Saskatoon

Saskatoon police freeze wages, find other savings worth $1M

The City of Saskatoon is asking the police service to shrink its budget by about $1 million due to shortfalls in funding from the provincial government.

City asked Saskatoon Police Service to shrink budget due to shortfall

Saskatoon police Chief Clive Weighill said the police service will save $714,000 from a freeze on wage increases for all city employees. (CBC)

The City of Saskatoon is asking the police service to shrink its budget by about $1 million due to shortfalls in funding from the provincial government.

Most of that — $714,000 — will come from a freeze on wage increases for all city employees, said Saskatoon Police Service Chief Clive Weighill.

"We're just doing our part," he said.

"The city has asked us to claw these savings back out of our budget and we've done so."

Weighill said the budget reduction won't affect front-line services.   

The budget was on the agenda Thursday at a meeting of the board of police commissioners. The police service's overall budget is about $96 million.

Another $250,000 in savings will come via the reduced power and heating needs at the police service's new energy-efficient headquarters.

Police are also expected to save $31,000 on gassing up vehicles thanks to lower fuel prices.

The union representing Saskatoon's police officers could not immediately be reached for comment.