Pubdate: Wed, 09 Apr 2003 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Pete McMartin SENDING DRUG PROBLEM TO CITY HALL Flash! The Vancouver police department has discovered that dangerous addictive drugs called "cocaine" and "heroin" are being sold on the streets of the Downtown Eastside by people who call themselves "drug dealers." Police are now engaged in a full scale campaign to rid our streets of this scourge! Good luck to our brave men and women in blue! Excuse me, but what in hell is going on? Why has Vancouver police chief Jamie Graham decided to blitz the Downtown Eastside with foot patrols, motorcycles and -- a weird touch, this -- officers on horseback? With all those nags on the beat, Hastings Street is starting to take on the air of St. Petersburg circa 1905, with the Carnegie Library standing in for the Winter Palace. Give those mounted cops sabres and you could re-enact the Revolution. Cossacks, mow the drug-addled Bolsheviks down! And then there was that little show on camera Tuesday, the one with a rap sheet as a prop. To demonstrate the persistence of the problem police face down there, an officer dramatically unfolded the arrest record of one of the perps they had caught during the campaign -- a computer printout so long it accordioned to the ground. These are the kind of repeat offenders we police have to deal with, was the little show's message -- and what you, the long-suffering public, have to put up with! Well gosh, officer, any cub reporter who has spent any time in the Downtown Eastside has seen those mile-long rap sheets before, and has seen them for the last 15 years. That the judicial system is a revolving door when it comes to drug-related offences is nothing new to the media; it is not even a revelation for the public. So why the sudden realization that, in the earnest words of Graham, the Downtown Eastside drug trade "is a blight on this particular city and this wonderful neighbourhood"? Why have police, after all these years, decided now to do their "best to ensure it stops"? Is Graham's new-found resolve the product of finally having a chance to look out his window? ("Hey! There's people dealing drugs out there! Why wasn't I told about this!") Perhaps it was a confluence of events. The force has suffered a series of embarrassments in the last year, from the public relations beating it took over the Pickton investigation -- which will probably inspire an inquiry -- to the beatings Vancouver cops allegedly doled out to itinerants. And in Graham, the force has a new chief striving to polish up the force's tarnish, and give it his own shine. Graham also finds himself in an odd relationship with Mayor Larry Campbell. Graham beat Campbell out for the police chief's job, but now finds himself, in effect, subordinate to him. Lugging all that baggage on their brawny backs, the force approached city council Tuesday night with a request for an additional $2.3 million for 2003, so they might pay for the staffing overtime needed to fund the force's new "enforcement initiative" for the Downtown Eastside. Part of that initiative started Monday -- thus the appearance of foot patrols, motorcycles and cavalry in the neighbourhood. The initiative, supposedly, was designed to be the enforcement part of the city's Four Pillars approach to drug control. Problem is, the other three pillars are not yet in place -- most especially, the safe injection sites Campbell and the COPE council have been promising from Day One. So when the cops started rousting the cokeheads and junkies out of the bars and hotels Monday, the cokeheads and junkies did what all aggrieved citizens do when wanting to make a complaint. They went to city hall. About two dozen residents of the Downtown Eastside crammed into the council chambers -- some of them carrying signs that read "Police Pogrom Must Stop" and "Stick Your Phoney Four Pillars Up Your Police Chief" -- and just as the city's finance managers started to go over the police funding request, they erupted, screaming at Campbell, berating the police and bringing the council meeting to a complete, chaotic halt. It lasted for about a half-hour. Campbell looked alternately bemused, stony, angry and bored, but let the screamers vent until they ran out of steam. Then he had to listen to a schoolmarm lecture from Ann Livingstone, project coordinator with the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users. While pleading for the removal of the police stormtroopers and the immediate establishment of a safe injection site, I believe she may have accused council of sponsoring genocide. It was quite a show, and probably not what Campbell would have preferred to sit through Tuesday afternoon. "None of us can believe," she said, "this is happening to a COPE council!" Nor could I. Six months in office and already Larry Campbell and his COPE council are accused of being mass murderers. Was this what Chief Graham was hoping to do by chasing the drug problem out of the Downtown Eastside? Send it down to Cambie and 12th? - --- MAP posted-by: Alex