Erin McCracken - Victoria News Published: November 22, 2011 11:00 AM
The union representing Victoria police officers has warned
Esquimalt that if it contracts RCMP services, there could be serious
financial, administrative and legal repercussions. If the province approves the township’s RCMP
recommendation, the union says its collective agreement would continue,
and the union would apply to the B.C. Labour Relations Board for
successor rights to represent the non-unionized RCMP officers who would
work in Esquimalt. That could prove expensive for Esquimalt, said
Tom Stamatakis, president of the B.C. Police Association, the union
representing 243 uniformed Victoria officers. “Citizens should be concerned because if (labour
issues are) not resolved through negotiation and consultation then that
means you end up in litigation, and that costs money,” Stamatakis said. He warned Esquimalt council in a letter made
public at a council meeting last week, which he also sent to Clayton
Pecknold, the province’s director of police services, Solicitor General
Shirley Bond, Victoria Police Chief Jamie Graham and Victoria Mayor Dean
Fortin. Fortin, chair of the Victoria Police Board, said
if the province allows Esquimalt to switch to the RCMP, “you would think
the province and Esquimalt would be responsible for (any) transition
costs.” But Esquimalt Mayor Barb Desjardins said the
police union’s letter “came prematurely,” because the solicitor general
has not yet made a decision on Esquimalt’s police proposal.
The township’s contractual obligations under the current collective agreement differ depending on the source. Fortin said the police board, made up of
Esquimalt, Victoria and provincial representatives, employs the
officers, and the two municipalities pay the police bill. Desjardins said the board employs the Victoria officers, while the City of Victoria pays their salaries. “The police union may have a contract with
VicPD,” she said. “That is a very different thing than people suggesting
we have a contract for policing with Victoria. It’s not with
Esquimalt.” The mayors agree, however, that the situation is
complicated due to the nature of the provincially-mandated police
amalgamation, said to be the only one of its kind in B.C. “We are an amalgamated police force and I don’t,
nor does anyone at this time, understand the complexity of this, and nor
do we need to at this time because we have not received a response from
the solicitor general,” Desjardins said. If the police association applies to represent
RCMP officers working in Esquimalt, “it’s going to be a mess in sorting
that out” because RCMP officers are not allowed to unionize under
federal law, said Kenneth Thornicroft, law and labour relations
professor at the University of Victoria’s Peter B. Gustavson School of
Business. The province could pass legislation to deny those successor rights, he said. But if the Township’s RCMP officers came under
the current collective agreement, “potentially, police officers in
Victoria – if they have seniority rights or bumping rights – would bump
into those positions. How would the RCMP be able to carry on? They would
no longer be RCMP employees,” Thornicroft said, adding he doesn’t
foresee that happening. “It’s legally going to be a tangled web, that’s for sure.”
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