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Short-staffed RCMP look at lifting ban on recruits with criminal records

Charlemagne

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Jul 19, 2017
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Short-staffed RCMP look at lifting ban on recruits with criminal records

Credit checks, aptitude test also being looked at as force deals with staffing crunch

Catharine Tunney·CBC News·Posted: Dec 22, 2018 4:00 AM ET |

The RCMP are taking a radical look at their recruitment strategy and could ditch credit checks and the ban on recruits with criminal backgrounds to help them rebuild their depleted ranks.

The Mounties have been plagued by staffing challenges in recent years and are looking at how to convince more women and visible minorities to don the red serge.

An internal document, obtained through access to information, suggests credit checks, the criminal background ban, the two-hour aptitude test and long stints at the training depot could all be eliminated from the hiring process as senior ranks try to make a career as a Mountie more attractive.

The document notes that some of the mandatory requirements can create barriers for communities the force wants to attract, including "groups more likely to have contact with the criminal justice system."

It asks: Are we "tuned-in or tone deaf?"

The review exercise is the brainchild of Vaughn Charlton, the director of gender-based-analysis-plus with the RCMP.

She was brought over from Status of Women Canada in April 2017 at the request of then-commissioner Bob Paulson and tasked with focusing on gender and inclusion within the force.

"We need to stop assuming there's only one kind of person who belongs in policing," she said in an interview with CBC News.

The challenge for us going forward is looking at diversity and inclusion as seriously as we look at security.- Vaughn Charlton

"If we're going to have mandatory requirements, we want to make sure we're not creating unintended barriers for reasons that really have nothing to do with whether you'd be a great police officer."

For example, someone coming to the force later in life might not be able to spend 26 weeks at the training depot in Saskatchewan. Credit checks — long part of the RCMP security screening process — can be a barrier for single parents or those who've been forced to take long-term leave, said Charlton.

Staffing crunch

The document also flagged hearing and vision tests and long shifts as potential barriers and questioned the value of the aptitude screening assessment — which, among other things, tests memory, logic, judgment and comprehension.

"I can definitely say we are looking at everything really seriously," Charlton said. "These are questions worth asking and thinking, 'Are they still relevant criteria in 2019?'"

So far, Charlton said, her questions have gone over well with top brass.

The recruitment review exercise is ongoing with no set deadline, she said. The entrance exam is getting its own fairness review through the Public Service Commission.

"I think the challenge for us going forward is looking at diversity and inclusion as seriously as we look at security," Charlton said.

'Race to the bottom'

When Commissioner Brenda Lucki took over as top Mountie earlier this year, she was warned in a briefing binder that "the RCMP has a growing vacancy rate that exceeds its present ability to produce regular members at a rate that keeps pace with projected future demands."

The briefing note says that in the last five years, there has been a "dramatic" increase in the number of new recruits required to fill operational vacancies and evolving program requirements.

The RCMP says that in 2018, 21.6 per cent of regular members self-identified as women and 20.8 per cent of members above the inspector level were women. According to a 2017 report, about 10 per cent of the force identify as visible minority and eight per cent are Indigenous.

Christian Leuprecht, a Royal Military College professor who has written about the RCMP's structure, said public service organizations like police forces are plagued by cumbersome hiring processes and low pay. On top of that, the RCMP have been plagued in recent years by allegations of sexual harassment, bullying and intimidation within the ranks.

"What this all points to is that the RCMP is going to have to change the way they do business, both as an organization and in particular in the way they recruit," he said.

But Leuprecht cautioned against dropping too many of the mandatory requirements simply to raise the number of applicants. In an age of complex cybercrime investigations, terrorist threats and sophisticated organized crime operations, he said the force needs to ask itself how it can bring in more of the country's top minds.

"The discussion is always about, 'Well what can we do to kind of eliminate some barriers to this race to the bottom?'" he said.

"The RCMP is the largest police organization in the country and it is also our federal police force. This needs to be the force that shows the greatest professionalism, the greatest competence and that needs to position itself as an employer of choice and an employer that affords equality of opportunity to all Canadians."

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/rcmp-recruitment-gender-1.4954015
 

Phil C. McNasty

Go Jays Go
Dec 27, 2010
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This should end well.

The problem is nowadays a cop is a job nobody wants anymore.
It comes with a shitload of stress, lots of PTSD and horrible pay.

And if you're a female cop you can count on a certain amount of sexual harassment as well
 

wilbur

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Jan 19, 2004
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Hiring cops with criminal records?

I guess they could let Biker gang members in. At least they know how to drive motorcycles. Also easy for them to detect the smell of pot.

It will reinforce the fact that licensed gun owners are less likely to commit a crime than police officers.
 

Keebler Elf

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Aug 31, 2001
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Those stats are for Toronto cops, not the RCMP.
All of the police forces, including the RCMP, are within a couple hundred bucks of each other in terms of annual salary. When one force negotiates an increase (usually Toronto), it cascades down to all the others like dominoes.

If ever there was a good reason for province-wide collective bargaining (or nation wide if we're taking RCMP), this is it.

That said, it's possible there are more OT opportunities in Toronto than in other police forces. But that's not base salary.
 

Phil C. McNasty

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Dec 27, 2010
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All of the police forces, including the RCMP, are within a couple hundred bucks of each other in terms of annual salary. When one force negotiates an increase (usually Toronto), it cascades down to all the others like dominoes.

If ever there was a good reason for province-wide collective bargaining (or nation wide if we're taking RCMP), this is it.

That said, it's possible there are more OT opportunities in Toronto than in other police forces. But that's not base salary
I remember reading a study that said if you pay police too little, you start getting widespread corruption.
Thats not good either. You need a healthy balance I guess
 

poorboy

Well-known member
Aug 18, 2001
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Original article was published just to get a rise out of people.

RCMP responded the next day saying that hiring people with a criminal record will not happen, but it's very difficult finding the article because why does the press want to publish the truth? Any suggestion that the RCMP or any other federal agency like the military is going to make fast or revolutionary changes is laughable.

RCMP is also paid quite a bit less than other police forces. Up to $20,000 dollars less vs some forces. They have no union.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/rcmp-mounties-leaving-jobs-police-1.4037752

The uniform RCMP officers also work harder than their municipal force counterparts because they do contract policing. How to businesses win contracts? Usually it is not the highest bidder.

RCMP is rotten at the top, not the bottom.
 

wazup

Well-known member
Jun 12, 2010
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Hiring cops with criminal records?

I guess they could let Biker gang members in. At least they know how to drive motorcycles. Also easy for them to detect the smell of pot.

It will reinforce the fact that licensed gun owners are less likely to commit a crime than police officers.
Pot is legal in case you haven't heard.
 
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