
Calgary mayor says province's police commission appointments 'not in the interest of citizens'
CBC
Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek says she's unhappy with the process the public safety minister followed to appoint three new members to the Calgary Police Commission without engaging council members or the commission beforehand.
Gondek and half of city council voted against directing administrators to draft a routine bylaw update that would align the Calgary Police Commission Bylaw with updated provincial laws under the Police Amendment Act.
She said it's a message.
"We have asked administration to not make changes to the bylaw that provincial legislation now requires them to make," Gondek said. "We've created an untenable situation. So now the minister will have to intervene and say to us, 'you must do this.' That's fine, but I'm not doing it on my own."
The Police Amendment Act, also known as Bill 6, was passed by the government last December. On March 29, the province proclaimed the section of the new Alberta Police Act that allows for provincial appointees on police commissions — permitting three provincial appointees to a 12-member police commission.
The act also allows for a transitional period, where the commission may have 15 members until the current commissioners' terms expire. In this case, that will happen at the end of October when six of the 12 commissioners' terms are up.
Previously, council appointed 10 members of the community and two city councillors to the commission. Going forward, the minister may appoint three members, leaving the city nine appointments in total.
In a presentation to council on Tuesday, commission executive director Heather Spicer said the commission was informed that three new members had been appointed through ministerial order on April 24. She said the commission was notified on May 1.
"The police commission, the actual oversight body, was not given the courtesy of a heads-up that we're making appointments," said Gondek. "They were, in fact, not even told about the appointments for a full week, and although they are very calm about this, I, on their behalf, I'm not too impressed."
Gondek outlined concerns about the oversight and process behind these appointments.
"We don't know who they are, we don't know their skill sets, we don't know who chose them," Gondek said. "This is political appointments on a citizen oversight committee. It is not in the interest of the citizens and is not in the interest of the service."
Coun. Courtney Walcott, who has already been vocal about changes to the Police Act, called this chain of events political overreach.
"We can't … supersede the provincial Police Act changes," said Walcott, "We can't."
"They were democratically elected. They put it through. I agree, I understand. But what I can say is that … there is no shame and there is no risk either to us simply by saying that we don't agree with what is happening with regards to the Police Act because it will impact us so deeply."