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Mounties protest for union, higher wages

Some B.C. Mounties are continuing to cover the stripes on their pants to protest in support of a nationwide campaign for higher pay and a union for the RCMP.
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Some B.C. Mounties are continuing to cover the stripes on their pants to protest in support of a nationwide campaign for higher pay and a union for the RCMP.

"It started in North Vancouver and spread to the Sunshine Coast and now it's all across the country," said Brian Sauv, an RCMP sergeant on leave and co-chair of the National Police Federation, which is awaiting a response from the federal government to its application to represent all RCMP members in Canada.

The federation is vying with the Mounted Police Professional Association to form a union that would represent rank-and-file members.

"I can't say whether it's every member, or 50 per cent, but it's in Richmond, Burnaby and other detachments are following suit," Sauv said of the decision by individual members to cover the yellow stripes on their uniform pants in solidarity with the campaign - while still serving their communities.

"There are a few taking off the stripe," Prince George RCMP media spokesman Cpl. Craig Douglass confirmed by email Wednesday.

"It's up to each member."

It's unclear whether there are officers at detachments in the surrounding region also taking part.

Sauv called the protest a "grassroots movement and we support every member's right to express their displeasure. And it's a passive way of doing that."

Sauv did not know how long the protest would last.

According to the federation, officers are also using the silent protest to highlight pay discrepancies between Mounties and municipal police officers, and staffing shortages.

Sauv said officers who participate in the protest could face discipline for being out of full uniform.

The federation said members are frustrated by several things, including an eight-year "effective pay freeze, lack of resources to better manage risk, rising detachment attrition rates and "inconsistent... use of the disciplinary process."

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale recently announced retroactive salary hikes for the RCMP (a 1.25-per cent raise effective Jan. 1, 2015, a 1.25-per cent raise effective Jan. 1, 2016, and a 2.3-per cent market adjustment effective April 1, 2016).

However, the federation said in a statement that the pay increase "does very little" for its members.

The Supreme Court of Canada ruled two years ago that RCMP officers have the right to unionize.

The federal government passed Bill C-7 in June 2016, which would pave the way for a labour relations regime in the RCMP.

However, a Senate committee identified major weaknesses in the legislation, and sent the bill back to the House of Commons.

The government has yet to redraft it.