Serving Canada's Aboriginal communities is one of the RCMP's strategic priorities.
Since the earliest days of the Northwest Mounted Police in the 1870s, the RCMP has been a long-standing law enforcement partner of Aboriginal communities. We continue to develop a unique and important relationship with Aboriginal people living in Canada.
The RCMP's National Aboriginal Policing Services (NAPS) is responsible for planning, developing and managing the organization's strategies and initiatives. NAPS works closely with Aboriginal groups to develop innovative policing approaches that meet their distinctive needs.
NAPS oversees a number of Aboriginal programs and initiatives, including the following:
NAPS also provides support on the First Nations Policing Policy to its partners in the Aboriginal Policing Directorate of Public Safety Canada.
A main initiative of the RCMP's Drugs and Organized Crime Awareness Service's (DOCAS) is the Aboriginal Shield Program, a youth-driven program that provides substance abuse prevention and healthy lifestyles coaching to Aboriginal communities.
The RCMP maintains ongoing dialogue with the:
The RCMP developed a National Recruiting Strategy to ensure that our workforce is representative of the communities we serve; a component of the strategy focuses on encouraging Aboriginal people to become RCMP officers or civilian members.
In November 2010, the RCMP's Aboriginal Community Constable pilot program began. The program will allow the RCMP to attract, develop and retain persons with specific linguistic, cultural and community skills that go beyond those taught at Depot. This will enable the RCMP to tailor our policing services to specific, community-identified, needs.