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“I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I believe wrong, or free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind.” ~~ John G. Diefenbaker

ROTHENBURGER -- Police body cams won’t fix everything but they’ll be a start

Used with permission – originally posted in CFJC Today

 

IT LOOKS VERY MUCH as though all front-line police in Canada will be wearing body cameras in the future and it’s about time. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday he’ll talk to premiers about the idea this very week.

 

It took a major racial crisis, and an RCMP officer wiping out an inebriated Inuk man with the front door of his police pickup truck, to start a serious conversation but better late than never.

 

A few police forces in Canada already employ body cameras — or body-worn cameras, BWC — and others are considering them. In B.C. the Independent Investigations Office supports them, and provincial policing standards provide guidelines for their use so it shouldn’t be a big leap to put them into practice.

 

Of course, body cams must be turned on before they’re of any value. By the way, records indicate Minneapolis police turn their cameras on at the right time in about 93 per cent of incidents, and at least one was on when George Floyd was arrested.

 

Obviously, then, body cameras aren’t a guarantee against bad policing but there’s plenty of other evidence that they do have a calming effect on police-public interactions.

 

Instead of simply pitting the word of a law-enforcement officer against that of a suspect, they provide real evidence.

 

The body cameras serve to protect not only those who encounter police but the police themselves, who might be unjustly accused of bad behaviour.

 

As Trudeau mentioned yesterday, there will be financial and logistical problems to overcome but nothing that should prevent this change. And, no doubt, some will fret about privacy.

 

RCMP have resisted the cameras in the past but it’s time to recognize that all police need to build trust and transparency.

 

Body cameras won’t solve racist police enforcement but they will certainly influence, in a positive way, the manner in which apprehensions are made. And that will be a step forward.

 

I’m Mel Rothenburger, the Armchair Mayor.

 


Mel Rothenburger was born and grew up in Oliver, BC. Following high school, he attended college in Wenatchee, Washington and graduated from the University of Washington in Seattle.

 

After working as a newspaper journalist in other parts of BC he joined The Kamloops Daily News. Mel served as chair of the Kamloops-Thompson School Board and, from 1999-2005, as Mayor of Kamloops. After retiring as Mayor, he returned to The Daily News, from which he retired in 2012.

 

He has been the TNRD Director, for Electoral Area P, since 2014.

Mel can be reached at
mrothenburger@armchairmayor.ca.

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