Pubdate: Tue, 08 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: Petti Fong and Frances Bula Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) CRACKDOWN TARGETS DRUG DEALERS Police Strength Tripled In The Downtown Eastside Vancouver police on horseback, motorcycles and foot patrol launched an unprecedented block-by-block campaign Monday to rid city streets of drug dealers. Chief Constable Jamie Graham has tripled the number of officers on the street in an around-the-clock crackdown aimed squarely at the drug-plagued Downtown Eastside. Graham has gone ahead with his get-tough initiative as a three-month pilot program, and asked city council for $2.3 million to extend the campaign for another six months. Councillors are expected to vote today on the request. Asked about the crackdown, Vancouver Mayor Larry Campbell said enforcement is an essential element of the city's four-pillar plan to cleanup the drug problem. "No doubt it's an experiment and if it doesn't work, we'll stop it," he said. Sergeant Geramy Field, one of four mounted squad officers patrolling the area on horseback, said law-abiding people in the area are glad to see the increased police presence. "The ones with the criminal records know why we're down there. We're giving them reasons why they should go home and stop selling." Field, who was reassigned to the area from patrolling Stanley Park, said the increased police presence is meant to reassure residents that something is being done to protect their property and neighbourhood. Police have increased the number of police officers patrolling the area to 60 from the 20 who were responsible for the Downtown Eastside. "The main goals are to reduce the high order of disorder in the Downtown Eastside and restore order to a community in distress," said Inspector Doug LePard, the officer in charge. "It is not to target the addicted drug user." Graham said police are using the stepped-up enforcement efforts as a pilot for three months and will gauge in two months whether they are being successful in cleaning up the area. Graham said he understands the "fiscal constraints" faced by council, but he vowed the department will continue to do what it can to rid the area of drug dealers. "This will disrupt what we think is a blight on this particular city and this wonderful neighbourhood," he said. "People are shocked when they drive by there and constantly say, 'How can you allow this to happen?' We will do our very best to ensure it stops." Part of what police are doing will result in dispersal of drug dealers who now congregate within a two-block radius of the intersection of Hastings and Carrall, Graham said. But he said many drug users have left the city and province entirely. "We're optimistic of the results and keep very careful statistics. There will be certain disruption and we will continue disrupting until we see results," Graham said. Albert Fok, chairman of the Vancouver Chinatown Merchants Association, said increased police presence has been needed in the area for years. "For a long time we've been hurt by the feeling that you can't walk down Hastings," he said. "Hopefully this move will grant the opportunity for people to feel more comfortable again around here." Among people who have been intimately involved in Downtown Eastside life for years, the reaction to the police activity ranged from worry to outrage. Michael Clague, director of the Carnegie Centre, said the police moves to clear drug dealers from the corner of Main and Hastings has been beneficial. Although there hasn't been a huge increase in numbers at the heavily used centre, which sees as many as 2,000 visitors a day, he said that having an entrance that wasn't blocked by a busy open drug market brought back some people who hadn't been seen for a while. Younger people with families and seniors are two groups that have reappeared, and evening drop-in programs have seen a slight increase in attendance. "I didn't realize how much we were living under siege," Clague said. "It's lightened things up and made a big difference to us." The open drug market moved to the corner of Main and Hastings in the mid 1990s, when the open drug scene generally expanded as crack cocaine, which requires much more frequent buys, became popular and as police forced drug-dealing out of the local bars. But Clague, like many people, said he is concerned about what the impact of the police action will be when there has been little coordination with other agencies. He said he would have been much more confident about the success of the plan if there had been a joint announcement about a plan that emphasized all four pillars of the city's official drug strategy. "If there had been people from the police, from health, from the city announcing together, 'This is the plan for detox, this is the plan for a safe-injection site and the police enforcement will follow step by step,' I would have preferred that." Instead, he said, police are acting unilaterally in advance of any coordinated strategy for treatment, harm reduction and prevention. Downtown Eastside activist Ann Livingston was much harsher in her criticism of the plan as she walked Hastings Street Monday afternoon. She said it appeared the police were deliberately defying the wishes of Vancouver citizens who voted in the last election in favour of a political group that campaigned on a harm-reduction approach to tackling Vancouver's drug problems. "The police are just ... in your face -- we don't care what the people of Vancouver voted for," said Livingston. "It's just an unbelievable power pull." Livingston said she can't see how the police plan is going to work, because she hasn't ever met an addict or a dealer who would quit using or dealing just because of an increased police presence. Law students from the Pivot Legal Society were also out on the street Monday, handing out "rights" cards to locals, which have a printed list of pointers for people on what to do if they are stopped by police. Katrina Pacey said Pivot volunteers -- about about 100 lawyers, law students and others -- are concerned about the police action because they see two negative consequences. First, there are already numerous problems with police harassing anyone they perceive to be a drug user, so "more officers means more human-rights violations," she said. Second, she said, the police action makes putting a balanced, four-pillar approach to drug addiction in place more difficult. If more money goes into policing, that's less for treatment, prevention or harm reduction, she said. As well, if police are cracking down on street activity, that will make it harder for addicts to access local services. Problems are being created beyond the areas of Hastings and Carrall because of the increased number of drug sellers and drug users, said Charles Gauthier, executive director of the Downtown Vancouver Business Improvement Association. "Our members are concerned about the extent of the drug use and enforcement has been viewed as an effective tool in controlling it," Gauthier said. "Enforcement does provide an immediate and desirable result, which is to have them leave the area." The DVBIA represents businesses in the area bounded on the east by Hamilton Street and Gauthier said members are already reporting that drug dealers and users are leaving the Downtown Eastside and moving west. "If we see a flood of dealers, I can assure you we'll be expressing a lot of concern," he said. There is a real concern that dispersing drug dealers to other parts of the city will solve the problem in the Downtown Eastside, but create new problems in surrounding municipalities, said Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan. "Everybody who lives next door to a crackdown is worried it's going to shift to their community," he said. "A crackdown in Vancouver will push people to a neighbouring community. If it's an enforcement issue and more incarceration, that will be more internal for Vancouver. If it's just pushing them out, it's going to be a problem in Burnaby." - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl