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RCMP members refuse ‘red serge’ duties

July 7, 2016

VANCOUVER - Members of the RCMP across Canada are taking part in quiet protests over what they say is unsustainable under-staffing and an overall morale problem within the force.

Some Mounties are refusing to volunteer for so-called "red serge duty" where they march in parades and appear at events such as fairs, festivals and sporting events in their ceremonial red uniforms and Stetson hats.

Vancouver's Canada Day parade was the first casualty.

July 7, 2016  By Corrie Sloot


July 7, 2016

VANCOUVER – Members of the RCMP across Canada are taking part in quiet protests over what they say is unsustainable under-staffing and an overall morale problem within the force.

Some Mounties are refusing to volunteer for so-called “red serge duty” where they march in parades and appear at events such as fairs, festivals and sporting events in their ceremonial red uniforms and Stetson hats.

Vancouver’s Canada Day parade was the first casualty.

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“It is with disappointment that I have to announce that I had to cancel the RCMP participation in this year’s Canada Day parade in downtown Vancouver due to a lack of response,” Sgt. Maj. Nathalie Caron wrote in an email to employees in B.C. “Thank you to the few that showed interest.”

Protest of any kind is rare inside the RCMP, which has strict regulations about publicly expressing any kind of comments about the force that could be considered negative.

But as Parliament missed ó and appears to be in no rush to honour ó a deadline set out by the Supreme Court to give Mounties the opportunity to form a union and collectively bargain with management, many members of the RCMP are organizing online to refuse requests for red serge duty.

“There is a morale problem,’ says Const. Richelle Daly. And while she doesn’t endorse the protest, the Edmonton-area traffic cop says she sees first-hand the effect of chronic short-staffing.

“The lack of resources, member fatigue ó just the operational burnout seems to be the biggest factor here. And I’m finding that members, when they are looking for overtime, they’re more likely to take the overtime that’s going to be for the front-line members and on the watches rather than doing a red serge duty,” Daly told CBC News.

Last month, RCMP managers in Alberta sent out a request for people to volunteer for a ceremonial troop that would attend six high-profile events per year. If there weren’t enough volunteers by July 1, the email said, people would be assigned to don the red serge.

The protests are largely being organized on social media, where Mounties have also discussed boycotting upcoming parades and other community events across Canada.

“Management should see this as an early warning signal,” says retired RCMP assistant commissioner Cal Corley.

He says front-line officers have been under a great deal of strain and expressions of frustrations are to be expected.

Among the irritants, according to Corley, are:

The decision to redistribute resources to combat terrorism.

Findings that three Mounties murdered in Moncton, N.B., in 2014 were not properly equipped

A class-action lawsuit over sexual harassment inside the force.

Commissioner Bob Paulson’s decision six weeks ago to scrap the closest thing officers had to a union.

How far the RCMP has fallen behind other police services in pay.

“The only way the RCMP is going to achieve its vision is to engage the membership in more democratic ways, and perhaps what we call non-traditional ways, than it perhaps has in the past,” he said. “It’d be foolish to dismiss it. It really warrants some introspection on the part of the organization and to take this seriously.”

When asked for the force’s reaction to the Canada Day parade boycott, a B.C. RCMP spokesperson responded, “As more and more communities throughout B.C. plan larger celebrations, we are seeing our members, and their families, choose to celebrate Canada Day in the communities where they live and work.”

Corley says it’s positive that the officers are choosing to strike out at a symbolic element of the force, instead of day-to-day policing. And organizers are clear that they won’t boycott Pride parades, regimental funerals or Remembrance Day ceremonies.

The last controversy over red serge duty involved on-duty officers training for the musical ride who were assigned to serve in the honour guard at Paulson’s 2012 wedding. Once the story became public, Paulson later cut a $912 cheque to repay the federal government.

(CBC – CP)


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