Top cop concerned with Mounties airing problems in public

grumpydigger

Electoral Member
Mar 4, 2009
566
1
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Kelowna BC
Top cop concerned with Mounties airing problems in public - Canada - CBC News Canada's top cop is signalling Mounties to stop airing their worplace grievances in the public eye, after a week when reports surfaced about an RCMP Inspector accused of groping his co-workers, and allegations of workplace bullying on the Prime Minister's protective detail.
In an interview airing on CBC Radio's The House, RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson told host Evan Solomon "one of the trends that I have seen is this propensity to go public on every sort of beef that happens in the workplace."
An internal RCMP management report leaked to Radio-Canada this week revealed there were internal concerns about workplace bullying by Supt. Bruno Saccomani, a senior RCMP officer responsible for Prime Minister Stephen Harper's security detail.
Earlier in the week, Paulson called the leak "unlawful."
While the RCMP Commissioner conceded there may be a good reason why Mounties may be going public in the first place, he also suggested that going outside of the chain of command to air their dirty laundry doesn't necessarily solve the problem either.
"I suppose you could argue that is a result of having no confidence in the internal processes and systems, but the fact is that the RCMP is very central in the public discussion these days. Any sort of issue relating to affairs within the RCMP is noteworthy and people exploit that," said Paulson.
Last November, Cpl. Catherine Galliford came forward to CBC News with complaints of continual sexual harassment during her career in the RCMP.
Since then, a former Nanaimo, B.C., RCMP officer Janet Merlo has filed a class-action lawsuit for alleged sexual harassment against the RCMP. Her legal team has told CBC News that up to 150 women are ready to join the suit with their own claims of sexual harassment.
Although Galliford is not part of the class-action lawsuit, she has filed an internal complaint with the RCMP.
Men have also complained about abusive behaviour and intimidation.
Paulson, PMO defend senior officer

With respect to the concerns raised about Saccomani in the leaked management report, Paulson told Solomon it's "a workplace issue, a management issue, there wasn't any discipline attached to that."
Paulson called Saccomani "a fine officer whose done a good job throughout all of his career."
The RCMP is "working with him," Paulson said.
"We have coaches and mentors, and systems to try and help him hone his leadership and management style such that his employees love coming to work, which is the case in most RCMP officers."
An internal memo sent to Conservatives by Harper's office on Monday praised Saccomani's work, underlining that the prime minister and his family "have witnessed first-hand a dramatic improvement in the unit's performance, an improvement due largely to [the detail's] strong leadership in recent years."
The internal memo urged Conservatives not to discuss the issue publicly.
New bill to end 'outrageous' Mountie behaviour

Paulson says a government bill introduced this week will give him additional powers to deal with "outrageous" behaviour Canadians have come to see from members of the RCMP.
Paulson told Solomon that Bill C-42 will amend the RCMP Act to give him the ability to appeal a decision where "the sanction" awarded in a case of employee misconduct comes up short of personal or public expectations.
In May, Sgt. Don Ray, an RCMP officer from Edmonton, was demoted and transferred to B.C. after admitting to harassing and engaging in sexual relations with subordinates in the workplace.
Paulson said the new bill would give him "the ability to appeal a decision like that."
The bill, introduced in Parliament on Thursday by Public Safety Minister Vic Toews, proposes a new centralized system for investigating harassment. It would also add additional powers with which to discipline or fire what Paulson has referred to as "bad apples" within the force.
"You can't just go to Costco and buy a new culture," Paulson said.
However, NDP Public Safety critic Randall Garrison said the new bill "doesn't appear to address the larger problem of changing the culture in the RCMP."
Garrison also raised concerns about the proposed civilian commission, which he said is "not independent" and would report to the minister instead of reporting directly to Parliament.

The answer to the rcmps problems is clearly to coverup lie and deny ....LOL The public has NO right to KNOW anything
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
9,949
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kelowna bc
Of course we wouldn't want the public to know what dirty little secrets
there are would they? Don't admit the problems hide them.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
I watched part of the Fifth Estate tonight which covered the sexual harrassment against four female officers by Robert Blundell, one of the victims being Victoria Cliffe who is still with the force, the other three having left. Blundell is still with the force having been promoted, despicable S.O.B. that he is, along with several other upper echelons in the force who obstructed justice. We are never going to have decency among the rank and file as long as corruption is running rampant at the top. It's beginning to appear the R.C.M.P. here is every bit as corrupt as the cops in New Orleans years ago. Even to the extent of murder (Robert Dziekanski)
 

Vancouverite

Electoral Member
Dec 23, 2011
287
0
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I still can't accept the fact that the Mounties responsible for the Dziekanski episode have not been charged with manslaughter.
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
17,466
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Location, Location
Nah, he had a stapler. It was clearly self defence by the mounties.

Same as these conniving women, forcing Blundell to harrass them. It was purely in self defence.
 

Vancouverite

Electoral Member
Dec 23, 2011
287
0
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And the Mountie chief, who was supposed to clean up, is instead trying to hide the problems. I think that bureaucracy should be broken up and rebuilt from scratch.
 

grumpydigger

Electoral Member
Mar 4, 2009
566
1
18
Kelowna BC
The bureaucracy I believes is the federal government who does not want the RCMP changed in any way...they fit in just perfectly with Harper's new policies............ much like the brownshirts they must OBEY their supreme leader, the citizens be damned
 

skookumchuck

Council Member
Jan 19, 2012
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Van Isle
I do not think it is overly political, just typically a bureaucracy that has gotten out of hand. These issues were around many years back during liberal governments as well.
Each and every organization has it's perks that are often carried to extreme and when entitlement is submerged within the facade of law, rooting it out is a hell of a task.
I sometimes think of the "good old days" when RCMP were respected, even honored, then i hark back to my younger days and the cops i knew, then think about what i personally witnessed them getting away with. No cameras or video recorders around then and you kept your mouth shut anyway if you knew what was good for you..