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You are here:Home / City Hall /Public speakers call for defunding, Halifax police board approves budget increase

Public speakers call for defunding, Halifax police board approves budget increase

February 1, 2022ByZane Woodford3 Comments

Halifax Regional Police cruisers lined up behind headquarters on Gottingen Street in June 2021. They're so shiny and white.

Halifax Regional Police cruisers lined up behind headquarters on Gottingen Street in June 2021. — Photo: Zane Woodford

The city’s police board is recommending in favour of a 2.3% increase to the Halifax Regional Police budget.

Chief Dan Kinsellaasked for that increase, equal to about $2 million on top of last year’s budget of $88.8 million, to pay for 26 new sworn officers and 10 new civilian positions. He said the new positions were needed to fix a police force “in dire straits” as a result of factors including Halifax’s growing population, a “dramatic spike in activism,” and increased officer absences due to mental illness.

On Monday night, the Board of Police Commissioners held its first ever public meeting on the budgetvirtually, and heard from 24 people. They were nearly all opposed to the budget increase.

Numerous speakers cited a lack of evidence for the proposed new officer positions and a lack of detail in the budget, along with the recentreport from the Subcommittee to Define Defunding Police(考官贡献者厄尔琼斯是一个作家的e report). They spoke aboutAugust 18, 2021, when Halifax Regional Police pepper sprayed and arrested protesters at the old Halifax Memorial Library after kicking homeless people out of city parks.

Kate MacDonald, who, like many of the speakers, was at that protest, questioned how the extra money would make policing more effective in the city.

“And how will $2 million make HRP more culturally competent and less racist?” MacDonald asked. “How do we know that this isn’t an investment in more violence, as trends show that it actually is?”

Gary Grant, the second of two retired RCMP officers to speak to the board, wasn’t vocally opposed to the budget increase, but said the police should be presenting the public with more details.

“There’s so much that isn’t there, that I don’t know how you can make a proper decision on it,” Grant said.

Tari Ajadi, a member of the board’s Subcommittee to Define Defunding the Police and one of the authors of its final report, told the board it had two paths to choose from:

One’s easier. It’s the status quo for how the board has operated for the past few decades, with little variation. From my perspective, it’s also a dereliction of your duty as commissioners under the Police Act to ensure that community needs and values are reflected in policing priorities, objectives, goals, programs and strategies. It means throwing away any shred of legitimacy that the subcommittee’s process, and this budgetary process might have. The other’s a lot harder. It’s more complex. It requires meaningful community engagement, extensive consultations, a willingness to experiment and be bold. It also requires you to say no to this budgetary request, to put your foot down, and to demand better for the residents of Halifax Regional Municipality.

After the public speakers, the board went in camera for a one-hour session with Kinsella for more details on his requests. Then it took the first path outlined in Ajadi’s speech, the status quo.

Commissioners voted down a motion from Commissioner Harry Critchley (also an author of the defunding report), with an amendment from Coun. Lindell Smith, chair of the board. That motion would’ve kept the dollar figure about the same as last year’s budget while adding the 10 requested civilian employees and two hate crime detectives.

Coun. Becky Kent said she felt she couldn’t deny the chief’s request.

“I’m very, very, very serious and concerned about our staffing issues in relation to the health of our serving members … I can’t ignore it,” Kent said.

“And I’m also very, very serious and cognizant of the work we have to do going forward to bring about change, creating a plan for re-tasking, whatever that might look like.”

Kent, along with Coun. Lisa Blackburn and commissioners Yemi Akindoju and Anthony Thomas, voted against Critchley’s motion and in favour of the full requested budget increase. Commissioner Carole McDougall, vice chair of the board, voted with Critchley and Smith.

The budget is not final after Monday’s vote. On February 23, it goes to Halifax regional council’s budget committee, where there will be anotheropportunityfor public speakers. Council may approve the budget, send it back to the board for revision, or further debate it later in the budget process.

Council will also be asked to consider increasing the budget for the board itself by $100,000. Critchley argued the board needed that increase to be able to hire staff to complete its work independently of the police force. The board’s budget line will also move from the police budget to the chief administrative officer’s.


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Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,NewsTagged With:Chief Dan Kinsella,Halifax Board of Police Commissioners,Halifax Police budget,Halifax Regional Police

AboutZane Woodford

Zane Woodford covers municipal politics for the Halifax Examiner.Email:[email protected];Twitter

Comments

  1. Colin Maysays

    February 1, 2022 at 10:30 am

    I watched the whole discussion and gave my 10 cents about the decades long violence in HRM. I’ll wager the majority of speakers were from the peninsula. Mr Ajadi and his friends should go out an visit the communities affected by homicides and guns and ask them how they feel about the police.

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  2. mchugh-russellsays

    February 2, 2022 at 10:44 am

    Re: Colin May’s comment – where does he want to have visits? The HRM “crime map” including assaults would seem to indicate that it is, in fact, peninsula and urban (inside circ) Dartmouth that have large numbers of assaults. Don’t see any homicides … but . . . Where should they be looking? I may be missing something and not sure how to (or if you can) change date range on the map, or, if that would make a difference?https://www.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=cd5b990f2132430bb2bda1da366f175c

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    • Colin Maysays

      February 2, 2022 at 1:08 pm

      The HRM crime map does not include Homicides or attempted homicides. It is a sanitized representation of crime in HRM
      Places for readers to visit : Crime stats :https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/en/pub/85-002-x/2021001/article/00013-eng.pdf?st=KqscvWFhsee page 56 for Violent Crime Severity index

      http://legacycontent.halifax.ca/boardscom/bpc/documents/120213bopc631.pdf

      https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/en/pub/85-561-m/85-561-m2008010-eng.pdf?st=I4bIXqAupage 56 under ‘Violent Crime Severity Index

      https://novascotia.ca/finance/statistics/archive_news.asp?id=17005&dg=&df=&dto=,16p&dti=12… Scroll down to bottom of the page to the graph
      ‘ Crime Severity Index : Violent crime ‘ ….
      Human trafficking :https://www.halifax.ca/sites/default/files/documents/city-hall/boards-committees-commissions/180226bopc911.pdf
      The provincial Department of Justice does not provide crime statistics. I have lived here for 48 years and like many other people who have lived here for more than 10 years I am well aware of the sad history of violent crime in HRM.
      Statistics Canada provides crime data from 1998.

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