Current provincial overview of policing responsibilities, police services, and public-safety context in Alberta.
Last evidence check means this project’s automated public-repository check; it is not a government audit, regulator audit, external audit, or assurance engagement.
001military-securityAlberta already has provincial public-safety and emergency-management responsibilities, which could provide a partial institutional base but not a complete national-security system.002rcmp-provincial-policingAlberta currently has provincial policing responsibilities and an Alberta Police Act framework, while RCMP contract policing remains an important part of service delivery in many Alberta communities.003rcmp-provincial-policingA pro-independence policing case is strongest when it proposes negotiated continuity, staged implementation, local accountability, and funded service standards rather than assuming the current RCMP model automatically continues or instantly disappears.004rcmp-provincial-policingThe main transition risk is operational continuity for emergency response, investigations, dispatch, records, labs, officer staffing, municipal policing, Indigenous policing, court support, and oversight.005rcmp-provincial-policingThe dossier uncertainty is medium-high until public documents show written policing agreements, budgets, staffing, data access, municipal and Indigenous arrangements, and tested readiness plans.