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Police working security nothing new, but more clarity needed, board chair says

Police working security nothing new, but more clarity needed, board chair says

CBC
Wednesday, July 27, 2022 02:48:14 PM UTC

The chair of Halifax's police board says more clarity is needed around the city's policy for extra duty employment, a program where officers are paid an hourly rate by private companies, public bodies or events to work security in full uniform outside their working hours.

The Halifax Examiner first reported last week that police — armed and in uniform — have been patrolling Superstore locations in Halifax Regional Municipality outside of their regular shifts in recent weeks. Some customers voiced their concerns to CBC.

Coun. Lindell Smith, chair of the board of police commissioners, said Halifax police working private security outside their regular shifts has been happening for years. "We're used to seeing police doing extra duty related to street closures and events."

He said an increase in theft has led more businesses to opt into the extra duty program. 

"I can understand there are definitely demographics who would be concerned walking into a store and seeing police," Smith said. "But I'm not aware of where police were being hired to do extra duty and monitor where issues have come out of that."

Nova Scotia's police act stipulates that municipal police boards establish a written policy for extra duty employment, but HRM's policy isn't publicly available. 

Smith said more public information on the details of the policy is needed to understand the limitations of the extra duty program, like whether they are empowered to use force and who can hire them.

Const. John MacLeod, HRP's public information officer, said extra duty officers cost $79.78 per hour.

"Business, organizations, public and private events can place requests for officers to conduct policing duties on or near their facilities and are responsible for the associated costs," he said.

Kevin Walby, a criminal justice researcher at the University of Winnipeg, said virtually every police service in North America has an extra duty program, but they don't widely advertise.

"Private buyers or sometimes even public buyers, they'll call that office and they'll say, 'I need some extra duty officers for the football game or the hockey game or a parade,'" Walby said, adding that members of the public often aren't aware the officers aren't on normal duty.

"Increasingly, we see big box stores calling them and saying, 'No, rather than private security, I want public police."

He said, for example, an officer could work 50 regular hours in a week and take on an additional 20 hours of extra duty.

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