![Thunder Bay's police board was supposed to receive state-of-the art training. 4 years on, that never happened](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6052179.1622745644!/cumulusImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/senator-murray-sinclair.jpg)
Thunder Bay's police board was supposed to receive state-of-the art training. 4 years on, that never happened
CBC
For the second time in four years, an independent panel has issued a report on policing in Thunder Bay, Ont., and at the same time, the expert panel's chair revealed that a key training recommendation from 2018 never got off the ground.
The police board training module, set to be known as the Thunder Bay Model, was to have set a new standard for governing police services across Ontario.
But four years later, no such program exists.
Alok Mukherjee, chair of the nine-member expert panel recruited to restore faith in the Thunder Bay Police Services Board, said the training was never developed after Murray Sinclair recommended it in his 2018 report for the Ontario Civilian Police Commission (OCPC).
Mukherjee made the revelation just before the panel's report to improve the state of policing in Thunder Bay was released Tuesday. It also calls for the Ontario government to develop new training for the police board.
The province discontinued a funding stream the Liberals had committed for Ontario Association of Police Services Boards (OAPSB) to develop training materials after the Progressive Conservatives were elected in 2018, Mukherjee said.
New members, who were appointed to the Thunder Bay police board in 2019 under the authority of provincially appointed administrator Thomas Lockwood, received some governance and Indigenous cultural training, Mukherjee said.
But he said the province didn't fund the well-publicized second round of training Sinclair recommended and Lockwood championed, and that was to have been known as the Thunder Bay Model.
"The followup never happened," Mukherjee said. "That's why we're naming OCPC in terms of providing the training. OCPC needs to provide the funding for it. "The OCPC needs to make sure that the way the training ended, and wasn't followed up on, doesn't happen again because the issue of resources will always be there."
Mukherjee said the result of not developing the Thunder Bay Model has resulted in a failure to effectively train police board members far beyond Thunder Bay.
"This is a live issue and it's a topic of conversation of the Canadian Association of Police Governance and the provincial associations," he said. "The board members find they're thrown in and the knowledge of the [police] chief is here, and board members are scrambling to figure out how to deal with providing governance to someone who is very well resourced and trained — and they're not."
A spokesperson for the Ministry of the Attorney General declined an interview request from CBC News, but issued a written statement instead.
The statement said new regulations under the 2019 Community Safety and Policing Act will require all police board members to take mandatory training, which the province says it's now developing with OAPSB.
"Our government is ensuring that police service board members have the appropriate training they need to effectively deliver on their responsibilities and duties," the statement reads in part. "The Ministry of the Solicitor General is preparing the required training, taking the time to get our government's updated policing legislation and its regulations right."