Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am ready.
I welcome the opportunity to appear before this committee for the first time in my role as a Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. I look forward to working with you, Mr. Chairman, and the other members of the committee, as I continue to become more familiar with the important work carried out by the women and men of the force, across the country and around the world.
I still have much to learn about the many roles and responsibilities of the RCMP, about policing more broadly, and the law enforcement challenges in communities served by the RCMP and by other Canadian police services.
It has been a little over six months since I took office as the twenty-second commissioner of the RCMP. In fact, it was seven months ago today that the Minister of Public Safety announced that I was being appointed commissioner.
On taking office, I indicated to the employees of the RCMP that my first priority was to support them. That continues to be the case. I also indicated that my first order of business was to meet with employees in order to gain a better understanding of them and the important work they do. I committed to visiting detachments, offices, and workplaces across the country as often as possible. Although I may never get to every one of our 750 or so detachments, and many, many other workplaces, including training facilities, forensic laboratories, and divisional headquarters, hardly a week has gone by that I have not been out meeting with employees.
I have also met with provincial, territorial and municipal partners in contract policing and with both domestic and international partner police services and public safety agencies.
In the past two weeks, for example, I met with employees in our regional headquarters in Charlottetown and in detachments in both the East Prince region and Queens County in Prince Edward Island; in detachments in Sherwood Park and Leduc, Alberta; with the mayors of communities in the lower mainland of British Columbia; with members of the integrated homicide investigations team in British Columbia; with members serving in our detachment in Surrey, British Columbia, and at the Vancouver International Airport, and with those preparing to provide security for the 2010 Olympic Winter Games.
I also visited our detachment in Thunder Bay, Ontario, and met in Ottawa with employees who provide security for the Governor General, the Prime Minister, visiting heads of state, and foreign diplomats, and with members of our national capital region emergency response team.
My travels so far as commissioner have taken me to every province and territory, with the exception of New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, and the Yukon. I have visited many of the divisions a number of times, and I intend to get to those divisions I have not yet visited within the next couple of months.
Next week I travel to Haiti to meet with Canadian police officers serving with the United Nations mission there. This includes not only members of the RCMP but police officers from other Canadian police services, including
the Service de police de la ville de Montréal, the Sûreté du Québec,
the Ontario Provincial Police, and officers from Durham, Ontario, Saguenay, Saint-Jérôme, and Rivière-du-Loup.
Without exception, what I find is that I meet with employees of the RCMP from coast to coast to coast who are dedicated men and women doing tremendously important jobs, promoting the safety and security of Canadians and the communities we serve, often under very difficult and challenging circumstances. The diversity of our employees, their roles, their experience, their training, education, and skill sets are nothing short of extraordinary.
I am very proud to be associated with them and to lead a national institution that has such a long and distinguished record of service, dating back almost to Confederation.
These are challenging and difficult times for the RCMP. As proud as I am to be commissioner and as proud as all of the women and men of the RCMP are, and as good a police force as we are, we are also fully aware that there is an urgent need for us to change in order to address a variety of problems and to adapt to the increasingly complex and difficult environments in which we operate.
Many of the challenges we face are highlighted in the report of the Task Force on Governance and Cultural Change in the RCMP, released just before Christmas. The report calls for action to address a range of issues, including management accountability at all levels, internal discipline, workplace disclosure, ethics, and independent oversight and review.
I note that the task force entitled their report, Rebuilding the Trust. Like the members of the task force, I recognize that we must strengthen public trust in the RCMP, for we cannot provide effective policing services without the support of the people we serve.
As I have said, the RCMP has significant weaknesses, as the report highlights. We must address them, and we will address them.
The important work to do is already underway.
As the report recommends, we are establishing a full-time change management team. Assistant Commissioner Keith Clark, who has taken on the important role as the head of that team, is working with our senior executive committee and commanding officers to identify members of a core team to be drawn from across the force and across the country.
Their first deliverable will be a detailed action plan. The team will support our efforts to build a more modern, more efficient, more effective, and more accountable RCMP to better serve Canada and Canadians, and to be more responsive to the needs of our employees.
An important element of what I have just described is independent oversight and review. We are committed to working collaboratively to support the current mechanisms providing such oversight and review. Parliament and parliamentary committees, including this committee, obviously play an important role. We are also committed to supporting whatever new or enhanced review mechanisms are put in place, and we look forward to the government's decisions in this regard.
In many ways, the past six months have been incredibly short. Yet, looking back, much has happened. There have been many highs, including a number of notable operational successes. Unfortunately, there have also been far too many lows.
My brief tenure as commissioner has witnessed the tragic killing of two fine young members of the RCMP: Constable Christopher Worden and Constable Douglas Scott. The pain inflicted by their deaths on their families and on their communities, and on the RCMP, cannot be overstated. We have also experienced the most unfortunate and disturbing death of Robert Dziekanski at the airport in Vancouver, a death we deeply regret.
The past six months have brought significant changes for me personally. They have also witnessed the beginning of real and significant changes in the RCMP, including in the senior leadership of the force. We will continue to push forward to develop and implement a change management agenda.
As I said last August at the official ceremony marking the change of command of the RCMP from Commissioner Busson to me, “We must build on our strengths, recognize and address our weaknesses, and live up to the highest standards that we set for ourselves and that Canadians rightly expect of us.”
I am confident that we can live up to this challenge and this commitment.
Thank you again for inviting me. I would be happy to respond to your questions.