Pubdate: Fri, 21 Jan 2005 Source: Amherst Daily News (CN NS) Copyright: Amherst Daily News 2005 Contact: http://www.amherstdaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3379 Author: Darrell Cole COUNTY CONCERNED OVER POSSIBLE DRUG CLOSURE WALLACE -- The chair of Cumberland County's policing services committee is adopting a wait and see attitude over the possible closure of the RCMP drug section in Truro. "It's something we as a committee and council will be investigating," Coun. Gerald Langille said Thursday. "I'm going to be speaking to the RCMP and the affected officers to see what they know. We need to get some information about this." Earlier this week, Colchester-Musquodoboit Valley MLA Brooke Taylor sounded the alarm about the drug section, which serves northern Nova Scotia from the Canso Causeway to Amherst and over to Enfield. Taylor said sources have told him that one of the province's four drug sections may be disbanded and its officers reallocated elsewhere, possibly Sydney and Halifax. Langille said he cannot speak for the county, but feels personally such a move would be a backwards step considering Cumberland is the lone land entrypoint to the province and all drugs entering Nova Scotia via highway have to come through this area. "I can't understand their reasoning if that's what they are considering," Langille said. "That section is providing a valuable service to the people of this area and the people of the province by stopping the flow of drugs into Nov Scotia. They have had success at both the Port Elgin and Amherst border entries and that presence has to be maintained." There is no word on whether the office is being disbanded. A spokesperson with RCMP headquarters in Halifax said a review of the federal policing program is currently underway with some reallocation being considered to make the best use of federal funds. Because of this review, Const. Gary Smith said officers throughout Nova Scotia may be moved to different locations within the province. Taylor said more than $2 million in drugs has been confiscated in the northern region over the last three years and feels it would be unreasonable of the RCMP to expect the remaining officers to pick up this work on top of their regular duties. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh