Proposed Elements to inform the First Nations Police Services Legislation
On this page
- Summary
- Preamble
- Definitions
- Treaties and Self-Government Agreements
- Purpose
- Government of Canada's obligations to fund First Nations police services as essential services
- Funding Arrangements
- Resolution of Disputes through Mediation Process
- Other Dispute Resolution Process
- Regulations
- Other Provisions - For greater certainty
- Implementation
- Review
- Coming into Force
1. Summary
The purpose of this document is to articulate First Nations, provinces/ territories and Public Safety Canada's shared vision to support the drafting of the federal First Nations police services legislation. These elements were co-developed by First Nations policing representative organizations, provinces/ territories and Public Safety Canada with the objective of developing a federal legislation which will support First Nations police services as essential services. The elements are intended to set the policy intentions of the legislation to inform drafting instructions.
2. Preamble
The preamble may emphasize that this legislation is founded on Canada's commitment to reconciliation with First Nations.
The preamble may recognize that:
- Canada and First Nations have forged partnerships through treaties which are based on mutual respect and cooperation. These treaty relationships should guide collaborative efforts to support First Nations police services as essential services;
- First Nations, as per their governance system and legal traditions, guided by their knowledge keepers, informed by their history and through their language, have historically and continue to exercise leadership in fostering safety and well-being in their communities;
- First Nations have unique histories, cultures and community safety needs which require policing that is responsive to each First Nation's individual needs;
- First Nations, provinces/territories and the Government of Canada have a long history of collaboration in supporting the administration of justice in First Nations' communities via the establishment of and support to First Nations police services;
- First Nations police services are well-respected in their communities and are instrumental in fostering safety and security in the communities they serve;
- Provinces and Territories have legislative jurisdiction over the administration of justice and First Nations police services are a critical part of the justice system in Canada;
- First Nations police services are established pursuant to, or their members are appointed under, provincial/territorial legislation;
- This legislation complements broader efforts to better support the administration of justice, enforcement of First Nations laws and fostering of safety in First Nations;
- First Nations police services, as well as First Nations police governance bodies, require funding to meet applicable standards outlined in provincial/territorial legislation and regulations, and any other applicable law, to provide services of a comparable level to non-Indigenous communities with similar conditions in the region, and provide police services that are responsive to the needs of the communities served; and,
- First Nations in Canada have long called for reform to how First Nations police services are funded and have advocated for federal legislation that recognizes First Nations police services as an essential service. These calls for reform were highlighted in the Final Report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.
The preamble may note that the Government of Canada is committed to:
- Working in partnership with First Nations and the provinces/ territories based on trust, mutual respect and participation in decision-making;
- Taking measures to support equitable funding for First Nations police services and First Nations police governance bodies, while respecting the roles and responsibilities of First Nations and provinces/territories;
- Taking necessary measures to ensure consistency with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, as required by the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act; and,
- Meeting its obligations concerning funding First Nations police services pursuant to treaties and self-government agreements.
3. Definitions
The legislation may include the necessary definitions to bring precision and clarity to interpret the Act. The following definitions may be considered for inclusion in the definitions section of the Act or in other sections, as the legislative drafters deem necessary:
- First Nations police service
- this definition may indicate that the authorities and responsibilities of the service are described in applicable provincial/territorial policing legislation and by the applicable First Nations and the applicable provinces/territories. The definition should be flexible enough to include all First Nations police services subject to relevant provincial/territorial policing legislation as deemed necessary by the applicable province/territory. The federal legislation should also be flexible enough to support First Nations police services that operate in a geographical area that includes more than one province or territory.
- The federal legislation must be flexible enough to support First Nations police services in Ontario that are recognized as such by the Government of Ontario. As per the Community Safety and Policing Act, 2019 , First Nation boards may be constituted under the Act to maintain a First Nation police service (section 32) or First Nation Officers may be appointed to act as a police service (section 101, formerly known as “First Nations Constables”). For further clarity, it is not the intention for the federal legislation to apply to First Nations Officers who are funded pursuant to a Service Level Agreement for Ontario Provincial Police administered policing.
- The federal legislation must be flexible enough to support First Nations police services in Quebec. Under section 90 of Quebec's Police Act, Indigenous police services are police services for the purposes of that Act.
- The federal legislation would not be applicable to other police services, such as the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, provincial police services and municipal police services, in the definition of a “First Nations police service.”
- The federal legislation may need to specify that community safety, public safety and other activities are within the scope of this legislation insofar as they constitute part of the roles and responsibilities of First Nations police services.
- First Nation
- the definition may identify the appropriate First Nation leadership which represents communities and is authorized to make decisions concerning policing on behalf of the communities, such as First Nations councils or political territorial organizations. Chiefs of police are not signatories to Public Safety Canada's FNIPP funding agreements for current First Nations police services, and it is anticipated this practice would continue for future agreements under the legislation.
- Minister
- this definition may indicate that it is the Minister of Public Safety
- First Nations police governance body
- this definition may be flexible enough to recognize First Nations police governance bodies also known as First Nations police boards or commissions depending on the province/territory which are defined under provincial/territorial policing legislation as well as those established by First Nations, and recognized by provinces/territories, but not necessarily required pursuant to provincial/territorial policing legislation.
- Policing legislation
- this definition may define this term as being the police legislation as per the applicable province/territory.
- Policing regulations
- this definition may define this term as being the police regulations as per the applicable province/territory.
- Policing standards
- this definition may define this term as being the police standards as per the applicable province/territory.
- Associated activities
- this term is intended to capture activities associated with the processes to establish and manage a First Nations police service and a First Nations police governance body (if applicable), including activities conducted by First Nations.
- Federal Funding
- this definition may clarify that this is funding provided by the Government of Canada pursuant to the funding arrangements, which represents 52% of the total costs articulated in the funding arrangement.
- Funding Arrangement
- this definition may clarify that this is the agreement to which the Government of Canada, the applicable provinces/territories and applicable First Nations agree in order to provide funding for First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities. This definition may highlight that the conclusion of a funding arrangement is the expression of the agreed upon financial requirements to support a First Nations police service as an essential service.
4. Treaties and Self-Government Agreements
The legislation is also intended to support the federal government to meet its obligations to fund First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies, and associated activities in treaties and self-government agreements.
The legislation may clarify that in the event of a conflict between the funding requirements for a First Nations police service established pursuant to a treaty or self-government agreement and this legislation, that the former will take precedence.
For added precision, the legislation may also mention that treaties and self-government agreements take precedence over conditions and specifications outlined in the legislation, particularly in determining the amount of federal funding provided to support First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities.
The legislation should be clear that the activities that this legislation is intended to fund are those pertaining to First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities. In other words, should obligations pertaining to other issues be contained in treaties and self-government agreements, these would be out of scope of this legislation.
5. Purpose
The legislation may articulate that the purposes of this legislation are to:
- Establish the Government of Canada's obligations towards funding First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities as essential services; and,
- Describe a process to determine, with First Nations and provinces/territories, the amount of federal funding necessary to support First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities as essential services.
6. Government of Canada's obligations to fund First Nations police services as essential services
The policy intention of this legislation is to establish the Government of Canada's obligations towards funding First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities as essential services. The Government of Canada would be obligated to provide 52% of funding as articulated in a funding arrangement agreed to by the applicable First Nations, province/ territory and the Government of Canada. The policy intention is that a funding arrangement would be the expression of the amount of funding needed to support a First Nations police service as an essential service.
The legislation may specify that the amount of funding articulated in a funding arrangement should:
- Enable the First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities to meet relevant provincial/territorial legislative requirements, regulations and standards pertaining to policing, and any other applicable law;
- Enable the First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities to respond to First Nations' policing and community safety priorities in accordance with the relevant legislation, regulations and standards of each province/territory pertaining to policing and any other applicable law;
- Be responsive to current and projected needs with respect to police facilities; and,
- Consider the broader policing landscape to ensure responsible management and stewardship of public funds.
7. Funding Arrangements
Minister Authority to Enter into Arrangements to Fund First Nations police services
The legislation may describe the Minister's authority to enter into a funding arrangement with the government of a province/territory and First Nations to support First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities as essential services, subject to federal conditions and the existence of appropriations granted by the Parliament of Canada.
Federal Conditions to Conclude a Funding Arrangement
The federal legislation may identify certain conditions to be met in order for the Minister to enter into a funding arrangement to provide First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities with funding.
- First Nations and provinces/territories exercise their roles in the establishment and maintenance of a First Nations police service, First Nations police governance body and associated activities
The legislation should articulate that the federal Minister's ability to enter into a funding arrangement is contingent on the implicated First Nations and provinces/territories exercising their roles in the establishment and maintenance of a First Nations police service, First Nations police governance body and associated activities. A confirmation that these roles have been exercised should be reaffirmed in the funding arrangement.
It is not the intention for the Government of Canada to determine, oversee, opine or set quality standards on how First Nations and provinces/territories conduct their roles in the establishment and maintenance of a First Nations police service, First Nations police governance body and associated activities, nor is it the intention of the Government of Canada to attempt to regulate matters of provincial/territorial jurisdiction.
The types of activities that the First Nations and provinces/territories may conduct in order to establish and maintain a First Nations police service, First Nations police governance and associated activities, may generally include:
First Nation
- In accordance with their governance processes or legal systems, support the establishment of a First Nation police service and First Nations police governance body (if not yet established when this legislation comes into force), and provide Canada and the applicable province/territory notice of this support;
- Complete required due diligence and processes to determine the feasibility, parameters and requirements to establish a First Nations police service and First Nations police governance body (if applicable);
- In accordance with their governance processes or legal systems, determine community safety and policing priorities for their First Nations police service in alignment with their own protocols, as well as relevant legislation, regulations and standards of the applicable province/territory pertaining to policing and any other applicable law; and,
- Adhere to applicable provincial/ territorial requirements to establish and maintain a First Nations police service and, where applicable, a First Nations police governance body.
Provinces and Territories
- Exercise its authority in establishing a First Nations police service and a First Nations police governance body (if applicable), including setting the process to establish a First Nations police service and First Nations police governance body (if applicable);
- Exercise its authority in the regulation and oversight of First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities, as per the relevant provincial/ territorial legislation that regulates policing; and,
- Agree to fund a First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies (if applicable) and associated activities to meet relevant provincial/territorial legislative obligations and standards.
- The Government of Canada, the province/territory and First Nations agree on the amount of funding required to support First Nations police services, First Nations police governance and associated activities, and articulate this in a funding arrangement
The legislation should articulate that the provision of federal funding to support First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities is contingent on the Government of Canada, the province/territory and First Nations agreeing on the amount of funding needed and articulating this in a funding arrangement.
Performance Measurement
The legislation may include provisions to support First Nations, federal and provincial/territorial collaboration to assess whether the funding arrangements are achieving the intent of the legislation. The legislation may also include provisions to support performance measurement and public disclosure of financial reporting.
8. Resolution of Disputes through Mediation Process
The federal legislation may outline a mediation process to resolve disputes concerning the implementation of the federal legislation, if the First Nation, province/territory and Government of Canada are unable to resolve a dispute during the process to conclude a funding arrangement.
The legislation may include provisions that this mediation process could incorporate the unique histories, cultures and ways of resolving disputes in the applicable First Nations.
Entities Eligible to Initiate a Mediation Process
The federal legislation may specify that the following entities are eligible to initiate a mediation process to resolve a dispute and that participation in the mediation process is voluntary. In order for the mediation process to proceed, all of the following entities would need to agree to participate in the mediation process:
- First Nations who have a First Nations police service and a First Nations police governance body (if applicable) and/or First Nations who have support from the applicable provincial/ territorial government to discuss the establishment of a First Nations police service and a First Nations police governance (if applicable) and are in the process of negotiating a funding arrangement with the Government of Canada and applicable province/territory;
- Provinces/Territories; and,
- The Government of Canada.
For further clarification, the federal legislation may specify that the entities may decide who represents them in the mediation process.
Types of Disputes that may be resolved through the Mediation Process
The federal legislation may specify the types of disputes which may be initiated by an entity eligible to do so. The following types of disputes may be subject to a mediation process:
- Where the eligible entities are unable to agree on the amount of funding needed to:
- Enable the First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities to conduct their responsibilities under laws and regulations; and,
- Enable the First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies and associated activities to respond to First Nations' policing and community safety priorities.
- Where the process to determine the amount of funding was alleged to be not fair and/or transparent.
Mediation Process
The federal legislation may specify that a mediation process may be initiated if agreed to by the three eligible entities.
The federal legislation may further specify that in order for the mediation process to proceed, the eligible entities need to agree on the terms of the process, which may include:
- Identification of a mediator or mediators who has/have knowledge of policing in First Nations;
- Identification of the dispute to be resolved;
- Agreement that the objective of the mediation process is for the Government of Canada, the provinces/territories and First Nations to attempt to resolve the dispute; and
- Any other item deemed necessary by the three entities to settle the dispute.
9. Other Dispute Resolution Process
The legislation may acknowledge that First Nations and provinces/territories may propose their own process for resolving disputes. The legislation may define how the Government of Canada would proceed to participate in such a process.
The federal legislation may specify that, if an eligible entity proposes a dispute resolution process that differs from the one described above (Section 8), the Minister shall authorize federal participation in that dispute resolution process, subject to receiving:
- Confirmation that the First Nations and provinces/territories have agreed to participate in that process;
- A request from the First Nations and applicable provinces/territories to participate in the dispute resolution process; and,
- Equal opportunity as the provinces/territories and First Nations to determine the terms of the dispute resolution process.
Should the result or decision of the other dispute resolution process being proposed be binding on the Government of Canada, the federal legislation may specify that the Minister may require additional authorities prior to entering into such a process.
10. Regulations
The federal legislation may specify the powers of the Governor in Council to make regulations to support the implementation of this legislation.
The federal legislation may specify that the Governor in Council may only make regulations following engagement by the Minister with First Nations, First Nations police services, First Nations police governance bodies, provinces/ territories and other representatives as determined by the Minister.
11. Other Provisions - For greater certainty
Limitations on the use of Federal Funding
If necessary, the federal legislation may specify that federal funding may not fund the First Nations police service and/or First Nations police governance body to:
- Assume policing responsibility for any community which is not a First Nation; and,
- Provide services which are beyond the responsibility of a First Nations police service, First Nations police governance body and associated activities, as per relevant provincial/ territorial policing legislation, regulations and standards.
12. Implementation
Transitioning existing self-administered police service agreements under the First Nations and Inuit Policing Program to funding arrangements as per federal legislation
The federal legislation may acknowledge that the Government of Canada is currently providing funding for First Nations police services via self-administered police service agreements under the First Nations and Inuit Policing Program.
The federal legislation may articulate that it is intended that all First Nations and Inuit Policing Program self-administered police service agreements which currently provide funding for First Nations police services will be transitioned to new funding arrangements under this federal legislation.
The federal legislation may articulate an intention to transition all existing self-administered police service agreements which provide funding for First Nations police services to new funding arrangements under the legislation within ten years from the coming into force of the legislation or before the expiry date of the self-administered police service agreement, whichever is later.
The federal legislation may further clarify that existing self-administered police service agreements will continue to be in effect with the coming into force of the federal legislation until such a time as they are replaced with a funding arrangement as per the legislation. If necessary, the legislation may also clarify that no self-administered police services agreements will be concluded or extended once the legislation has been in force for ten years.
Adaptable Implementation
The legislation may clarify that the Government of Canada, in implementing the legislation, should be adaptable to changing circumstances and willing to adjust a funding arrangement to respond to changes in the operational and funding requirements of a First Nations police service, First Nations police governance body, and associated activities. Modifications to a funding arrangement would be subject to agreement between the Government of Canada, the province/territory and the First Nations.
Establishment of First Nations police services
The federal legislation may reaffirm that the process to establish a First Nations police service is subject to provincial/territorial processes. For further clarity, First Nations police services are not established pursuant to this federal legislation, and nothing in the federal legislation should give the impression that the federal government is compelling provinces/territories to establish a First Nations police service.
13. Review
The federal legislation could refer to a requirement for the Minister to conduct a review of the entire Act every five years. This may include a comprehensive review of its provisions, administration and operations, arrangements made pursuant to the Act, as well as any other topics relevant to the legislation and deemed necessary by the Minister at the time of the review.
The review should assess whether the legislation is successful in achieving its objective of supporting First Nations police services. This review may also consider whether First Nations police services and First Nations police governance bodies are able to provide services of a comparable level to non-Indigenous communities with similar conditions in the region, and provide policing services that are responsive to the needs of the communities served. The scope of this review should also be broad enough to account for and respond to the evolution of the administration of justice in First Nations.
The legislation may indicate that these review processes must include engagement with First Nations and provinces/territories. The legislation could indicate that a report with the findings and recommendations from these reviews be tabled in Parliament by the Minister.
14. Coming into Force
The federal legislation may include provisions concerning how the Act comes into force.
- Date modified: