Cops offer to fund first year of Taser program themselves - Action News
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Hamilton

Cops offer to fund first year of Taser program themselves

Police officers have stepped forward and offered to pay for Hamiltons new conductive energy weapons program themselves. That means it wont cost taxpayers anything for the first year, says police chief Glenn De Caire.

Chief says new tasers wont cost taxpayers anything for the first year

Citizen Ana Long gives her opinion on Taser usage during a sparsely attended public meeting held by the Hamilton Police Service board Tuesday. Chief Glenn De Caire says officers will pay to implement the program themselves. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

Police officers have stepped forward and offered to pay for Hamiltons new conductive energy weapons program themselves. That means it wont cost taxpayers anything for the first year, says police chief Glenn De Caire.

Two associations representing Hamilton officers have offered a pot of money from the late 1990s to implement an expanded program for CEWs, often known by the brand name Taser.

The program would see 519 Hamilton Police Service officers trained on CEWs, and would expand the arsenal from 66 to 150 weapons. Original estimates pinned implementationcosts at about $1 million.

Sharon Dorr, fiancee of slain Hamilton man Steve Mesic, spoke during the public meeting. She likes the idea of alternate uses of force, she says, but wants more officer accountability. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

But the Hamilton Police Association and the Hamilton Police Senior Officers Association have offered up $468,000 from a pension overflow fund dating back to 1996. The service will also phase in the program over three years. So that money will be enough to pay for the first year of the new program, De Caire said after a public meeting Tuesday.

Were continuing to look for efficiencies in our business process, De Caire said.

The police services board will vote on Dec. 16 whether to implement the new program. But the new information about cost will help, said Coun. Lloyd Ferguson, vice-chair of the police services board.

Ferguson still has a lot of questions, such as why the money wasnt offered up earlier. And the annual cost to operate the program is still a question mark. Initial reports give an estimate of $635,443 per year to maintain the program, including $226,449 for two full-time training officers and about $100,000 for cartridges.

But at the end of the day, were going to be able to implement this with no impact to the levy for taxpayers, Ferguson said.

Citizens gave their opinions on the proposed CEW program at Tuesday's public meeting. The 15 speakers included the presidents of the two police associations and Sharon Dorr. Shes the fiance of Steve Mesic, a Hamilton man shot and killed by police officers earlier this year.

Like other speakers, Dorr advocated for lapel cameras for officers. Her father, Norm Dorr, said video cameras would solve the mystery of what happens during police standoffs with civilians.

His family still doesnt know what happened with Mesic, he said. With lapel cams, at least we would know the truth.

Ive said many times, weve got three witnesses to the shooting, he said. One is dead and the other two are cops.

Hamilton police have usedCEWs since 2004. They were involved in 49 incidents in Hamilton in 2012, up from 22 the year before. Of those incidents, 17 involved people who were described as emotionally disturbed/mentally ill by police.

Earlier this year, the province released relaxed guidelines around CEW usage. On Nov. 7, Torontos police services board voted against an expanded CEW program.

Tuesday's meeting was sparsely attended, with about 25 people in the audience.