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RCMP Must Enforce First Nation Laws

Full Title: An Act to amend the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act

Summary#

This bill amends the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act to make it clear that RCMP officers must prevent offences against First Nation laws and execute warrants issued under those laws. It also defines what “First Nation law” means for this purpose. The bill changes section 18 of the RCMP Act, which sets out core police duties, and adds a new definition to section 2(1) (Clause 1; Clause 2).

  • Adds “First Nation laws” to the list of laws RCMP officers must enforce and prevent offences against (RCMP Act s.18(a), as amended by Clause 2).
  • Allows RCMP officers to execute warrants issued under First Nation laws (RCMP Act s.18(b), as amended by Clause 2).
  • Defines “First Nation law” to include Indian Act bylaws, First Nation land management laws, and laws under federal self‑government agreements (Clause 1).
  • Does not create new offences, fines, or taxes; it clarifies RCMP duties (Clauses 1–2).
  • No stated effective date in the bill; there is no special coming‑into‑force clause (Bill text).

What it means for you#

  • Households on First Nation lands:

    • RCMP officers would have a clear duty to intervene to stop offences against First Nation bylaws and other First Nation laws (RCMP Act s.18(a), as amended).
    • RCMP officers could serve and carry out warrants issued under those laws (RCMP Act s.18(b), as amended).
    • Effective date not specified in the bill; standard federal practice is on Royal Assent when no special clause is included (no coming‑into‑force clause shown).
  • First Nation governments:

    • RCMP duties would expressly include preventing offences against your bylaws and laws and executing related warrants, which may aid enforcement and compliance (RCMP Act s.18(a)–(b), as amended).
    • Coverage includes bylaws under the Indian Act, laws under the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management Act, and laws under self‑government agreements implemented by Parliament (Clause 1).
  • Businesses operating on First Nation lands:

    • Expect clearer RCMP enforcement of First Nation laws that apply to operations, permits, land use, or public safety on First Nation lands (RCMP Act s.18(a)–(b), as amended).
    • Warrants related to business activities under First Nation laws could be executed by the RCMP (RCMP Act s.18(b), as amended).
  • RCMP officers and detachments:

    • Core duties would explicitly include First Nation laws, alongside federal and provincial laws, which may require updates to policies and procedures (RCMP Act s.18(a)–(b), as amended).
    • Authority to execute warrants under First Nation laws would be clear in the Act (RCMP Act s.18(b), as amended).
  • Provinces, territories, and local governments:

    • Where the RCMP provides contract policing, the change clarifies that prevention and warrant duties extend to First Nation laws within those jurisdictions (RCMP Act s.18(a)–(b), as amended).

Expenses#

  • Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.

  • Key points:

    • The bill contains no direct appropriations, fees, or taxes; it amends duties in the RCMP Act (Clauses 1–2).
    • No official fiscal note identified. Data unavailable on RCMP implementation costs (training, policy updates, systems).

Proponents' View#

  • Clarifies RCMP authority and duty to enforce First Nation laws, reducing gaps that can hinder prevention and enforcement on First Nation lands (RCMP Act s.18(a)–(b), as amended by Clause 2).
  • Supports First Nations governance by recognizing Indian Act bylaws, land management laws, and self‑government laws within federal policing duties (Clause 1).
  • Improves the execution of justice by allowing RCMP officers to execute warrants issued under First Nation laws, similar to warrants under federal and provincial laws (RCMP Act s.18(b), as amended by Clause 2).
  • Promotes consistent enforcement across provinces where the RCMP is the police service of jurisdiction, by explicitly adding First Nation laws to the RCMP’s duty set (RCMP Act s.18(a), as amended).

Opponents' View#

  • Expands RCMP workload without new funding in the bill, which could strain resources or shift capacity away from other policing priorities (no appropriation in Clauses 1–2).
  • May create overlap or friction with First Nation police services where they exist, unless roles and protocols are clearly defined (RCMP Act s.18(a)–(b), as amended).
  • The broad category of “First Nation law” could pose training and operational challenges for officers across many communities with diverse legal frameworks (Clause 1).
  • Risk of legal disputes if warrants or bylaws are later found invalid or procedurally deficient, exposing RCMP actions to court challenges (RCMP Act s.18(b), as amended).

Timeline

Jun 22, 2023 • Senate

First reading

Dec 4, 2024 • Senate

Second reading

Criminal Justice
Indigenous Affairs