
Charlottetown police offering free tuition to some cadets, but there's a 5-year catch
The sponsorship will cover the cost of tuition at the Atlantic Police Academy, amounting to about $32,900 per year, said Jennifer McCarron.
"Our numbers are low and we can fit it in our budget to actually send them to the academy this year," McCarron said.
The police service will pays the tuition cost upfront, and the province will reimburse the cost when the cadets graduate from the 32-week program, she said.
Those cadets won't have to pay back any of the money as long as they graduate from the program and commit to serving with the Charlottetown police force for five years, McCarron said.
The police service will begin screening its applications in early October, with the cadets set to begin at the academy in January 2026.
An information session with more details is scheduled for August 6 at the Murchison Centre on St. Pius X Avenue off St. Peters Road.
An advantage for local police
The City of Summerside already has a sponsorship program in place to send cadets to the Atlantic Police Academy.
McCarron said this kind of sponsorship program is the new normal for police academy admissions in Atlantic Canada.
According to the Atlantic Police Academy's website, the recommended pathway to admissions is by applying through a police agency in one of the Atlantic provinces.
Charlottetown police use the same standards and application process as the academy, McCarron said, noting that the main difference for the local police service is that it takes a more active role in recruiting and doing background checks.
She said getting to see and meet the applicants before they start to go through the program is an advantage for the city's police force.
"It used to be [that] we wouldn't meet them until they were here for on-the-job training. This way, we get to meet them, get to know them a bit through this whole process, and we kind of know what we're getting when they graduate," she said.
Nationwide shortages
Charlottetown's police service has faced challenges keeping its numbers up, McCarron said, noting that it's part of a larger trend.
"Every police department across Canada has a shortage. Policing is not as attractive as it used to be, so now we have to attract," she said.
While retirement is typically the main reason officers leave the Charlottetown police, McCarron said the local force also lost eight people to the RCMP in the past year.
She said Charlottetown tries to rotate its current officers between divisions within the force to give them a chance to try different things throughout their careers.
While the new sponsorship program is mainly focused on recruitment, there are also retention benefits, she said.
"It also helps older officers as well, when younger officers start, because they have different points of view," McCarron said.
"We have officers that have been here for 25, 30 years.… When you put them with a cadet, they learn just as much as a cadet does."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Scooping success: 11-year-old P.E.I. entrepreneur serves sundaes and smiles
Maria Sarrouh talks to an 11-year-old entrepreneur in P.E.I regarding her success in running an ice cream business. When customers ring the bell at Scooper's Dairy Bar in Brudenell, P.E.I., the pint-sized employee behind the counter can sometimes be a surprise. Roya Cooper, 11, is turning her summer break into sweet profit. She runs the shop herself, checking freezer temperatures, scooping sundaes and balancing the books. 'They think that I'm way older,' Roya said. Some cash she had saved up helped start the shop. A loan through the Community Business Development Corporation, a not-for-profit network that finances small businesses and startups in Atlantic Canada, covered the rest. 'I thought ice cream was really cool. I liked eating it, and I wanted to start a business,' she said. It is not her first enterprise. At just six years old, she made French books out of post-it notes, 'She sold those bad boys for $5 apiece to tourists,' said her mom, Ambyr Cooper. 'She loves money. Always has.' Roya gets her hard-working nature from her parents. They run several businesses, including the Brudenell Riding Stables next door. '(We're) super proud,' said Carson Cooper, her dad. 'She's so good at doing everything,' added her mom. 'It's a way harder job than you think it is.' Scoop work can be sticky. Roya says chipping into the tubs takes muscle, and she often finds herself managing staff years older than she is. Her last employee threw in the towel. 'Too much cleaning for her,' the young owner said. 'Some are like, 'I don't really need to do this because I don't need to listen to you,' but others actually respect me.' So for now, she's working seven days a week, until she finds a replacement – or school starts. Most customers leave happy. 'I love the ice cream. And the chocolate, of course, is my favourite,' one patron said. Still, Roya has learned she can't please everyone. 'Some are like, this ice-cream scoop isn't so big. You have to redo it.' Her latest creation is nacho ice cream, a big scoop topped with sprinkles, sauce and waffle chips. But Roya's favourite flavour is peanut butter fudge crunch. After closing up, she goes home and handcrafts earrings shaped like mini ice-cream cones. She packages the accessories, then sells them from a small display outside, adding another revenue stream to her store. She says she wants to serve many more sundaes in the years to come, and her dream is for the business to grow with her.


CBC
14 hours ago
- CBC
More women wanted in P.E.I.'s tech industry, conference told
The P.E.I. IT Alliance invited women leaders from the province's tech industry to speak about their jobs and opportunities for work on the Island. As CBC's Laura Meader reports, they say there are many jobs available, and they hope more women consider them.


CBC
14 hours ago
- CBC
Group says its homelessness prevention program needs more money from P.E.I. government
The John Howard Society of P.E.I. has been running a provincial pilot project called the Prevention and Diversion Fund, which provided vulnerable Islanders money to pay for things like first months' rent to prevent them from becoming homeless. Government was funding that program, but the society says it needs more money for the program to work. CBC's Tony Davis has more.