British Columbia

Vancouver Police Board member resigns after vote to reconsider school liaison officer program cancelled

Rachel Roy announced her departure after board chair Faye Wightman cancelled a vote on the program at the start of Thursday's board meeting, which led an African-descent advisory board to say their time was being wasted.

Advisory committee calls cancellation a waste of time

A white woman with short brown hair sits at a board room table.
Rachel Roy stepped down from the Vancouver Police Board Thursday. (CBC)

A member of the Vancouver Police Department's board has resigned after a vote on the proposed return of the school liaison officer (SLO) program was cancelled.

Rachel Roy announced she was stepping down after board vice-chair Faye Wightman said there wouldn't be a vote at Thursday's board meeting as the program had been approved.

"I'm deeply disappointed about what happened here today," Roy said. 

"I cannot make a difference on this board with the way that the board in particular restricts the flow of information and access to full debate."

SLOs were axed in 2021 due to concerns about the impact that police presence in schools had on the mental and physical well-being of students, especially students of colour. The Vancouver School Board voted the program back in November.

Roy said she has yet to see empirical evidence to support the SLO program or a clear explanation as to why the program is moving forward.

WATCH | Rachel Roy resigns

Vancouver Police Board member resigns after vote to reconsider school liaison officer program cancelled

1 year ago
Duration 1:57
Rachel Roy announced her intention to resign from Vancouver Police Board after a vote to reconsider the school liaison officer program was cancelled. Roy says she has yet to see empirical evidence to support the program. The cancellation of the vote led Sadie Kuehn, the co-chair of the VPD's African Descent Advisory Committee, who voiced concerns about the traumatizing effect of police in schools on racialized students, to say her time had been wasted.

The Vancouver Police Department announced the return of its SLO program will include less formal uniforms, cultural awareness training and smaller, less-exposed firearms.

Intense meeting

Members of the VPD's  African-descent advisory committee walked out of Thursday's meeting, calling the cancellation of the vote "insulting."

The exterior of the Vancouver School Board buiding.
Vancouver School Board trustees had voted to remove the school liaison officer program in April 2021, citing the impact a police presence in schools had on the mental and physical well-being of students, especially students of colour. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

The committee says police don't need to be in schools and that their presence can be traumatizing for some students. Committee members said there has been a lack of consultation with racialized students over the program.

Parker Johnson, a member of the advisory committee, said he felt their opposition to SLOs was not taken seriously.

"What is being done right now in our mind is a fiasco and you wasted our time asking us to come to a meeting which you've already made a decision on, so it seems like a bold-faced lie," he said.

WATCH | Committee co-chair slams vote cancellation 

African Descent Committee lambasts Vancouver Police Board's decision to cancel vote to reconsider school liaison officer program

1 year ago
Duration 2:11
In her address to the Vancouver Police Board, Sadie Kuehn, the co-chair of the VPD's African Descent Advisory Committee, called the decision to cancel a vote to reconsider the school program "insulting."

Roy says civilians would be a better alternative to police officers. She also has issues with guns in schools. 

In response to those concerns, Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim, who is a non-voting chair of the police board, said "there are guns in our schools."

Sim said he was "personally preyed" on by two gangs as a high school student in the '80s. 

"For me personally, if it wasn't for the SLO program, I would've had some serious physical harm or I'd be in a gang or I'd be dead," he said.

The VPD says officers need to carry weapons to be able to react quickly to a situation, such as an active shooting.

The SLO program  — which will involve 15 constables, two sergeants and one youth co-ordinator — is set for the new school year in September.

With files from Rhianna Schmunk and Jon Azpiri