Thank you, and thank you for having me this morning.
Let me preface my remarks by saying I know that on the one hand, by virtue of working at the Royal Military College of Canada, I'm a civil servant, but I also have the privilege of academic freedom. The remark is important in the sense that what I say this morning is in no way to be construed as partisan, but rather, I trust that all my remarks are soundly supported by evidence and by research, both from within Canada and comparatively. In that sense, I hope these are remarks around which the committee can rally. These are matters that I think, with a little bit of action, can make substantial improvements for Canadians.
I'd also like to remark that this is an area in which we all have a common interest. We are all taxpayers but we are all consumers of security. In that sense, ultimately, if we follow Thomas Hobbes, security is the ultimate public good that a modern state provides. In that sense, if I may say so, we all have a dog in this race together.
You can ask your questions in French, as I am bilingual. I will respond in the official language of your choice.
There are four remarks I would like to make at the start with regard to this particular issue, as to where I see opportunities for the federal government to act. One is at a national level. The second is at the federal level. The third is at the level of intergovernmental affairs. The fourth is at the level of the RCMP, the RCMP as the federal police force, with opportunities there for both improvement and also for benchmarking and trendsetting for police forces throughout the country.
From a national perspective, one of the concerns I have is that policing has become a little like calling Ghostbusters. When we have a problem these days, the ultimate default position is to call 911 and a police officer will show up. We've seen a substantial ever-growing enlargement of policing services and what we make police responsible for. This is not necessarily by choice of the police forces themselves. Rather on the one hand, it is by mandates we have imposed upon them. On the other hand, by having installed a default mentality that when we need someone to solve a dispute or when we have a raucous kid somewhere in the neighbourhood, we call our police force. This has led, over the last 130 or 140 years, to a substantial and continuous expansion of police services.
The most recent expansion has been in the areas of mental health. One of the concerns here is that as the federal government and particularly provincial and municipal governments, which are largely responsible for the delivery of social programs and the supports that go along with them, look to balance their books, we will see cuts in precisely those types of support services. We will likely see an enlarged call volume for non-traditional policing-type services.
This is the same with child protection and child welfare. My wife is a social worker for the Children's Aid Society and there are increasing demands. When couples split up, we now have a police officer standing by, if there has been violence, to monitor the person moving out of the house. These ever-enlarging duties mean that we have a sort of iceberg problem, if you will. The more we impose duties on police services that are non-traditional, non-conventional policing services, the less of the tip of the iceberg we actually see in terms of people who are out in patrol cars and people who are out on the roads. So it's no surprise that people can say they can drive from Ottawa to Toronto without ever passing a police cruiser.
My plea on this particular account is that we need a national discussion on what actually constitutes core policing duties. I don't necessarily have a direct and clear answer for that. As Canadians, we need to decide what are policing functions and what are functions that in many cases are carried out, not only more effectively but more cheaply and more professionally, by other agencies. I'm sure you've talked to plenty of police officers, as part of the committee work, who have told you that they are not mental health workers. When they show up, their training has not really prepared them for that particular situation.
First, we need a national discussion on what constitutes core policing duties. What are duties that police officers are doing—administratively but also on the intervention side—that would be better done by other agencies, or in cooperation with them? Calgary police and Durham police have some models in that regard. That's the first element.
The second element pertains to the federal level. What specifically does the federal government need to do? I'm happy to discuss this more during questions, but in particular, we need a national records management system. Every police force currently has its own digital records management system. These systems, in most cases, don't even talk to one another. So it is very difficult to exchange information. When police talk about paperwork, they mean paperwork. While we have digitized processes within police forces, we don't have a very effective way of sharing information amongst police forces. We also don't have a particularly effective way of sharing this information with the crown, or with the defence, for instance.
You have all seen the television pictures of large police investigations where police officers are trucking out box-loads of paperwork because they have no other method of sharing this documentation. We need a national electronic records management system—a system that doesn't just connect police forces to one another but also connects courts and the Public Prosecution Service of Canada, so that the crown can have access to this. This is not just a matter of cost savings. This is a matter of making our justice system a whole lot more efficient. When we currently schedule police officers, for instance, it is all done on paper. Miscommunication and missed dates cost our courts system and the police uncountable amounts of money.
The other advantage of a national records management system is that when we have large investigations, the police officer would have something known as the advisory crown. This is usually a crown that will help with issues such as warrants. What the advisory crown should really be helping with is the entire investigation and the entire investigative process—to point out to the police officers when there may be pieces of evidence that they still need to gather for the crown to prosecute the case successfully.
With the exception of warrants, what we currently have is a situation where the crown is often confronted with the evidence after the fact. The crown then discovers that there is certain evidence missing, or certain evidence that perhaps was collected in a fashion that makes it difficult to present in a court of law. It's not just about the cost savings. It's about making the entire system more efficient and it's about making sure that in these increasingly complex cases.... Just about every case is becoming more complex, even the simple defences. The defence has an interest in making cases complex, and I will explain in a moment why.
We have colleges for physicians and various professions in this country, but we don't have a police college standard, per se. The country needs a professional standard for police officers. It would cover everything from the way we do tactical training to professional expectations, to professional ethics to the leadership training we expect. If we want to treat policing as a profession, we need to recognize this through a college. Ultimately, we probably don't want the civilian authority to interfere too much in the autonomy of our various police forces, because we want them to get on with their jobs. The way to do this is to make sure that we treat them as a profession.
The third element that I might point out is intergovernmental affairs and intergovernmental relations. In the aftermath of 9/11, we saw substantial emphasis on trying to get lower-level forces, municipal and provincial, to prosecute cases that are national security cases, or cases that are ultimately in the federal government's interest rather than the local interest. As local and provincial governments and forces look to balance their budgets, they inherently retrench to the priorities that are the most important for their particular level of government, and for the people to whom they are ultimately accountable. That means, for most municipal and provincial forces, primarily issues such as organized crime as opposed to issues of national security, for instance.
I have two quick final remarks with regard to the RCMP. The way it is structured with its paramilitary heritage, it looks unique in the western democratic world and the western policing world in the sense that here we have officers who one day are writing liquor tickets and breaking up domestic disputes and the next day are promoted to the white-collar crime force in Toronto because they have done their stint up in the North.
I think the RCMP needs to have three tiers: one that looks after client-based services, namely provincial policing and a few other services; one that looks after federal investigations; and a separate civilian tier that looks after things such as human resources, finances, and policy.
To this effect, I will submit to the committee “Organization and Accountability”, a document from 1999 that explains the way the Department of National Defence is organized to have a civilian part and a uniformed part. While there's crossover between the two, it is important that we separate these functions and that we have separate recruitment streams.