Incoming police chief's baggage creates uphill battle, observers say - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:35 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Incoming police chief's baggage creates uphill battle, observers say

Observers say Ottawa's incoming police chief comes with baggage from his time with the RCMP in British Columbia, which will force him to work even harder to gain the trust of racialized communities in Ottawa as he starts Thursday.

Eric Stubbs says he enjoyed working with Indigenous communities while at RCMP

A portrait of a man.
Eric Stubbs, Ottawa's new police chief, speaks at a 2020 news conference when he was in charge of core policing in B.C. with the RCMP. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Observers say Ottawa's incoming police chief comes with baggage from his time with the RCMP in British Columbia, which will force him to work even harder to gain the trust of racialized communities in Ottawa as he starts Thursday.

Eric Stubbsassumescommand from Deputy Chief Steve Bell, who temporarily filled the gap left by former chief Peter Slolyhe quit his post in February amid fiercecriticism of his force's handling of the Freedom Convoy protests.

Sloly, Ottawa's first Black police chief, was a self-described change agent seeking broad reform within the Ottawa Police Service, including addressing systemic racism within the ranks.

In the news conference last monthannouncing the assistant B.C. RCMP commanderas the new chief, Stubbs said police forces have to adapt to working in "a different world"than five years ago,citing the COVID-19 pandemic and cryptocurrency alongside systemic racism.

The relationship between police and diverse communities continue to be fraught with challenges, and Stubbs will also face an uphill battle, observers told CBC.

When local residents begin to look into his past with the RCMP, his dealings with First Nations communities in B.C. are the first items to appear on a Google search.

"I think they've made a poor choice," said Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, the president of the Unionof B.C. Indian Chiefs.

Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, the president of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, thinks Stubbs was a bad hire for Ottawa. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Indigenous leaders, including Phillip, have accused the RCMPof using needless paramilitary tactics as Mounties carried outcourt injunctions against blockade participants on Wet'suwet'en traditional territory in northern British Columbia.

When asked about his role in helping oversee the B.C.RCMP's crackdown on blockades of the pipeline construction site, Stubbs said policing resource-based protests was"very challenging" and "similar to the convoy."

"There's a team here that has ... really dedicated themselves to trying to resolve these things through talking and negotiating," said Stubbs, referring to his former officers in B.C.

"We've been successful in a lot of those cases, but often we do end up having to arrest people and some people are upset."

The Stubbs biography released by the Ottawa Police Services Board said he led the RCMP's response to "many high-profile protests related to the resource sector."

Stubbs cites history of working with Indigenous groups

Phillip also criticized Stubbsfor not taking concerns seriously while meeting with the First Nations Leadership Council (FNLC), a coalition of B.C.

The coalition would meet regularly with Stubbsto discuss its concerns about resource development projects.

"He would go through the motions of listening ... and went ahead and authorized thebrutal actions that were undertaken," said Phillip, who was not consulted by the police board in Ottawa about Stubbs.

"And in my view, in his attitude was arrogant."

CBCreached out to Stubbs and the police board for comment about Phillip's remarks. Neither were available.

Stubbshas defended his relationships with Indigenous people by saying he served in 11 First Nations communities when he was younger, and went on to work on a number of committees and initiatives with Indigenous groups as he moved up the RCMP ladder.

"I enjoy it, working with the Indigenous communities," he said."I've done it a lot and I'll continue to do so."

RCMP helicopter footage of the 2019 raid on Wet'suwet'en barricades.
RCMP helicopter footage of the 2019 raid on Wet'suwet'en barricades. (CBC News)

'An open mind and open heart'

Heidi Metcalfe saidshe's willing to give Stubbs a chance.

AnInuk member of the Ottawa Police Service's community equity councilbut speaking personally and not on behalf of the council Metcalfe said Stubbs's timewith the RCMPis "a tough one because the relationship between RCMP and Inuit communities specifically is full of missteps and mistrust."

"Hearing that the new Ottawa police chief is RCMP,it is a concern, but I do have hopes for any new person coming in. I keep an open mind and open heart," Metcalfe said.

"My goal always, always, always is to create allies."

WATCH | Equity council member has open mind:

Inuk equity council member keeping an 'open mind' about Stubbs

2 years ago
Duration 1:13
Heidi Metcalfe said, while she's concerned that the new chief is RCMP, she's keeping "an open mind and open heart."

Metcalfe said the council had hopedfor anew police chief who has existing relationships with marginalized communities in Ottawa, and who understandsthe police's relationship with the city's Inuit community.

She said anynew police chief shouldreach out "in a genuine way" to Ottawa's Indigenous community, which is diverse itself.

"I would like anybody who is doing work that affects the community to get to know the community."

'So many bad optics'

Robin Browne did not mince words. He said Stubbs should just quit, and the hiring process for a new police chief should start again with Ottawa's new city council having a say.

Browne is aco-lead with613-819 Black Hub, a grassroots advocacy group with eyes on city hall and the police.

Browne echoed a criticism of the police board, saying they should have waited to hire the new chief. First, forthe new city council to be sworn in that happened Tuesday and second, for the results of theongoing public inquiry into the Freedom Convoy protests, set to bereleased next year.

Browne also criticized now-former police board chair, Eli El-Chantiry, who endorsedMayor Mark Sutcliffe during his election campaign. This was also a criticism lobbed at Sutcliffe during the mayoral campaign.

"There werejust so many bad optics," Browne said. "There's no repairing the loss of faith in that office if [Stubbs]comes in with all these circumstances."

Robin Browne of the 613-819 Black Hub thinks Stubbs should quit before he even starts, citing what he sees as a flawed hiring process. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)

Stubbs, who said he "went through a rigorous process" to be hired as police chief,believes the timing of his hiring does not change a principal goal: gaining the community's confidence.

As it pertains to Ottawa's various racialized communities,Browne said Stubbs has his work cut out for him.

Trust in local police was already low before the Freedom Convoyprotests, Browne said, because oftheir involvement in the deathofAbdirahmanAbdi, a Somali-Canadian man, during a violent arrest by twoOttawa policeofficers in 2016.

Throw in Sloly's resignation and Stubbs's role in policing theWet'suwet'enblockades and "the level of trust is so low given, again,the way they rushed to hire," Browne said.

Bringing police leadership 'into order'

Sloly also oversaw an effort to rethink the way Ottawa officers respondto calls involving mental health a factor at playin thedeaths ofAbdiandGreg Ritchie, an Indigenous man shot and killed by police at Elmvale Shopping Centre in 2019.

A portrait of a man in a suit.
Greg Ritchie was shot to death by Ottawa police on Jan. 31, 2019 in the parking lot of the Elmvale Shopping Centre. (Submitted by Chantel Ritchie)

Police reform became "so much of the promise" of Sloly's hire, according to Jeffrey Monaghanof Carleton University's Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice, but now the force starts over with a new leader and "time will tell" what his priorities will be.

Monaghan said he doesn't think Stubbs is a "protest squasher," but rather calls him an "old-school cop."

WATCH | Professor says hire comes with baggage:

Stubbs brings 'baggage' as OPS chief, criminology professor says

2 years ago
Duration 1:27
Jeffrey Monaghan of Carleton University's Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice noted Eric Stubbs' role in defending court injunctions against blockade participants on Wet'suwet'en traditional territory.

"[He's]going to bring discipline to the forces and is someone who's going to be able to take the upper echelons of the police command and bring them into order," said Monaghan.

"What we've seen at the [public inquiry]is that the Ottawa Police Service is highly disorganized and fractured, especially at the top."

Clarifications

  • A previous version of this story did not explain how Eli El-Chantiry was an honourary co-chair of Mark Sutcliffe's campaign.
    Nov 17, 2022 10:51 AM ET

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said Abdirahman Abdi was shot. No firearms were used during his arrest.
    Nov 17, 2022 8:14 AM ET

With files from Radio-Canada's Frdric Pepin