette said. "So that's very important for our communities to continue calling in suspicious activity."

But at least one municipality has expressed concern about how quickly the RCMP responds to serious calls, too. The RCMP apologized to residents of Grand Lake last month, after taking 50 minutes to respond to a shooting that left a 75-year-old man seriously injured.

"There was a learning opportunity there for us," Ouellette said.

Tensions have also flared between the RCMP and politicians over how the RCMP handles crime. In 2021, the province invoked a section of its policing contract with the RCMP to demand the removal of former RCMP assistant commissioner Larry Tremblay.

At the time, Ted Flemming, who was justice and public safety minister, expressed a lack of confidence in Tremblay's ability to curb drug crime. Tremblay argued his removal was related to disagreements with the province's vision on policing, which blurred "the lines between politics and policing."

As the province grapples with a surge in the cost of housing that has driven an increase in homelessness, in conjunction with more demand for mental health and addiction services, police aren't the only answer to dealing with the crime issues communities are facing.

A common concern across the province

Grand Bay-Westfield Mayor Brittany Merrifield has heard a similar tune from counterparts across the province who pay for RCMP service. She wants the RCMP to make more decisions based on the kilometres an officer must cover rather than the population of an area.

"This is a common theme when I talk to my colleagues across the province in terms of their feeling of the level of service that municipalities are receiving from their RCMP detachment, that that level of service has dropped over the years from the visibility of the officers to the response of the officers," said Merrifield, the president of the Union of the Municipalities of New Brunswick.

"That sort of leads back to one of the things we hear about most is there's a lack of accountability from the RCMP to the local councils, and this is an issue because the local councils are the ones that have the responsibility to provide public safety to their residents and we're the ones that that pay the bill at the end of the day."

Merrifield said that's left some residents with a feeling of hopelessness. Why bother calling police if you feel your issue will fall low on the priority list?

"At the end of the day, public safety is about some of the small things as well as some of the big things," she said.

Medium shot of woman smiling at camera on a sunny day Grand Bay-Westfield Mayor Brittany Merrifield, who is president of the Union of the Municipalities of New Brunswick, says she's heard concern across the province about the visibility of RCMP service. (Hadeel Ibrahim/CBC)

Back in St. George, Tidd said he feels the RCMP are trying to respond to communities' concerns.

He pointed to a recent survey circulated among municipalities on their perceptions and concerns about crime, as well as meetings with community leaders.

But he still questions whether the municipality is getting its money's worth. He also wonders whether the RCMP are suited to community policing, with so many other priorities in a federal force.

The RCMP's statistics show police were called for 268 occurrences, which can range from 911 calls to traffic stops, in St. George so far in 2024, down from 279 in the same period in 2023. Blacks Harbour has also seen a slight decrease: 155 so far this year, down from 169.

"When you're not seeing a member within the community, when you're paying $2.1 million for that service and when you're calling and no one's coming for two or three hours, that goes to prove the point that there isn't a presence," Tidd said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Karissa Donkin is a journalist in CBC's Atlantic investigative unit. You can reach her at karissa.donkin@cbc.ca.

 
 
 
461 Comments
 
 
David Amos

 
 

Monday 29 July 2024

Top Mountie ousted by Higgs flagged political 'influence' on policing

 
 
 
Your account has been banned from posting permanently.  — 

Where are the records of the Coroner's Inquest that many people testified at in July of 1982?
 
 
 

Opposition leaders rap Higgs for 2021 removal of top RCMP officer

Larry Tremblay’s letter on political ‘influence’ raises concerns about premier, say Susan Holt, David Coon

Opposition leaders say new information about the 2021 departure of the RCMP's top officer in New Brunswick is another example of Premier Blaine Higgs blaming others for his lack of leadership.

CBC News revealed this week that J Division commanding officer Larry Tremblay raised concerns about a Higgs government vision that "blurs the lines between politics and policing" in a July 2021 letter.

The province had asked for Tremblay's removal from the position, leading to Tremblay's retirement from the RCMP later that year.

"It's yet another example of political influence from the premier where it shouldn't be," Liberal Leader Susan Holt said Monday. "We need our public safety leaders at the RCMP to be independent, and we need their work to be clear and transparent.

"This is another example of a lack of leadership from Higgs."

WATCH | 'They're not kings': Liberal, Green leaders on RCMP letter:
 

Opposition leaders question Higgs’s role in RCMP leadership change

Susan Holt and David Coon say they’re concerned by former N.B. RCMP assistant commissioner Larry Tremblay’s 2021 letter citing political interference.

Green Leader David Coon agreed.

"It's more of the same," he said, accusing Higgs of believing he is "the boss of everybody. It was no surprise to me at all." 

Then-public safety minister Ted Flemming asked for Tremblay's removal in a July 15, 2021, letter, invoking a section of the province's policing contract with the RCMP.

A man in a police uniform CBC News has obtained the letter that Larry Tremblay, once the top Mountie in New Brunswick, wrote in 2021. (Ed Hunter/CBC)

Flemming told then-RCMP commissioner Brenda Lucki he didn't have confidence in Tremblay to ramp up the fight against drug crime in the province.

In his July 26 letter to Lucki, Tremblay said the force had been fighting drug crime, but the province had never identified it as a priority.

Instead, the Higgs government had a "different vision" of police independence, Tremblay said, and the force must remain "independent and free from influence."

A spokesperson for the Public Safety Department refused to comment on the letter obtained by CBC News. The RCMP also refused to comment.

Under the policing contract, the province can set goals for the RCMP as the provincial police force but operational decisions are up to the force itself.

Tremblay's letter did not identify specific examples of blurred lines between politics and policing but said there were differences between the RCMP and the province on issues, including Crown-Indigenous relationships and how to handle legal protests.

Holt and Coon agreed with policing expert Chrisitan Leuprecht, a professor at the Royal Military College, that a provincial police commission — like the boards that exist in Saint John and Greater Moncton —  would safeguard police independence.

medium shot of man with white hair wearing a suit   On certain issues, there were differences between the Blaine Higgs government and the RCMP, the letter says. (Radio-Canada)

Coon said the model is used elsewhere in Canada and is a good suggestion.

"To have buffers between politicians and those who deliver public services … I think the case has been made repeatedly."

The Green leader said Higgs's top-down, hands-on approach was a continuation of how former premier Brian Gallant governed. 

Holt said public concern about crime is real, and rather than doing real work to address it in 2021, Higgs opted instead to look for someone he could fire — as he has done when problems have erupted in other areas such as health care. 

"It seems the premier doesn't have answers for them, so went looking for somebody to blame," she said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jacques Poitras

Provincial Affairs reporter

Jacques Poitras has been CBC's provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. He grew up in Moncton and covered Parliament in Ottawa for the New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal. He has reported on every New Brunswick election since 1995 and won awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, the National Newspaper Awards and Amnesty International. He is also the author of five non-fiction books about New Brunswick politics and history.

 
 
 
 

Top Mountie ousted by Higgs flagged political 'influence' on policing

Larry Tremblay wrote that PC government’s vision ‘blurs the lines’ between politics, policing

The RCMP's top officer in New Brunswick raised concerns about political interference by the Higgs government when he was ousted from the job in 2021, according to a letter he wrote at the time.

Assistant commissioner Larry Tremblay wrote in the letter, obtained by CBC News, that his removal was the result of disagreements with the provincial government over its vision that "blurs the lines between politics and policing."

"In my view, it is imperative that the provincial police remain independent and free from influence in the application and enforcement of laws," he wrote in the July 26, 2021, letter to then-RCMP commissioner Brenda Lucki.

Tremblay wrote the letter 11 days after the government invoked a section of its policing contract with the RCMP to demand Tremblay's removal as the head of J Division in New Brunswick.

RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki  makes her way to the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security, in Ottawa, Monday, Oct. 31, 2022. Tremblay's letter was addressed to then-RCMP commissioner Brenda Lucki. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Ted Flemming, as justice and public safety minister, said at the time that he had "no confidence" that Tremblay could "drive the change" to fight drug crime and be accountable to local communities policed by the RCMP — two priorities for the government, he said.

In his letter to Lucki, Tremblay said that wasn't true.

He told the commissioner that Flemming's letter was the first time anyone from the Higgs government told the RCMP that drug crime was its top priority, and that a "directional statement" from the province didn't refer to it as a priority.

Until he was called to a meeting on June 30, 2021, "I had not received any prior indication" that the partnership between the province and the RCMP "was anything but positive and future focused," he wrote.

WATCH | 'You can't tell me how to resolve that,' expert says about letter:
 

RCMP letter says Higgs government ‘blurs the lines’ between politics, policing

Chief Terry Richardson of Pabineau First Nation says the title claim court case also seeks compensation for use of land, resources.

"I believe the request for my removal is not related to a lack of provincial drug enforcement or community engagement and accountability," he continued. 

"I believe this request stems from a different vision of the role of the provincial police that blurs the lines between politics and policing, and the resulting direction provided to police."

The three-page letter also provided details of the force's efforts on drug crime and said the RCMP's reporting structure through regional service commissions made it "extremely difficult to demonstrate to local communities the value of our service."

Tremblay's letter did not identify specific examples of blurred lines between politics and policing.

But he wrote the Higgs government and the RCMP had "principled differences" on issues, including "a measured approach to lawful protests" and Crown-Indigenous relations, as well as on policing standards, intelligence sharing and external reviews of incidents.

Three months before Tremblay's removal, the premier announced he was ending tax-sharing agreements with 13 First Nations communities in the province.

A man wearing a coat with a shirt and tie underneath.  Ted Flemming, as justice and public safety minister, said at the time that he had 'no confidence' that Tremblay could 'drive the change' to fight drug crime and be accountable to local communities policed by the RCMP. (Jacques Poitras/CBC file photo)

The federal police force had adopted an Indigenous reconciliation policy that included training for officers in "appropriate police intervention options" during protests, including alternatives to confrontation such as "de-escalation techniques."

The cancellation of the tax deals did not lead to any major protests or roadblocks by Indigenous people.

Tremblay would not agree to an interview about the letter or his removal.

A spokesperson for Public Safety Minister Kris Austin turned down a request for interviews with Austin, Flemming or Premier Blaine Higgs.

"Minister Flemming's letter to the Commissioner accurately expresses his reasons for writing," Geoffrey Downey said in an email.

"We have nothing further to say about this."

Christian Leuprecht, a professor and policing expert at the Royal Military College, said the letter is an example of "fundamental flaws in the contract policing model."

New Brunswick's contract with the RCMP says the provincial public safety minister sets "objectives, priorities and goals" for the RCMP's provincial policing, but the force decides how to apply federally set "professional police standards and procedures" to its operations.

Those two can be at odds, Leuprecht says.

A man in black-framed glasses in a purple collared shirt and dark grey jacket. Christian Leuprecht, a professor and policing expert at the Royal Military College, said the letter is an example of 'fundamental flaws in the contract policing model.' (Submitted by Christian Leuprecht)

The RCMP can also be left "holding the bag" when protests flare up over political decisions.

"Any police force will tell you, 'Our job is not to do political policing,'" Leuprecht said.

"We've learned a lot of hard lessons … about how not to police political protest. I think that's partially what the deputy commissioner is likely echoing.

"The minister is telling him, 'I want this resolved, I want that resolved,' and he's saying, 'Yeah, you can tell me to resolve that, but you can't tell me how to resolve that.'"

The government's demand for Tremblay's removal was made under a section of the RCMP's contract with the province to police communities without their own municipal forces.

When the ouster became public in October 2021, Flemming said in an interview the government wanted to "declare war" on drug crime.

"I found, and the government found, that we were not having the kind of leadership that we felt we needed," he said.

Flemming requested Tremblay's removal in a July 15, 2021, letter to Lucki. Tremblay remained in the position until he retired from the RCMP at the end of October 2021. 

Tremblay's letter disputing the province's explanation was dated July 26, and three days later, on July 29, Lucki responded to Flemming's request.

In her letter, the commissioner said it was unfortunate no one from the province had told her about "concerns" with Tremblay before invoking the agreement to ask for his removal.

"There may have been an opportunity to proactively address some of the issues you've raised," she wrote.

RMCP spokesperson Sgt. Kim Chamberland said in an email Friday that Tremblay "made a personal decision" to retire in 2021. She said the force had no other comment.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jacques Poitras

Provincial Affairs reporter

Jacques Poitras has been CBC's provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. He grew up in Moncton and covered Parliament in Ottawa for the New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal. He has reported on every New Brunswick election since 1995 and won awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, the National Newspaper Awards and Amnesty International. He is also the author of five non-fiction books about New Brunswick politics and history.

 
 
 
170 Comments
 
 
David Amos 
"RMCP spokesperson Sgt. Kim Chamberland said in an email Friday that Tremblay "made a personal decision" to retire in 2021. She said the force had no other comment."

The RCMP cannot deny that I have commented a lot since

 
 
 
David Amos  
Christian Leuprecht has a lot to learn
 
David Amos  
Reply to David Amos
'Christian Leuprecht, a professor and policing expert at the Royal Military College, said the letter is an example of 'fundamental flaws in the contract policing model.' (Submitted by Christian Leuprecht)

The RCMP can also be left "holding the bag" when protests flare up over political decisions.

"Any police force will tell you, 'Our job is not to do political policing,'" Leuprecht said.

"We've learned a lot of hard lessons … about how not to police political protest. I think that's partially what the deputy commissioner is likely echoing."

The first question I should ask him is "Who is WE???"

Tristis Ward  
That would be the RCMP 
 
David Amos  
Reply to Tristis Ward
Bingo
 
 
 
David Amos  
I have no doubt Paul Palango thinks he knows all about why Larry Tremblay is history 
 
 
 
Matt Steele 

Another nothing burger story by JP . An old story from THREE years ago that was already investigated , and reported on , with no misconduct found . Wait a month , and the same story will be run again.... 
 
David Amos  

Reply to Matt Steele 
Perhaps you should call Christian Leuprecht like I just did
 
 
John Clarke   

Boo Hoo Not doing the job as per the job description. Fight crime put the drug dealers in Jail. Tremblay was in a no win situation with a lame duck Commissioner Lucki who I believe was in my opinion one of the worst RCMP Chiefs in the last 50 years. The worst being the civilian hire Elliot. Any way NB needs a Provincial Police Force. But this would cost millions and will never happen. By the way ask all the smaller towns and municipalities if they could rewind the video if they would have opted to get rid of their local police forces in favour of an RCMP presence.
 
David Amos  

Reply to John Clarke 
"The worst being the civilian hire Elliot"

Yup

David Amos  

Reply to David Amos  
Big Bad Billy Elliott COM KC was the 22nd Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police when they falsely arrested me in Fat Fred City in July of 2008
 
 
 
Gabriel Boucher  
Higgs must resign now. There is no place for authoritarianism in NB.
 
Jake Newman 
Reply to Gabriel Boucher 
for what reason? as per the contract they requested new leadership in NB for the RCMP? There's been a lot of questions on the overall leadership for the RCMP.
 
Gabriel Boucher 
Reply to Jake Newman  
This story isn't the only time Higgs overstepped his boundaries. The firings of the health board, the introduction of discriminatory policies in the education system... the list goes on and on. It's not just this event. It's an accumulation of events that makes Higgs look bad.
 
David Amos  
Reply to Jake Newman 
I have asked many 
 
Jake Newman 
Reply to Gabriel Boucher 
again, it is the gov't right to "fire" the health board. The health board (and school boards, etc.) are created by gov't. you don't see them listed in the Constitution do you? Discriminatory polices in the education system---you mean keeping parent rights involved.
 
Gabriel Boucher 
Reply to Jake Newman   
You don't seem to understand what a democracy is. The people of NB never agreed to dismantle the health board. Higgs jumped the gun without proper consultation. That's not how democracy works.
 
Jake Newman 
Reply to Gabriel Boucher 
umm, they were voted into power with majority.  
 
MR Cain
Reply to Jake Newman    
The majority never voted, nor does it give this government the right to act without due process.
 
MR Cain
Reply to Jake Newman  
Due process.  
 
MR Cain
Reply to Jake Newman  
I will stick my neck out by saying the answer is in the name...Tremblay. Think about it.
 
Jake Newman 
Reply to MR Cain 
 big stretch
 
Jake Newman 
Reply to MR Cain 
the majority never voted?? They have a majority gov't.
 
 
 
Daniel Franklin  
Is anybody surprised by this? The entire conservative movement is based on authoritarian theories, political interference and views that set us back to the 1930's.
 
Bob Enrob
Reply to Daniel Franklin
The federal liberals must be conservative then...
 
David Amos   
Reply to Bob Enrob
Seems so 
 
 
 
Jonathan Martin 
old story, rehashed to make Higgs look bad. The playbook is now known to all.
 
Oscar Biasinni 
Reply to Jonathan Martin
He looks bad because he is emulating Alberta's premier bad governance! 
 
William James
Reply to Jonathan Martin
Trudeau wrote the book on it, Higgs played a page.   
 
Sarah Brown 
Reply to Jonathan Martin 
Higgs makes himself look bad all on his own. It's the one thing he is good at. 
 
David Amos   
Reply to William James
Well put
 
David Amos   
Reply to Sarah Brown
Oh So True
 
 
 
William Peters 
Yes, we get it. Higgs thinks he is one of those old Tory elitist who think they get to run the show by virtue of their proven fealty to the Lords Irving. 
 
David Amos   
Reply to William Peters
Isn't that a fact? 
 
 
 
Samual Johnston  
the province pays for the RCMP to be here no? so of course the provincial government should be directing what they do.
 
William Peters 
Reply to Samual Johnston 
No, not at all. They should have nothing to say about it. We pay for the luxury of not having political influence which was rampant in the old days (and still vey much a thing in the US).
 
David Amos
Reply to Samual Johnston  
Surely you jest  
 
 

Ronald Miller

When you’re at the top you get to make all the decisions. That’s how democracy works folks.

Kyle Woodman
Reply to Ronald Miller
Like hiring travel nurses for 100's of millions of dollars?

David Amos
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Good question

Dan Lee
Reply to Kyle Woodman
and dont forget the mosts wonderfull gifts to irving........more wood......great subsidies...replanting irving s brand.......pay to cut crown wood........

Gabriel Boucher
Reply to Ronald Miller
You're describing authoritarianism, not democracy. Democracy is when the common people are considered as the primary source of political power, not the leader.



Matt Steele
Just another old rehashed story from THREE years ago that was already investigated , and reported on previously . There has always been the attitude with some police services that they are above the law , and answer to no one but themselves . The province provides provincial policing , and pays a substantial amount of taxpayer money to do ; and no doubt MLAs get a lot of complaints about the lack of policing services , and the rise in crime . If the RCMP want the contract to provide provincial policing , they need to be accountable to the government , and taxpayers of N.B. . The Higgs PC government brought in the SIRT program to provide independent over sight and investigation for police officers involved in serious misconduct , so no doubt that would upset some in the policing community who thought they should answer to no one but themselves .

Bobby Richards
Reply to Matt Steele
Don’t you have an artist rendering of the NB museum to celebrate?

David Amos
Reply to Matt Steele
Methinks one has to go back a lot further than 3 years N'esy Pas?
 
Tristis Ward 
Reply to Matt Steele
Why do you keep repeating that even though it's been explained that this is new information and the public has a right to hear about it? 
 
 
 
John Lawrence  
Higgs, for a leader, is a very poor communicator. When he can’t communicate with law enforcement clearly there is an issue. Removing people like Tremblay and Dornan ultimately cost the taxpayer money yet his desperate pitch of lowering the 15% tax to 13% is a platform for re-election? The campaign brochure in my mailbox was ridiculous…I thought it was advertising lol. Holt must beat him
 
Samual Johnston 
Reply to John Lawrence  
why would nay one want Holt to win --- she will spend more on renaming rivers and erasing history than she will on policing 
 
John Lawrence  
Reply to Samual Johnston   
Susan rocks!!
 
Gabriel Boucher  
Reply to Samual Johnston 
Erasing history... how rich... You do realize that this "history" you're talking about was the product of erasing another part of history, right?
 
David Amos  

Reply to Gabriel Boucher
Where are the records of the Coroner's Inquest that many people testified at in July of 1982?

 
 
Ed Wallis   
Dickie Hatfield didn't like the RCMP (because they caught him with 35 grams of mj in his suitcase on his way to visit the Queen), and tried to replace them with a Provincial Police Force. That didn't work out so well for NB...the NBHP were using their cruisers for everything and anything, while the taxpayers were footing the fuel bill....
 
 
David Amos  

Reply to Ed Wallis
Do you recall name of the cop who found Dickie's stash?
 
 
 
Max Ruby
CBC 2021 Christian Leuprecht, an expert in public safety and policing at the Royal Military College in Kingston, Ont., says:

"We can see here that New Brunswick is trying to set a trend, that if we're going to pay for contract policing, the police force is ultimately responsible in a democracy to a civilian political authority, that being the provincial government."

Melanson and Arseneau both say that aggressive police action is not the best way to tackle drugs and addiction.

David Amos  

Reply to Max Ruby 
"Christian Leuprecht, an expert in public safety"

Yea Right



Peter Churcher
This reporter is always trying to bring up old stories and needs to be careful not be influencing an election by showing bias.

Tristis Ward
Reply to Peter Churcher
You're the second person to suggest this.

The other wouldn't answer. Can you please provide information that shows Tremblay's statement about political blurring of the lines (likely) around policing protests?

I'd never heard that specific allegation. If it was out there before, as you imply, can you point to it?

Max Ruby
Reply to Tristis Ward
Opposition parties denounce government ousting of N.B.'s top RCMP officer

Move is in line with premier's pattern of pushing out top officials, says Liberal leader

Jacques Poitras · CBC News · Posted: Oct 20, 2021 5:12 PM ADT | Last Updated: October 20, 2021

Matt Steele
Reply to Peter Churcher
Yep ; the reporter of this article obviously has a very strong anti PC party bias as all his stories have the same bias . Now he has been reduced to rehashing stories that were already investigated , and reported on THREE years ago . His bias is so glaring ., it is hard to believe anything that he tries to report on .

JOhn D Bond

Reply to Peter Churcher
So in provincial politics it is bias but in federal politics it is a desired outcome. Certainly seems to be the case.

Btw if the press is simply reporting, not creating something new, that is their job.

Peter Churcher
Reply to JOhn D Bond
The problem is the press does not simply report. If you read many of this reporter's articles he makes person statements and expresses his opinion more often than not. Yes the accusation of bias should apply at any level of politics. The difference here is there is no Federal election on the horizon.

Jack Bell
Reply to Tristis Ward
They aren't suggesting it, they are stating verifiable facts.

John Montgomery

Reply to Peter Churcher
You are trying to get facts dismissed because the person who said them is 'biased'.

It doesn't make them facts any less. Who would ever think that way?

John Lee

Reply to John Montgomery
Who would ever think that way? You must not have been paying attention during the past few Canadian and American elections, or during Covid.

MR Cain
Reply to Peter Churcher
Due to legislative changes to the Access to Info, which added another level to block and delay, the letter has only recently been made available to the public.

Jack Bell
Reply to John Montgomery
Why did the writer of this article leave out important pieces of information, like this article that they themselves wrote?

"a top expert says while the move is the first of its kind, it's a welcome step toward greater civilian oversight of police operations."

"We can see here that New Brunswick is trying to set a trend, that if we're going to pay for contract policing, the police force is ultimately responsible in a democracy to a civilian political authority, that being the provincial government."

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/rcmp-new-brunswick-larry-tremblay-1.6218373

Do we need less oversight on the RCMP?

The kind of oversight lacking in things like this?

"Regional Police Force officer who has been suspended with pay for more than four years, and now plans to retire before facing any possible disciplinary action, has cost local taxpayers more than $1 million"

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/jeff-porter-kennebecasis-police-cost-taxpayers-quispamsis-rothesay-1.5789323

Tristis Ward

Reply to Max Ruby
Yes, but this doesn't address Tremblay's accusations of political interference in policing.

This is a serious charge.

MR Cain
Reply to Peter Churcher
Looks like another case that Higgs et al has not bothered making the necessary changes as promised in Nov 21. 84 breaches of the act and nothing happens?

JOhn D Bond

Reply to Peter Churcher
Actually, it is no different here than in most other media including the tv stations news casts.

Actually are two federal byelections before the nb election,

But the press have a role up until the last hours of the election to print stories about the issues and the divergent views they are provided when they ask questions.

JOhn D Bond
Reply to Peter Churcher
Actually, it is no different here than in most other media including the tv stations news casts.

Actually are two federal byelections before the nb election,

But the press have a role up until the last hours of the election to print stories about the issues and the divergent views they are provided when they ask questions.

David Amos  
Content Deactivated

Reply to Peter Churcher
So says an ex cop

Tristis Ward
Reply to Jack Bell
They are not stating varifiable facts, though.

As per this article itself, the ousting took place in 2021.

The news is about what was written in the letter. It's significant. They're implying it's a rehash, when it most definitely is not.



Matt Steele
An old rehashed story from THREE years ago that has already been investigated , and reported on back in 2021 ; so if there was anything to it , it would be out in the open at this point as the officer involved has been retired for quite some time . Yesterday's news with no new information .

Tristis Ward
Reply to Matt Steele
You keep saying this, but not backing it up.

INSIDE this article it says specifically that Tremblay resigned AND wrote the letter in 2021.

That's not new information you keep bringing up. It's IN the story.

What you hint at is that his allegations are ALSO old and have been investigated, but I know nothing of that. Can you show it?

David Amos  
Content Deactivated

Reply to Tristis Ward
The dude is redundant
 
 
 
Jack Edwards
The reason this seems to be a rehashed story is because Jacques Poitras has been spreading anti Conservative innuendo his entire career. Yet when the Liberals are in power he seldom critiques anything. What else is new?
 
Tristis Ward
Reply to Jack Edwards
Several commenters have been making your same point, so I went back and found the old coverage of this event.

TURNS OUT:

What was NOT known at the time, and has only recently come to light, is the statement by Tremblay about Higgs and political blurring of the lines.

This is significant. It needs to be looked at.

(sorry it gets in the way of whatever your political hopes you hold for a specific party)
 
MR Cain
Reply to Jack Edwards
I would say that Jacques has been correct in reporting on the numerous fumbles of this government.
 
MR Cain
Reply to Jack Edwards
If you can refer us to another media site that is less biased than the CBC, please do.
 
Mathieu Laperriere
Reply to Jack Edwards
Why not read the national post then? They would have the kind of bashing you are looking for.
 
David Amos
Reply to Tristis Ward
Dig Deeper
 
 
 
James Risdon
Until we have specific examples of this alleged blurring of the lines between the government and the police, it's nothing but innuendo and speculation.
 
Tristis Ward
Reply to James Risdon
It's an allegation made in a resignation letter. It absolutely deserves investigation, rather than speculation, but let's not pretend this was somebody throwing something at a wall. It's a hint that there might be a problem.
 
James Risdon
Reply to Tristis Ward
Might be. It's also a letter from a disgruntled employee.

So, you know, the validity of the allegation - an allegation unsupported by any specific examples whatsoever - is highly suspect.
 
Tristis Ward
Reply to James Risdon
"highly suspect' because "disgruntled" completely shows bias against any complaint.

This man was disgruntled BY something the government did. I don't know if it's the not-going-to-serve-like-this issue HE thought it was, but it warrants a close examination.
 
Matt Steele
Reply to Tristis Ward
More likely it was sour grapes from a disgruntled police officer who thought he was above the law , and answered to no one . This is an old rehashed story that was already reported on substantially ; so if there was anything to it , it would be out in the open at this point as the officer involved has been retired for quite some time .
 
Tristis Ward
Reply to Matt Steele
How is it "sour grapes" is more likely?

What information do you have that shows this situation was completely different?

This is a letter that has finally come into public knowledge, and it hints a a problem that New Brunswickers should at the very least pay some attention to.
 
Matt Steele
Reply to Tristis Ward
This is an old news story that is just being rehashed again ; no new information is being reported .
 
Tristis Ward
Reply to Matt Steele
So, you're saying that the contents of this letter was in the public record all this time and that it has not recently been obtained by the CBC and reported here new?

Can you provide me with information on this letter from prior to this point?
 
Bobby Richards
Reply to James Risdon
He was looking into one of the Saint John MLAs
 
Matt Steele
Reply to Bobby Richards
Totally fake information .
 
jean marc michaud
Reply to James Risdon
Why wait 3 years...🤔
 
JOhn D Bond
Reply to James Risdon
Actually you don't need any examples. This is politics, optics are all that is required.
 
Jos Allaire
Reply to Matt Steele
It's Higgs and his crew that think they're above the law.
 
Bobby Richards.
Reply to Matt Steele
Nope. SJE
 
David Amos  
Content Deactivated

Reply to Tristis Ward
IMHO Steele sells "sour grapes"
 
David Amos 
Reply to Jos Allaire
Oh So True
 
James Risdon
Reply to Tristis Ward 
My bias is quite simple - and logical. Anyone who makes any allegation carries the burden of having to prove that allegation or at least support it with evidence.

The burden of proof is on the person making the claim.

In this case, there is no evidence whatsoever provided. Therefore, this is so far an unsubstantiated claim.


 
Matt Steele
There has always been the attitude with some police services that they are above the law , and answer to no one but themselves . The province provides provincial policing , and pays a substantial amount of taxpayer money to do ; and no doubt MLAs get a lot of complaints about the lack of policing services , and the rise in crime . If the RCMP want the contract to provide provincial policing , they need to be accountable to the government , and taxpayers of N.B. . The Higgs PC government brought in the SIRT program to provide independent over sight and investigation for police officers involved in serious misconduct , so no doubt that would upset some in the policing community who thought they should answer to no one .
 
Tristis Ward
Reply to Matt Steele
This is a rather alarming article that hints at a corrupt government firing a top officer because he would not compromise policing for the sake of politics, and your response is that the RCMP thinks IT is above the law?

Come on!

This requires a thorough investigation, not promoting people ignore the allegations.
 
Matt Steele
Reply to Tristis Ward
This story is from 2021 , and has already been investigated on , and reported on previously . No misconduct on behalf of government was found , and the officer involved retired in 2021 , and was free to speak out as a private citizen . It is what it is .
 
Tristis Ward
Reply to Matt Steele
Not what I asked.

Your "nothing to see here folks. Move along," message implies that it has been already known that Tremblay stated that Premier Higgs had attempted to blur the lines of policing and politics.

Is that your statement?

Is it already known information that Tremblay stated that Higgs was attempting to blur the lines of politics and policing and that when the RCMP would not act against their own developed policies on policing protest he was forced out?

IF that is the case, then what you need to do to SHOW that is the case, is point to that information so I'll know this isn't just an attempt to whitewash.

(it really really looks like an attempt to whitewash, so how about you just settle the matter by providing some kind of backup for your statement—or, hey, it's equally cool to just not respond. I won't pursue. I just don't want a constant stream of repeated replies containing unsubstantiated implications against reported facts)
 
JOhn D Bond
Reply to Matt Steele
Not surprising that you miss the issue. Flemming had no business trying to direct the RCMP to focus on Drugs. That is not his role. It is up to the police to allocate resourses so that they can address all crime.

Look at the difference on the approach by the Feds to auto thefts, Instead of telling police forces to do this or that, The got them all together, provided case for additional resourcing and then attained consensus on what needed to be done. All without telling / interferring with the police.
 
David Amos  
Content Deactivated

Reply to JOhn D Bond
Flemming is a clown
 
 
 
Shawn Tabor  
Where there is smoke, there is fire.
 
David Amos  
Content Deactivated

Reply to Shawn Tabor  
You should know