City of Merritt budget cut proposal may end 24/7 policing: RCMP commander
MERRITT — The City of Merritt is in the second year of a two-year plan to restock its reserves as it builds back from the 2021 floods. Last year, residents faced a 12.5 per cent tax increase, with the current 2025 proposed budget expected to come in between eight and 12 per cent. Council’s plan is to then drop to more manageable increases in 2026 once the city’s reserves return to a safe level.
The current working budget under consideration by Merritt’s city council proposes an eight per cent tax increase for 2025. But getting to that figure could mean potential service cuts, including to the RCMP.
“The RCMP costs — you will probably see more from me and council on this. We are at a point now where costs are becoming almost unbearable. When I came (on council) in 2008, our RCMP costs were $1.75 million. Today, they are $3.5 million — so [that is] getting close to half of our budget,” Mayor Mike Goetz told CFJC Today Friday (Jan. 10).
The proposed cut is to drop from 17 positions to 15, with the mayor noting the RCMP has struggled to fill all the positions within the detachment.