British Columbia

Surrey Police Service submits reports in bid to convince province to continue transition from RCMP

The Surrey Police Service has submitted two reports that it hopes will convince the province to stick to the city's policing transition away from the RCMP. The solicitor general will decide the fate of the SPS in early 2023 after Surrey's recently elected mayor and council voted to keep the RCMP.

Reports outline where police force is in transition, rationale for carrying through

A composite of an RCMP shoulder badge and a Surrey Police Service badge.
Some community leaders have suggested a referendum to give Surrey residents the say on who should police the city. (Ben Nelms/CBC, Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

The Surrey Police Service has submitted two reports that it hopes will convince the province to stick to the city's policing transition away from the RCMP.

B.C. Solicitor General Mike Farnworth will decide the fate of the SPS in early 2023 after Surrey's recently-elected mayor and council voted to keep the RCMP.

Since the province has the final say, the SPS submitted a pair of reports to decision-makers on Thursday detailing how far along the transition is, and its rationale for carrying on with it.

"It's way too far down the road to reverse," said SPS Chief Norm Lipinski.

Among the two reports is the publicly available Surrey Police Service: The Future of Public Safety in Surrey, which claims it's in the best interest of the community to continue on the current path.

It notes that the SPS has already hired 375 employees, many of whom have moved their families to the community from other parts of Canada. Officers are already in the field and firing them would mean dissolving two unions that have already been formed, which would likely be costly and spark grievances, it adds.

In all, $107 million has been spent on the SPS, and dissolution would cost an estimated $81 million in severances, the report says.

It also points out the SPS has had no issues recruiting, with more officers due to enter training programs in January. It claims it's had 2,500 applications, while noting the RCMP has trouble recruiting new officers.

"It would be a net gain for policing in B.C.," said Lipinski, noting that RCMP officers who don't join the service can be deployed to other parts of the country.

"We're one of the few major cities in Canada that has no problems recruiting," he said.

The second report submitted to the province, titled Surrey Police Service Policing Transition Progress Reporthas not been made public because it contains detailed operational and personnel information, the SPS says.

Brenda Locke following her election victory in October. Locke campaigned to keep the RCMP in Surrey. (Justine Boulin//CBC)

Community divided

The policing debate has been ongoing for years, with the municipal police force transition sparked by the city's previous mayor Doug McCallum.

He was defeated in the Octoner elections by current Brenda Locke, who campaigned on ending the transition and keeping the RCMP in Surrey.

She argued that the transition isn't past the point of no return, as more than 75 per cent of on-duty officers in Surrey are still with the RCMP, and the RCMP still retain command of forces and control of infrastructure. 

But some community leaders have suggested a referendum to ensure that Surrey residents are actually in favour of this. While Locke campaigned heavily on her promise to keep the RCMP in Surrey, she was elected with just 28 per cent of the vote. 

Surrey is the largest city in Canada that continues to be under RCMP jurisdiction, with every other major city in the country outside B.C. under local police control or part of a regional or provincial police service.

The SPS says it could achieve the requirements to become the police of jurisdiction for Surrey in 2023, with the full transition complete the following year.