Chief Clive Weighill
President, Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police
Chief Weighill served 31 years with the Regina Police Service, prior to joining the Saskatoon Police Service in 2006. In Regina he worked in Patrol, Communications, Crime Prevention, Commercial Crime, Property Crime, Drugs, Vice, Planning and Research and Senior Administration.
He has lectured to universities, police colleges, national conferences, federal, provincial and municipal governments and appeared before Parliamentary Committees regarding; crime trends, community policing, organized crime, street gangs, vehicle theft, leadership, and the future of policing.
Chief Weighill’s associations are:
- Member of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police (CACP), the Saskatchewan Association of Chiefs of Police
- Co-Chair – National Police Information Services Advisory Board
- Governor – North Saskatchewan Corps of Commissionaires
- Member – Advisory Committee on Judicial Appointments – Saskatchewan
- Member – CACP Police Information and Statistics Committee
- Member – Canadian Safety and Security Program Advisory Board
- Member – Saskatchewan Mental Health and Addictions Action Plan
- Past Co-Chair CACP Information Technology Sub-Committee
- Past Chair Prairie Region of National Joint Committee of Senior Justice Officials
- Chaired – Business Requirements Sub-Committee developing the business requirements for the $134 million modernization of CPIC.
Chief Weighill holds certificates in Administration and in Continuing Education/ Administrative Development from the University of Regina. He has attended Executive courses at the Canadian Police College, the Banff School of Management and has graduated from the Senior Management Institute for Police, held in Boston and sponsored by the Police Executive Research Forum in the United States.
Chief Weighill is the recipient of the Police Exemplary Service Medal and Bar, the Saskatchewan Protective Services Medal, the Saskatchewan Centennial Medal, the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal and is a Commander of the Order of Merit of the Police Forces.
Chief Weighill served 31 years with the Regina Police Service, prior to joining the Saskatoon Police Service in 2006. In Regina he worked in Patrol, Communications, Crime Prevention, Commercial Crime, Property Crime, Drugs, Vice, Planning and Research and Senior Administration.
He has lectured to universities, police colleges, national conferences, federal, provincial and municipal governments and appeared before Parliamentary Committees regarding; crime trends, community policing, organized crime, street gangs, vehicle theft, leadership, and the future of policing.
Chief Weighill’s associations are:
- Member of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police (CACP), the Saskatchewan Association of Chiefs of Police
- Co-Chair – National Police Information Services Advisory Board
- Governor – North Saskatchewan Corps of Commissionaires
- Member – Advisory Committee on Judicial Appointments – Saskatchewan
- Member – CACP Police Information and Statistics Committee
- Member – Canadian Safety and Security Program Advisory Board
- Member – Saskatchewan Mental Health and Addictions Action Plan
- Past Co-Chair CACP Information Technology Sub-Committee
- Past Chair Prairie Region of National Joint Committee of Senior Justice Officials
- Chaired – Business Requirements Sub-Committee developing the business requirements for the $134 million modernization of CPIC.
Chief Weighill holds certificates in Administration and in Continuing Education/ Administrative Development from the University of Regina. He has attended Executive courses at the Canadian Police College, the Banff School of Management and has graduated from the Senior Management Institute for Police, held in Boston and sponsored by the Police Executive Research Forum in the United States.
Chief Weighill is the recipient of the Police Exemplary Service Medal and Bar, the Saskatchewan Protective Services Medal, the Saskatchewan Centennial Medal, the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal and is a Commander of the Order of Merit of the Police Forces.