Pubdate: Thu, 24 May 2001 Source: Tri-City News (CN BC) Copyright: 2001, Tri-City News Contact: http://www.tricitynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1239 Author: Janis Cleugh DRUGS, SPEEDERS? WHAT CONCERNS YOU? On a scale of one to five, how important is it for you to know your neighbour has a drug lab? How do you rank traffic issues in your community? And have you ever complained about the police - collectively or individually? These and 39 other questions will be posed to 500 Port Moody residents next week as part of a telephone survey for the city's police department. PMPD is planning how to spend its multi-million dollar budget for the next three years and wants feedback on how to improve its services. It will also gauge the community's expectations of the department as well as determine it perception of crime and attitudes about safety. "What we want to know is, are we doing a good job and, if not, how can we do better?" Chief Const. Paul Shrive said. "A while back, we had a focus group to get some ideas and we were told that we're not making the most of our volunteers. That little piece of information was a real eye-opener for us." The survey, developed with SFU criminologist Bill Glackman, will randomly target 500 homeowners; the phone poll is expected to take about 15 minutes and will be carried out between 3 and 8 p.m. for two weeks starting May 28. The department hired five students from PMSS and a supervisor to ask questions. The budget for the survey is $6,000 but Shrive considers it money well-spent. "For us not to spend this money and to manage a $3.7 million police budget is like buying an airline ticket but not knowing the destination," he said. Results, which will be correlated by Glackman, will be ready by September. According to PMPD's annual report for 2000, the city has changed significantly in the past 25 years, from a bedroom community to a suburb of Vancouver - the busiest drug entry port in Canada, home to the Hell's Angels, the Big Circle Boys, other organized crime and a host of other criminal operations. Crimes such as armed robbery and marijuana growing operations are now commonplace in the city: a grow op investigation ties up two detectives for four to six days, and 10 grow op inquiries are ongoing in the department at any given time. These days, crime centres on drug and alcohol abuse. The more serious offences in PoMo are home invasions, prostitution, drug labs and attempted murders. Last year, PoMo Police responded to 14,719 requests for service, including several for the Serious Crime Section. Some of the cases investigated by the section in 2000, which were made public last month, included: * An attempted murder of a young woman by her boyfriend; the man beat her and was about to slit her throat when relatives and friends intervened. He was charged with attempted murder. * The seizure of 36 firearms from a home, including a restricted handgun for which no permit existed, and two prohibited handguns. * Shutdown of a major methamphetamine lab with Coquitlam RCMP. The accused pleaded guilty and is now serving four years in jail. * Monitoring of a major drug trafficker who had moved to PoMo after an attempt was made to kill him. As a result of the monitoring, the trafficker moved away and has since been arrested in Portland. * Investigation of an internet fraud ring that resulted in three young people being charged. The department has also had to contend with drug traffickers returning to PoMo. Two years ago, PMPD officers launched Project Youth Downsize to eliminate high-profile traffickers in the area but most have now been released from jail, according to the report. "The CIS section does not have the resources to mount a sustained effort of drug enforcement to combat these traffickers," the report said. "A good majority of youth addicted to heroin identified in Project Downsize continue to suffer and strain police resources, committing robberies, assaults, break and enters, [stealing] vehicles and are involved in domestic disputes with their parents." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake