Portfolio Pocket Book

The Portfolio

The Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Portfolio was established in 2003 with the goal of consolidating a range of responsibilities in the safety and security realm under one Minister. Your general powers, duties and functions are set out in the Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Act (PSEP Act).

The Portfolio is composed of the Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness (the Department, PS); and five agencies: the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), the Correctional Service of Canada (CSC), and the Parole Board of Canada (PBC); and three review bodies: the RCMP External Review Committee (ERC), the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the RCMP (CRCC), and the Office of the Correctional Investigator (OCI).

The Portfolio is the biggest, non-military Portfolio in the Government of Canada. The Portfolio’s 2021-22 budget is more than $10 billion, and it employs more than 69,800 people working in every part of the country and internationally. Each organization contributes to public safety and to the mission of building a safe and resilient Canada through its unique mandate and responsibilities.

The Department’s principal role is to bring strategic focus, coordination and direction to the government’s overall safety and security agenda. It plays a key role in the development, coordination and implementation of policies and programs in the areas of national security, community safety, crime prevention, law enforcement and emergency management. The Department’s annual budget is approximately $915 million with 1,136 employees. The majority of the Department’s employees work in the National Capital Region, but regional offices are also located in five regions: Ontario, Quebec and Nunavut, Atlantic, Prairies and Northwest Territories, and Pacific (British Columbia and Yukon) regions.

The Department is made up of five Branches. The following lists each Branch and responsible Assistant Deputy Minister:

The Five Agencies

RCMP – Prevents and investigates crime, maintains peace and order, enforces laws, contributes to national security, ensures the safety of senior officials and foreign missions, and provides operational support services to other law enforcement agencies within Canada and abroad.

CBSA – Provides integrated border services in support of national security and public safety priorities by enforcing Canadian laws governing trade and travel, facilitating legitimate cross-border traffic, collecting duties and taxes and interdicting goods and people that pose a potential threat to Canada.

CSIS – Investigates and reports on activities that may pose a threat to the security of Canada. CSIS also provides security assessments, on request, to all federal departments and agencies.

CSC – Responsible for administering court-imposed sentences of two years or more for adult offenders and supervising offenders on various forms of conditional release in the community.

PBC – An independent administrative tribunal that reports to Parliament through the Minister of Public Safety and has exclusive authority to make independent, quality conditional release, record suspension and expungement decisions, as well as clemency recommendations in a transparent and accountable manner. The Board’s authority extends to federal offenders and offenders in provinces and territories that don’t have their own parole boards.

The Three Review Bodies

ERC –  Provides civilian oversight of labour relations within the RCMP by conducting independent reviews of certain types of grievances as well as demotions and dismissals

CRCC –  Receives complaints from the public about the conduct of RCMP members and conducts reviews when complainants are not satisfied with the RCMP’s handling of their complaints. It also initiates complaints and investigations into RCMP conduct when it is in the public interest to do so, holds hearings, and reports findings and makes recommendations.

OCI – Conducts independent investigations about issues related to CSC that affect offenders either individually or as a group. The Office is also responsible for reviewing and making recommendations on CSC’s policies and procedures associated with the area of individual complaints to ensure that systemic areas of concern are identified and addressed.

Media Lines

Key messages:

Hot Issue Messages:

Border (COVID-19)

Emergency Response

Ideologically Motivated Violent Extremism (IMVE)

Foreign Interference

5G

Firearms

Indigenous Community Safety

Key Contacts

Rob Stewart

Rob Stewart, Deputy Minister, Public Safety Canada
Office: 613-991-2895
[Redacted]
Email: rob.stewart@ps-sp.gc.ca

Brenda Lucki

Brenda Lucki, Commissioner, Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Office: 613-843-6400
[Redacted]
Email: brenda.lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca

John Ossowski

John Ossowski, President, Canada Border Services Agency
Office: 613-952-3200
[Redacted]
Email: John.Ossowski@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca

David Vigneault

David Vigneault, Director, Canadian Security Intelligence Service
[Redacted]

Anne Kelly

Anne Kelly, Commissioner, Correctional Service of Canada
Office: 613-995-5781
[Redacted]
Email: Anne.Kelly@csc-scc.gc.ca

Jennifer Oades

Jennifer Oades, Chairperson, Parole Board of Canada
Office: 613-954-1154
[Redacted]
Email: Jennifer.Oades@pbc-clcc.gc.ca

Date modified: