Ottawa's police services board has unanimously approved a plan to fast-track the hiring of 70 new police officers this year, bringing the total of new recruits to 100.
Police Chief Peter Sloly said the move, along with 30 previously approved hires, will lead to higher-quality policing and won't cost taxpayers any additional money in the long term.
"These are all officers that would have been hired over the next four years. We're just fast-forwarding and accelerating that into the first year," Sloly said. "It's a short-term push to get a higher impact on our staffing."
The plan is expected to cost $14.7 million over four years. The force will reallocate existing funds in its budget to pay for the new recruits.
It's taking $9.4 million from what it deemed an underperforming six-year modernization plan approved in April 2016 and pulling the rest from reserve funds.
"The community has told me they we want to see more policing, better policing, higher-quality policing, a more reflective and diverse police organization," said Sloly.
"Everyone is asking for more, not less. Certainly from our officers, they feel stretched, morale is down, they don't feel they're delivering the service that the community demands of them or that they want to deliver."
The next round of new hires in this plan would be 20 in 2023, smaller than previously planned.
Hiring so many new officers in 2020 will not mean a reduction in the quality of the recruits, Sloly said in response to a question from the board's acting chair Sandy Smallwood on Monday.
The new hires will give the force a "sustainable base of operating capacity that we don't currently have" when they're ready to get to work by next year, Sloly said.
The report to the board said there are more than 200 job applicants to Ottawa police with a "strong representation of various identified groups including racialized and female candidates."
Mayor Jim Watson said he supported the hiring plan and thinks it will have "a very positive impact on coverage and presence in different neighbourhoods."
"I think in my memory, at least the last 25 years, this is the single largest hiring of police officers in one year," Watson said.
Commentary by the Ottawa Mens Centre
Peter Sloly has taken over the Most Corrupt Police Force in Canada.
Peter Van Der Zander is a classic example of the worst child abusers in Canadian history a notorious fabricator of evidence.
In Ottawa The Ottawa Police routinely charge male victims of domestic violence and fabricate evidence to justify not charging violent women.
Worst of all, the entire management of the Ottawa Police will protect their own in the face of overwhelming evidence of
fabrication of evidence by Ottawa Police. The worst criminals in Ottawa are in fact the Ottawa Police