Windsor

Province says it will fund training and maintenance for Windsor police helicopter

The provincial government has disclosed more information about a helicopter it’s buying for Windsor police amid questions from city officials about the aircraft’s cost to local taxpayers and stated border security mandate.

Ontario's Solicitor General provided some details 11 days after announcement

A helicopter on a tarmac.
An OPP version of the H-135 helicopter that has also been ordered for the Windsor Police Service. (CBC News)

The province has disclosed some more details about a helicopter the government is buying for Windsor police amid questions from city officials about the aircraft's cost to local taxpayers and stated border security mandate.

On May 15, Ontario Premier Doug Ford's government unveiled its 2025 budget, which includes $57 million to purchase two new Airbus H-135 helicopters — one for Niagara regional police, and one for Windsor police.

The aircraft are meant to help municipal law enforcement "with increased patrols, security, and enforcement at key entry points at the U.S. border," according to the budget.

A police helicopter.
An OPP version of the H-135 helicopter that the province has also ordered for Windsor police. (CBC News)

On Monday, the province told CBC Windsor that it will be covering some of the costs associated with the new equipment.

"Our government is ensuring police services have the tools they need to protect our borders and keep our communities safe — This includes supporting the Windsor Police Service with a new H-135 helicopter," wrote Dakota Moniz, director of communications for Ontario Solicitor General Michael Kerzner.

"In addition to the new helicopter, we will provide funding to the police service to hire and train tactical flight officers, and support the Ontario Provincial Police, who will provide maintenance for the helicopter upon its arrival in 2027," Moniz stated.

As of Monday evening, Moniz had not responded to follow-up questions regarding how much the province would be providing, and whether those amounts are included in the original $57-million investment.

Ontario Solicitor General Michael Kerzner speaks at the Toronto Police College on April 25, 2023.
Ontario Solicitor General Michael Kerzner speaks at the Toronto Police College on April 25, 2023. (Tijana Martin/The Canadian Press)

Windsor city councillor Jo-Anne Gignac, who chairs the Windsor Police Services Board, has expressed concerns about the costs associated with operating and maintaining a helicopter.

"I think for the people of Windsor to have to assume the cost of operating a helicopter is naturally concerning," Gignac told CBC after the announcement.

WATCH: Ontario budget promises new police helicopter for Windsor

Ontario budget promises new police helicopter and more skilled tradespeople for Windsor-Essex

14 days ago
Duration 2:28
A new helicopter for Windsor police and almost a billion dollars in funding for worker skills development are among the aspects of the latest Ontario budget that will have a direct impact on our region. CBC's Dalson Chen spoke with Coun. Jo-Anne Gignac of the police board and John D'Agnolo of Unifor Local 200 for their reactions.

After a meeting of the Windsor Police Services Board last week, Gignac said the city was still awaiting details from the province about the helicopter.

"We still don't have the information that we need to be able to sign an agreement in terms of that tool," Gignac said.

"And it is a tool. It's a tool that I appreciate the premier has thought that it might be a positive thing."

A woman with white hair sits at the head of a conference table
Coun. Jo-Anne Gignac, chair of the Windsor Police Service Board, leads a meeting on Thursday, May 22, 2025. (Emma Loop/CBC)

There have also been questions about whether it's the role of a municipal police service to patrol the international border — which is normally a federal responsibility.

"It's just getting to the point where downloading of different responsibilities that were never part of our municipal responsibilities are coming left and right," Gignac said. "And so we have to be very careful."

Both the Canadian and Ontario governments have implemented new border security measures in response to criticisms from U.S. President Donald Trump, who has claimed that fentanyl smuggling from Canada justifies imposition of tariffs on Canadian goods — despite data showing that the vast majority of fentanyl enters the U.S. from Mexico. 

In an effort to appease Trump, Ottawa announced in December that it would spend $1.3 billion on beefing up border security — which includes having the RCMP patrol the border with leased Black Hawk helicopters.

A large black helicopter with RCMP logos.
A Sikorsky Black Hawk helicopter equipped for the RCMP. (Royal Canadian Mounted Police)

The Windsor detachment of the RCMP declined an interview request on Monday and did not respond to questions about coordinating with the coming Windsor police helicopter patrol.

There's some precedent for the province's new police helicopters. Ford's government previously said it was spending $134 million on five helicopters for police in Ottawa and the Toronto area.

The latest announcement "builds on" that investment, the budget says, adding that the new aircraft "will help protect Ontario's borders and keep highways and roadways safe from violent carjackings, auto theft, street racing, and impaired driving."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Emma Loop

Digital Reporter/Editor

Emma Loop is a digital reporter/editor for CBC Windsor. She previously spent eight years covering politics, national security, and business in Washington, D.C. Before that, she covered Canadian politics in Ottawa. She has worked at the Windsor Star, Ottawa Citizen, Axios, and BuzzFeed News, where she was a member of the FinCEN Files investigative reporting team that was named a finalist for the 2021 Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting. She was born and raised in Essex County, Ont. You can reach her at emma.loop@cbc.ca.

With files from Dalson Chen