Public safety, on the Nation's terms.
A professionally managed, 24/7 non-police peacekeeping service purpose-built for First Nations communities — operating under the direct authority of Chief and Council to fill the critical gap between under-resourced local response, RCMP policing, and the day-to-day safety needs of community members.
A force multiplier — not a replacement.
The Peacekeeper Program is engineered to strengthen the systems already in place, not displace them.
RMFC's Peacekeeper Program is a professionally managed, 24/7 non-police public safety and peacekeeping service purpose-built for First Nations communities, operating under the direct authority of Chief and Council to fill the critical gap between under-resourced local health-related response efforts, RCMP policing, and the day-to-day health and safety needs of community members.
Staffed by trained peacekeepers with backgrounds in military peacekeeping operations, law enforcement, security, and community service, RMFC deploys uniformed Peacekeepers on continuous patrols, responds to calls for service, conducts wellness checks and missing persons follow-up, enforces Band Council Resolutions, monitors CCTV infrastructure, supports school safety, and provides integrated emergency response alongside local community response efforts, RCMP, and EMS — acting as a force multiplier for existing emergency services rather than a replacement.
The program's value to First Nations is both immediate and structural: communities gain a culturally accountable, locally responsive safety presence that reduces response times, deters crime, intervenes in crises before they escalate, and generates the documented incident intelligence — patrol logs, use-of-force records, heat maps, and outcome data — needed to justify and sustain ongoing ISC funding.
All of this is delivered through a turnkey model that removes the administrative burden of standing up an in-house program, while keeping sovereignty over public safety decisions exactly where it belongs — with the Nation itself.
What the program tracks.
The figures below are illustrative — shown for demonstration to convey the categories of activity the Peacekeeper Program captures, from patrols and wellness checks to response times and RCMP/EMS assists. Verified deployment data is reported directly to Chief and Council.
What's deployed, where it counts.
Nine service lines, delivered as a unified program — sovereignty stays with the Nation, the operational burden moves to RMFC.
Continuous Uniformed Patrols
24/7 deployed peacekeeper presence with marked vehicles and visible identification, tuned to community geography and risk profile.
Calls for Service Response
Live dispatch and on-scene response across the full spectrum of community safety incidents — captured directly into RMFC's intelligence platform.
Wellness Checks
Coordinated welfare visits and follow-up to support members at risk, with clear documentation for community health partners.
Missing Persons Follow-Up
Structured search, follow-up, and family liaison coordinated with RCMP and trusted community members.
BCR Enforcement
Enforcement of Band Council Resolutions on the ground, with documented patrol logs and outcome reporting.
CCTV Monitoring
24/7 oversight of community CCTV infrastructure, with integrated alerting and recorded incident review.
School Safety Support
Visible safety presence around schools, drop-off and pick-up coverage, and incident liaison with school administration.
RCMP & EMS Integration
Operational coordination with RCMP and EMS — every assist logged, every handoff documented for downstream review.
Incident Intelligence
Patrol logs, use-of-force records, heat maps, and outcome data delivered to Chief and Council for ISC reporting.
The work, in the field.
Operational photography from RMFC's Peacekeeper deployment at Alexis Nakota Sioux Nation. Each image documents real frontline activity captured by the platform.
Peacekeeper white paper.
A formal document outlining the program's mandate, deployment model, governance accountability, and outcomes framework — written for Chief and Council, ISC reviewers, and partner agencies.
Peacekeeper white paper.
The full white paper is in active drafting and will be available for download once approved. In the interim, briefings can be requested directly through the contact form — RMFC leadership is available to walk Chief and Council through the program in person or via secure call.
