Pubdate: Fri, 11 Apr 2003 Source: Westender (Vancouver, CN BC) Copyright: 2003 WestEnder Contact: http://www.westender.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1243 Author: Justin Beddall CITY COUNCIL NIXES POLICE CALL FOR MORE TROOPS Like U.S. Marines in Baghdad, the Vancouver Police Department has vowed to take back the inner city one block at a time if necessary--but city council isn't backing them with the necessary funds. In November, the VPD began deploying a minimum of two officers to the corner of Main and Hastings, nearby the Carnegie community centre--24 hours a day, seven days a week--to deter the open use and trafficking of crack and heroin at the city's most notorious open drug markets. So far, "Operation 24/7" has gone according to plan: the 100 or so regulars who used to loiter in front of Carnegie have decamped. Although police admit the problem has shifted a few blocks west to Columbia Street, VPD spokesperson Const. Sarah Bloor says the increased police presence has reduced the numbers of those involved in the open-air drug trade. "A number of people have left the area completely," Bloor said. Still, in order to clean up the hardscrabble neighbourhood, the VPD understands it will have to monitor the movement of the drug trade while still maintaining a presence at Main and Hastings. Reclaim a block, keep it, claim the next. And that will take more men and women in black. "One of the tactics we would employ to affect this open drug market would be an expansion of (the Carnegie) project," stated Chief Constable Jamie Graham in a report submitted to council March 27 asking city hall for $2.3 million (44 more officers) to help fund the cost of a new "city-wide enforcement team" to deal with the drug problem. But following a heated protest by some members of the Downtown Eastside at the regular council meeting Tuesday, the city unanimously denied the backing, and is waiting for the go-ahead for Canada's first safe injection site to open. The operation focuses on disrupting the open drug market and interrupting the cycle of crime and drug use that has turned the streets of the Downtown Eastside into a drug warzone, says Graham. Already, Operation 24/7 has reclaimed the neighbourhood's community centre. "We've had people we haven't seen in a while, especially older folks and people who bring kids," said Dan Tetrault, assistant director at the centre. "It has made the centre more accessible." Not everyone is pleased by the operation, though. "What has it accomplished? It's just moved the whole drug trade 90 feet down the street," said John Richardson, executive director of the Pivot Law Society. "It's probably had a negative impact. It's moved people farther away from the needle exchange program." And if it takes six officers to claim a city block, at an average cost of $70,000 per officer, Richardson believes the price tag is far too high. "It's like a waterbed; you push down in one place and it will spring up somewhere else." Vancouver community AIDS organizations have cited fears of increased transmission of HIV with increased police presence around the Downtown Eastside. "Operation 24/7 is a prime example of the limited, and often negative aspects of enforcement," said Malsah, acting chair of BC Persons With AIDS Society (BCPWA). "All they've done is displace drug users two blocks closer to the tourist area of Gastown, and scared addicts in desperate need of sterile syringes away from the needle exchange." - --- MAP posted-by: Alex