Surrey council takes next steps in scrapping municipal force in favour of RCMP
CTV
Surrey's new mayor and council have taken the next step in their plan to scrap the Surrey Police Service and maintain the RCMP as the city's police force.
Surrey’s new mayor and council have taken the next step in their plan to scrap the Surrey Police Service and maintain the RCMP as the city’s police force.
Assistant Commissioner Brian Edwards, commanding officer of the Surrey RCMP, appeared at Monday night’s council meeting to lay out the plan for keeping the national force.
"My job is to lead policing for this city, it is the job of others to decide who polices the city,” Edwards said as he made a presentation that council would ultimately vote to accept.
He also presented a chart purporting to show crime in the city trending down over the last decade.
“Certainly we know, by looking at the crime stats that were provided to us last night, we know that Surrey is doing very well on the crime stats,” said Mayor Brenda Locke at a Tuesday morning news conference.
The Surrey Police Union – which represents officers hired by the municipal Surrey Police Service – has a very different take on where things stand when it comes to crime in the city.
“What is important is the crime index. And right now, Surrey is the most dangerous community in Canada,” said Const. Ryan Buhrig, the union’s spokesperson.