
ROTHENBURGER: Calls for provincial police force are déjà vu all over again
THE MORE THINGS CHANGE, the more they stay the same, the old saying goes. It might be an apt description for a proposal to get rid of the RCMP in British Columbia and establish a provincial police force instead. An all-party legislative committee says the change would re-establish trust in policing, that it would “improve local accountability, responsiveness and decision-making.”
Fact is, though, that B.C. has taken the provincial police force route once before. Kamloops author Lynne Stonier-Newman wrote an excellent book about the B.C. Provincial Police in 1991, called Policing a Pioneer Province, that outlined its fascinating history.
The force (initially called the B.C. Constabulary) was created in 1858 as B.C. was becoming a Crown colony and dealing with the impact of the Cariboo gold rush. The new force was directed to “carry out the general policing of the district, taking special care that drinking and gambling are as much as possible put down.”