Posts Tagged ‘Private Security and Investigative Services Act’

Security Stakeholder Memo from The Private Security and Investigative Services Branch (PSISB)

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

ontario-government logo1

The Private Security and Investigative Services Branch (PSISB) is experiencing unexpected and unique challenges, including an increased volume of licence applications prompted by the upcoming G8 and G20 Summits. To help ensure that those licences that expire during the period leading up to the Summits are renewed despite this higher than normal volume, the Ministry has taken the following action.

The PSISB has made recent amendments to Regulations under the Private Security and Investigative Services Act, 2005 (PSISA).  The affected Regulations are the Term of Licences Regulation, the Registration Requirements for Business Entities Regulation and the Training and Testing Regulation.

These amendments ensure that existing licences with expiry dates from June 14, 2010 to June 30, 2010 may receive a 30 day extension, in the event that the Branch has not been able to process the application prior to the licence’s expiry.  This provision applies only to those applications received by the Branch prior to their licence expiry date and which the Branch has not been able to process.  This provision applies to individuals, licensed agencies and registered business.

For example, if the Branch receives an application on June 15, 2010 for a licence that expires on June 29, 2010 and the Branch is unable to process the application prior to June 29, 2010, the licence is automatically extended to July 29, 2010.

Individuals affected by this process will receive their plastic licence with the extended July expiry date.  The expiry date will not revert back to the original June date.

The amendments also ensure that affected licensees will not have to take and pass the mandatory test until they renew their licence in 2011.

The Branch will continue its efforts to ensure that all applications are processed as quickly as possible, however these amendments will ensure that licensees with imminent expiry dates are able to continue to provide security services at this critical time.

Finally, these amendments only relate to licences with an expiry from June 14 to June 30, 2010.  They do not allow for a 30 day extension to be applied to licences with expiry outside of these dates.  We strongly encourage licensees to submit their application at least 30 days prior to their licence expiry date to ensure that the Branch has adequate time to process their renewal.

Private Security & Investigative Services – News and Updates 25 Feb 2010

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

ontario_logo

February 25, 2010

As of April 15, 2010, the new basic Training and Testing Regulation takes effect. This Regulation helps strengthen the professional requirements for security guards and private investigators and enhance public safety.

For more information on the basic Training and Testing Regulation, please visit http://www.mcscs.jus.gov.on.ca/english/PISG/private_inv_sec.html

Roll Out of Mandatory Training Under PSISA Now Delayed Until Mid 2010

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

B Robertson Photo - blog formatby Brian Robertson, B.A., LL.B.

President, Diligent Security Training and Consulting Inc

www.diligenttraining.ca

Companies who were hoping to find out this month whether or not they had been awarded the contract to deliver standardized testing services as part of the mandatory training requirements that are to be brought in under the Private Security and Investigative Services Act (PSISA) have recently been notified that the Province’s original RFP has been cancelled and that a new RFP will be issued within the next few weeks.  As a consequence of this development, the Province’s anticipated target for implementation of standardized testing will now be pushed back from around the end of this year to sometime in the middle of 2010.

The original RFP, which was issued in late May, called for a successful contract services vendor to be selected by sometime in September, and for testing services to be up and running by the end of December.  With a new RFP slated to come out between now and the middle of October, it is unlikely that testing will now be implemented anytime prior to May or June, if then.  The Private Security and Investigative Services Branch (PSISB) is expected to make some kind of formal notification to industry stakeholders over the next couple of weeks.

Meanwhile, the Province’s contract with test development company Castle Worldwide proceeds on schedule.  The first test forms are being piloted this month, and subject matter experts from the industry have been invited to participate in standard setting workshops – for the purpose of making recommendations regarding pass marks for the two tests (one for security guards and one for private investigators) – on the last 2 days of September.

It is as yet unknown what effect this most recent setback – the additional  delay in the process of selecting an outside company to administer the standardized testing process – will have on any plans the Province may have had to publish the new Training and Testing Regulation which it is in the process of finalizing the wording for.  In June of this year the PSISB circulated a draft regulation for comment by industry stakeholders.

No Online Option for Security Training in Ontario: What Year Is This?

Friday, August 21st, 2009

B Robertson Photo - blog format

by Brian Robertson, B.A., LL.B.

President, Diligent Security Training and Consulting Inc

www.diligenttraining.ca

It has been 2 years since the Private Security and Investigative Services Act (PSISA) came into force in Ontario, over 6 years since the Province of Ontario stated its intention to include mandatory training as part of its regulatory reform package, and nearly 10 years since Patrick Shand died as a result of having been handcuffed and pinned down during an arrest in a parking lot in Scarborough.  This coming winter the first phase of mandatory training for licensed security guards and private investigators in Ontario will finally be implemented.  By next spring, it will have become an across-the-board requirement that all new guard license applicants have completed a 40-hour training course, and that all new PI license applicants have completed a 50-hour course, prior to licensing.

Early on in the process of determining what mandatory training in Ontario would look like, the Private Security and Investigative Services Branch (PSISB) decided that mandatory training would have to be delivered by means of face-to-face, instructor-facilitated, classroom-based learning.   The prescribed content has been set out in very broad general terms, and there will be no requirements for instructor certification, but the training will have to be delivered face to face.  No on-line delivery options will be permitted.  If a student hasn’t spent the requisite 40 or 50 hours in a classroom receiving instruction from a live instructor, he or she will not have met the Province’s mandatory training requirement.

There are many people in the security industry, including probably most trainers, who are generally convinced that receipt of face-to face instruction by a qualified instructor, coupled with the opportunity to ask questions and participate in class discussions, offers a way better learning experience for the average student than completion of a self-paced on-line course does. This may be true in many cases.  But not necessarily in all.

The young millenials who we all hire these days are a generation who were raised online. Online learning is second nature to many of them.  And the developments in on-line learning technology and pedagogy that have been made over the course of the last 20 years (i.e., since many of us went through basic training) have created opportunities for online learning that can be highly interactive.   Meanwhile, the ideal of rich, robust, interactive classroom learning that we all like to imagine pre-supposes the presence of an instructor who knows and loves his or her topic, who loves to teach, and who knows how to teach well.  It also pre-supposes that at least some of the students present will be the kind of thoughtful, motivated, active learners who like to participate in class discussions.  If one or other or both of these elements is absent, classroom learning can be a pretty tedious affair.

I’ll make the argument that neither on-line learning nor classroom learning are inherently any better than the other.  Everything we know about adult learning tells us that different learners have different learning styles, and all like to learn in different ways and at different paces.  Plus, online learning offers a practical learning option for students who live in the sorts of small communities and rural areas where the low numbers of people who will require training will mean that participation in formal classroom instruction is cost prohibitive.  It’s easy to organize a classroom-based course if you’ve got 24 students who need to take it.  It’s less easy if only one or two people in your town need to take it.

One of the reasons that the public regulators who set up mandatory training requirements tend to shy away from allowing online learning is their dogged commitment to the idea that training standards have to be articulated in terms of minimum training hours.  If you start with the notion that a course has to be 40 hours in length, how can you permit asynchrous online learning?  There’s no truly effective way to run a stopwatch on online learning.  But the idea of minimum training hours also flies in the face of everything we know about adult learning.  So a student sits for 2 hours in a room where a lecture on use of force theory is being delivered.  So what?  This tells us nothing about what that student has or has not heard, understood, and retained.  In the end, it will be the test administered by the PSISB that determines whether or not the poor fellow knows anything.  If he can pass it, who cares whether he acquired his knowledge from a 40-hour course, a 400-hour course, an on-line course, a good textbook, or from watching the discovery channel?  Either he knows the answers or he doesn’t.   If he does, why not let him go to work?

There are some well-qualified purveyors of on-line security training out there, and it will be interesting to see whether or not they attempt to bring pressure to bear on the PSISB to reconsider its position on on-line learning.  It will be interesting to see whether or not we in Ontario ultimately end up getting a mandatory training requirement designed for this century, or for the last.