New police recruits to spend more time in community, Montreal police chief says - Action News
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Montreal

New police recruits to spend more time in community, Montreal police chief says

Four weeks of "immersion training" for new recruits is one initiative announced by Montreal police Chief Fady Dagher to mark the first 100 days on the job.

Fady Dagher hopes recent pay hike for officers will help more of them afford to live where they work

man at podium
Just 10 to 15 per cent of SPVM officers live on the island of Montreal. Police Chief Fady Dagher wants to see that change. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Newrecruits to the Service de Police de la Ville de Montral (SPVM)will get four weeks of "immersion training" to help them build connections with communities in which they'll be workingbefore patrolling the city'sstreets.

"This immersion training is really for both sides to better understand one another: police to the community but also the community towards the police," said SPVMChief Fady Dagher at a news conference Monday marking his first 100 days on the job.

"We want them to discover the rich cultural and community history of Montreal."

The training, which is similar to the programthat Dagher championed while chief of the Longueuil police service, is part of hiseffort to better connect police officers to thecommunities in which they work

It is tied to a recruitment push to increase the diversity of the SPVM's ranks, which Dagher said is also a priority for the service.

"To bring us closer to all the populations, we need the SPVM to reflect diversity a little better even much better," Dagher said. "We need all populations to feel the SPVM can also be their home. We need to have a better understanding of the needs issues and codes of all populations."

Only 10 to 15 per cent of police live in Montreal

Montreal police officers this month approved a new collective agreement that will see their salaries increase by 20 per cent over the next five years.

That increase should help more officers afford to live on the island ofMontreal, Dagher said. Currently, only 10 to 15 per cent of police live on SPVM territory, a reality that means many of them don't feel connected to community in which they work, the chief said.

Fo Niemi, the director of Montreal'sCenter for Research-Action on Race Relations (CRARR), said it's important for officers to build bonds in their communities.

"I believe the chief, at one point in the past, has spoken of emotional intelligence," he said. "I think it's very important for police chiefs and police organization to emphasize that human quality of police work."

Fo Niemi
Fo Niemi, the director of the Center for Research-Action on Race Relations, said he understands the need to have officers who are tied to their communities. (Kwabena Oduro/CBC)

The immersion training that Dagher introduced while chief of police in Longueuil saw officers spend time with community groups, out of uniform,where they were able to form bonds and familiarize themselves with social workers and other partners who frequently work alongside officers to respond to 911 calls.

However, Ted Rutland, an associate professor in the department of geography, urban planning and environment at Concordia University with expertise in policing issues, said it's inefficient and expensive to have officers performing the role of a social worker.

"Instead of doing what a lot of cities are doing and saying we need different kinds of responses to those calls, Fady wants to make the police department into a combination police force/social work operation," Rutland said.

"If it's a social work issue, why don't we have a social worker deal with it?"

With files from Steve Rukavina