Thunder Bay Police Service

The Thunder Bay Police Service is the police force for the city of Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada, and also contracts to police the contiguous municipality of Oliver Paipoonge. The police force has a service area of 679 km2 (262 sq mi) with a population of 114,897. The force has 222 sworn officers, 198 per 100,000 people, which is six more than the provincial average of 192.[1] The chief of police is Sylvie Hauth.

Thunder Bay Police Service
MottoCommitted to Community Needs
Agency overview
Formed1970
Headquarters1200 Balmoral Street
Thunder Bay, Ontario
Sworn members246
Unsworn members98
Elected officer responsible
  • The Honourable Michael Tibollo, Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services
Agency executive
  • Sylvie Hauth, chief of police
Facilities
Divisions1
Website
www.thunderbaypolice.ca

The force was established and operates under the authority of the Police Services Act of Ontario. The act requires the police force to be governed by a five-member civilian "police services board". The mayor has the option to sit on the board by virtue of office. At least two members must be members of council. A third member is appointed by council from the community and the remaining two members are appointed by the Province of Ontario. The current board chair is Jackie Dojack. The remaining members are councillors Brian McKinnon and Joe Virdiramo and provincial appointees Celina Reitberger and Don Smith. City of Thunder Bay clerk John Hannam acts as the board secretary.

History

The Thunder Bay Police were formed in 1970, a result of the amalgamation of the cities of Port Arthur and Fort William and their respective police forces. The force was originally headquartered in the Fort William Police station, which is now the home of the Thunder Bay Historical Museum. The headquarters was relocated to 1200 Balmoral Street in 1987 and the entire agency was under one roof by 1993. The 9-1-1 emergency service was implemented in the summer of 1986.

Branches

The force is made up of six branches: administration, uniform patrol, criminal investigation, neighbourhood policing, resource centre, and traffic.

Uniformed patrol includes an emergency task unit/containment team and K9 unit. Criminal investigation includes street gang, property crime, crime scene, and fraud units, an intelligence section and a crime analyst. Neighbourhood policing centres are located in both of Thunder Bay's urban cores and in six suburban neighbourhoods.

References

  1. Gomes, Julio. "Show of strength", The Chronicle-Journal, 21 November 2007. Retrieved on 24 November 2007.


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