Lower Mainland Police and Crime Commissioner

The Lower Mainland Police and Crime Commissioner (usually abbreviated internally as the PCC) is an elected public official in the Canadian province of British Columbia (BC), who is charged with the oversight, executive management, and policymaking of the Lower Mainland Police Board, the official employer of the Lower Mainland Constabulary (LMC). The Lower Mainland Police and Crime Commissioner is elected by and from amongst the 47 members of the Police Board, who are themselves popularly elected.

The Lower Mainland Police and Crime Commissioner is one of two public officials to whom the Chief Constable of the Lower Mainland Constabulary is accountable, the other being the Attorney General of British Columbia. The office of Police and Crime Commissioner has a three-year term, with no limit on the amount of terms served, consecutive or otherwise.

The incumbent Lower Mainland Police and Crime Commissioner is Malcolm Brodie, mayor of the city of Richmond, South Fraser County; he has been PCC since 2014, currently serving his third term, which began 1 February 2020.