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Fort Macleod residents were assured last week the first crop of
recruits will arrive on schedule in the fall of 2010 at the new
Alberta Police and Peace Officer Training Centre.
The man in charge of the $110-million police college project was in
Fort Macleod to meet with local officials and the public.
"We're still on track to turn sod early next year," police college
project manager Bill Meade said. "It will be a two-year build."
Meade and other government staff working on the police college
project attended the May 28 open house at the community hall
hosted by Fort Macleod town council.
Meade told the more than 110 people at the open house considerable
work is being done in the background to move the police college
project ahead.
"There isn't a model to follow," Meade said. "That's one of our
challenges we have."
The Alberta Police and Peace Officer Training Centre is to be a
world-class training centre used by police forces in Alberta and
around the world.
"One of the first things we had to do is figure out how many people
are going to use it," Meade said.
The college is to be built to serve for 30 years, and designers
have to know how many people it will serve.
"Even though you haven't seen a lot of what we've been doing, it's
really because we've had to get a handle on the numbers for 30
years," Meade said. "That's been a real challenge, but kind of a
fun one too."
Meade told the audience there are three groups of people who will
use the police college.
"There is the group that we know are going to use it," Meade said
of police officers, corrections facility staff and peace
officers. "We had to ask them what are their (human resource)
requirements, what their recruiting numbers will be for the next
30 years. They looked at us like we were from Mars."
"We had to really work with them to figure out what that was going
to look like," Meade said.
The second group of people who might use the college for training
are those who require sidearms or other skill sets.
"There's a whole bunch of potential students in that second
category that we're just negotiating with now," Meade said.
While they might not attend the college as recruits, they will use
the facility for ongoing training and recertification.
"You hear some talk about border security people getting firearms,
and maybe Parks Canada people getting sidearms," Meade said.
"When that happens they usually get their initial training at a
central location, but then for recertification . . they'll
potentially be coming to us."
The third category of people who might be trained at the police
college represent an international group.
"The policing community across our world is in need of such a
facility," Meade said. "Canada through our RCMP have a very good
reputation about training officers . . . and we think there is a
real market to have ongoing recruit training for some of our
specialty forces."
As an example Meade cited Canadian police officers who are sent
overseas to help in war-torn countries and other trouble spots.
"Those individuals need training, not in policing, but in terms of
going and helping out in other cultures for the most part,"
Meade said.
People working on the project are optimistic some of those groups
will use the police college in Fort Macleod.
"We have to balance how big we think we need (the college) to be,
with our potential revenue streams," Meade said. "We can't
overbuild it dramatically, but we have to make sure it's big
enough (to last) for 30 years. That takes a lot of detailed
assessment and an awful lot of planning work."
Once that is completed the information will be shared with Alberta
Infrastructure to prepare cost estimates. Meade will then report
back to the provincial government on the number of students, the
revenue streams and the cost to build the college.
Project officials will also determine what the market is like in
terms of a private-public partnership, such as the government
leasing the facility for 30 years and possibly the province
owning the college at the end of that three-decade term.
"There's all kinds of different scenarios we can explore with the
market place," Meade said.
Meade said his group is close to releasing to the market an
expression of interest. The next step is to release the
pre-qualifications.
"What we're looking for here is to weed down the number of groups
that might be able to pull this off to a manageable number,"
Meade said. "It will probably be two or three."
The next step will be a request for proposals from that small
number.
"They'll respond to that, and then we'll put the shovel in the
ground," Meade said.
Solicitor General's special projects unit manager Dr. Curtis Clarke
said there is another factor.
"Because we're starting from a blank slate here, we're looking at a
brand-new model of strategic training," Clarke said. "We're
moving toward a scenario-based, problem-based learning model.
That's manpower intensive."
Clarke said the model is also infrastructure intensive.
"It's not just building a bunch of classrooms and having our
officers sit there," Clarke explained. "We have to build
scenario environments, small communities, small store fronts,
and a variety of other things that will facilitate that kind of
training."
That will shape the design, the style and the structure of the
police college.
"Until we have that set up and we have all our stakeholders, that
is all of the law enforcement agencies in Alberta, willing to
buy into that style of training, we have nothing," said Clarke,
who is in charge of curriculum development. "We needed to have
that in place so that we can then look at the design style.
that's taken us some time as well."
Meade told Fort Macleod residents the 1,400 recruits who will
attend the college each year will live two to a room in
dormitory-style accommodation at the site.
"There are a whole bunch of reasons we want them together," said
Meade, adding one of the main reasons is to allow a strong bond
to develop between the police officers. Fort Macleod residents
also learned the police college will employ 75 instructors.
"At the moment what we're looking at is about half of that would be
full-time and the other half would be seconded from police
services or other agencies," said Clarke. "Usually the seconded
officers are here for a year to two years."
It is likely all the instructors will live in housing in Fort
Macleod rather than at the police college.
"The full-time instructors will certainly be in the town, and the
part-time or seconded officers, we would like to see them being
integrated into the community," Clarke said. "That's a lot of
space to have at the academy, and to also have them isolated at
the academy for two years."
Clarke said seconded officers don't live on-site at other police
academies he has been involved with across the country.
"They live in the community," Clarke said, "and are set up through
our administration to be integrated into the community."
The audience was also told driver training will be done on a track
on the college site.
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