A Quebec police officer the oldest in Canada is retiring

A Quebec police officer, the oldest in Canada, is retiring after 58 years of service

Longueuil Conurbation police officer Lionel Bourdon is retiring at the age of 79 after a 58-year career. He was Canada’s longest-serving police officer.

Police officers from the RCMP, the Sûreté du Québec and Longueuil underscored that achievement by presenting him with a guard of honor on Thursday.

“I didn’t expect that at all,” says Mr. Bourdon. I didn’t know anything.”

Lionel Bourdon began his career in 1965 with aspirations of becoming a police officer.

“I stayed on the other side of the police station and saw the police coming in at the beginning and end of their shift,” he said. Even when I went to school, I went back with them.”


However, he could never have imagined practicing this profession for so long.

“Usually a police officer can retire after 30 years, I was 30 in 1995,” he explains.

Over the years, the Sergeant has seen the profession evolve.

“There was the influx of women into the police force, on a technological level there were a lot of new devices,” he says. Working methods have evolved. […] The training is improved today, it is forced.

Even when he retires, his projects remain connected to his passion.

“I’ll try to travel a bit, but I’m very passionate about the Longueuil Police Museum,” shares Mr Bourdon. I have collected items over the years […] and it will be kept in a room at the headquarters and then we will try to highlight it by creating a museum.

Watch his full interview in the video above