Tuesday 30 May 2023

Province to cover RCMP backpay bills for some communities

 

Province to cover RCMP backpay bills for some communities

N.B. municipalities that directly contract RCMP won't have cost covered

The first collective agreement included retroactive pay increases back to 2017. The federal government opted not to cover those costs.

Andrew Black, president of the Union of the Municipalities of New Brunswick, said the province recently notified most communities that their costs would be covered. 

However, that only applies to communities policed by RCMP under a contract with the province. Around eight other communities have separate municipal policing agreements and won't have their costs covered.

Sackville, Bouctouche, Hampton, Saint Andrews, Oromocto, and Campbellton are among the communities in this latter group.

Moncton, together with Dieppe and Riverview, also has a separate policing agreement and won't be reimbursed. 

A bearded man is interviewed in front of a pile of rubble. Andrew Black, mayor of Tantramar and president of the Union of Municipalities of New Brunswick, says the different approach is because of separate contracts. (Frédéric Cammarano/Radio Canada)

"Contractually, I don't think that the province really has skin in the game with the RCMP municipal contract," Black said. "So they don't really have a responsibility to do it." 

CBC News asked the provincial Department of Public Safety on Monday why it opted to cover the costs for some municipalities, why others would not be covered, and how much the province would be spending. 

The department did not answer the questions. 

Black is also the mayor of Tantramar, a newly created municipality that includes Sackville. 

He said the town faced a backpay bill of about $295,000 but had set aside money and will be able to cover the cost. 

Oromocto assistant town clerk Cindy Goguen said in an email the municipality's bill is $352,141. That cost will be covered through its general operating account, Goguen said. 

In a news release last year, the Federation of Canadian Municipalities urged the federal government to cover the backpay cost since communities were not part of the RCMP contract negotiation and would need to absorb the bill. 

In Moncton, the bill is more than $5 million. 

Don Moore, chair of the Codiac Regional Policing Authority board, which oversees the RCMP policing Moncton, declined to comment.

The organization had set aside money in advance, expecting the collective agreement to include wage increases. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Shane Magee

Reporter

Shane Magee is a Moncton-based reporter for CBC. He can be reached at shane.magee@cbc.ca.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices 
 
 

15 Comments

 
 
David Amos 
"The first collective agreement included retroactive pay increases back to 2017. The federal government opted not to cover those costs."

Yet it was the Feds who made the deal with their cops???

 
 
 
MJ Anderson  
It would be nice if the CRA was as determined in collecting due monies as the RCMP seems to be...
 
 
David Amos
 
Reply to MJ Anderson 
Ask KPMG why that is  
 
 
Jaques Remalard 
Reply to MJ Anderson  
They never forget about me when I owe them moola.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Wally Manza 
Why do we still have the RCMP?  
 
 
G. Timothy Walton 
Reply to Wally Manza  
Inertia. 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Wally Manza
Ask Higgy 
 
 
 
 
June Arnott  
Rcmp are not making a dent in crime in NB. Busting small time dealers while the head honchos live large. Open drug use daily. The whole Moncton area belongs to street people and crime. Almost need to hire private security to monitor Riverview…
 
 
Micheal Wilson 
Reply to June Arnott  
They are not looking for crime. They are looking for expired registrations and stickers for an easy ticket and to annoy people. 
 
 
Catherine Longley 
Reply to June Arnott  
No they don't non existence where I live and they don't patrol the roadways either like the race track on the transcanada 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Micheal Wilson 
Bingo

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