Ontario_Provincial_Police Ontario_Provincial_Police

Ontario Provincial Police - Definition and Overview

Related Words: Agrarian, Agricultural, Authoritarian, Beg, Bey, Bigot, Bigoted, Borne, Burgrave, Closed, Clown, Collector, Country
Ontario coat of arms
Politics of Ontario
Monarchy
Lieutenant-Governor
Parliament
Cabinet
Premier
Former Premiers
Political parties
Ontario politicians
Court of Appeal
Census Divisions
Ontario electoral districts
Ontario Provincial Police

The Ontario Provincial Police, also known as the OPP, are the province of Ontario's police force. The organization is responsible for providing police service to localities in the province that do not otherwise have municipal or regional police services. Therefore, they are mainly present in small rural and suburban localities, on the provincial highways or in the northern part of the province. They also have a mandate to investigate province-wide crimes. It was originally founded in 1909 with 45 men to bring peace and order to the province's northern regions where mines and logging camps were experiencing delinquency. The organization was rendered permanent when constables became necessary in Ontario's small towns.

The OPP Headquarters are located in Orillia. The force employs roughly 5300 officers. Recruits are trained at the Ontario Police College in Aylmer, then in their training facilities in Orillia. The starting rank is provincial constable. The first OPP detachment was in Bala. The current OPP commissioner is Gwen Boniface. The OPP is the second-largest police service in Canada; only the RCMP outnumbers the force in manpower. The OPP has among its many initiatives an auxiliary program designed especially for citizens interesting in receiving first hand experience in the organization. It is a volunteer program where citizens join and receive a special training in order to assist provincial constables in their duty.

See also

External link

Copyright 2009 WordIQ.com - Privacy Policy  :: Terms of Use  :: Contact Us  :: About Us
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the this Wikipedia article.