'A job that has to be done': Being an RCMP diver is not for the faint-hearted - Action News
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Nova Scotia

'A job that has to be done': Being an RCMP diver is not for the faint-hearted

There are only about 70 RCMP divers in Canada, and their work can involve hunting for bodies the victims of accidents or crimes that are lost in lakes, rivers or the ocean.

There are only about 70 RCMP divers in Canada who are often tasked with finding bodies and evidence

Searching for bodies and hunting for evidence are all in a day's work for the RCMP Underwater Recovery Team. (David Pate/CBC)

They work in a murky world, where they are often sent out to search by touch alone.

And aday's work can involve hunting for bodies the victims of accidentsor crimes that are lost in lakes, rivers or the ocean.

The members of the RCMP Underwater Recovery Team form a specialized unit that is on call across the country. There are only about 70RCMPdivers in Canada, so it's an elite group that'sused to working in extreme conditions.

A small team with six members and more being trained is on call for the Maritime provinces. The team ismade up of regular officers who are called on whenever a search is needed in water.

Underwater recovery isn't for everybody.- RCMP Cpl. Mark Bishop

In the past year, that hasinvolved about 20 call-outs.

"Primarily we look for missing people or missing items underwater, whether it's related to investigation [or]a piece of evidence,"saidRCMPCpl. Mark Bishop.

"It could be anything as small as a bullet to as large as a car, plane, boat."

The team is often sent to locate bodies missing after an accident. (David Pate/CBC)

This is not work for the faint-hearted.

The grim reality of underwater recovery is that the team is often sent to find bodies after an accident.

Giving families closure

"It's a job that has to be done," said Bishop.

"Underwater recovery isn't for everybody. When we're looking for a missing person, we're helping the family as well because [when] we locate that person, we're giving themsome closure."

Sometimes, the team is sent to search for important evidence.

The team has twice found evidence"instrumental" in leading to a conviction in murder cases, said Bishop.

All the divers have been through weeks of training at theRCMPtraining centre inNanaimo, B.C.

Training day

This month saw the Maritimes RCMP team undertake a day of training at the Department of Natural Resources office on Lake William in Waverley, N.S.

Divers arrived in aspecialized truck that carries their equipment and can act as a mobile command centre for the search.It also includes a compressor, so that divers' air tanks can be filled on site.

A supervising diver ticked off a checklist of equipment and tasks for each diver.

The RCMP team training at the Department of Natural Resources office on Lake William in Waverley, N.S., earlier in December. (David Pate/CBC)

Once in the water, divers were tethered by rope to a supporting team member on shore.

'We do a lot by feel'

The December training exercise was in shallow waterin reasonable visibility.

But a real call-out could be in February, in a snowstorm, in the dark.

"We do a lot by feel, for things as small as a cellphone or bullets," said Bishop."We train in zero visibility and sometimes complete darkness."

Poor visibility isn't the only challenge the team faces.

Sgt. Ross Burt of the Halifax Regional Police is also a member of the team as part of theforce's integrated unit with the RCMP.

Cold, dark conditions

He remembersbeing towed on an underwater sledge off Peggys Cove, searching for a tourist swept into the ocean from the lighthouse rocks.

"Iwas so cold that I couldn't feel my arms or shoulders," he said.

The job can be demanding both physically and mentally.

"It's not something everybody can do," said Burt. "Nobody does what we do, and we've got great camaraderiewith the team."

All the divers have been through weeks of training at the RCMP training centre in Nanaimo, B.C. (David Pate/CBC)

There are resources in place within the force to help divers deal with the inevitable stress of recovering bodies, but the team members also rely heavily on each other for help both in the water and on land.

"We're really, really close and we look after each other a lot internally," said Burt.

Always on call

The next call for helpcould cometomorrowor next month.

They never know.

And while they wait, they gear up for the next training exerciseunder the ice in a New Brunswick lake in February.

It's fun for the divers, but there'sa tragic subtext:they practise there for the inevitable winter accidents involving snowmobiles and drivers crashing through the ice.