Pubdate: Mon, 23 Jun 2003 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2003, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.fyiedmonton.com/htdocs/edmsun.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Shane Holladay, Edmonton Sun UNHAPPY CAMPERS Park Squatters Pose a Threat, Says Ranger If you go out in the woods today, be ready to run into used syringes and condoms. That's thanks to a fivefold jump in the number of people camping illegally in Edmonton's river valley since 1999, a problem directly tied to the city's growing homeless population, says park ranger Ian Hosler. "What we see in the parks is really just symptomatic of a much larger problem," he said yesterday. "We're just trying to manage the safety and quality of experience people have on our parkland. Just moving these folks around isn't a long-term answer." Public safety is an issue because many people forced to live in the river valley suffer from mental-health issues or addictions, Hosler said. "With people with substance-abuse problems, we'll often see used needles and condoms and that kind of thing. That proves to be a hazard to our patrons. "It used to be sort of confined to the downtown, the Louise McKinney or Dawson parks area. And now we're seeing that extend into the district parks in the community, wherever there's a patch of trees." The Edmonton Police Service's river valley unit of two full-time and two part-time officers was disbanded in early 2002. In February, Coun. Karen Leibovici asked bureaucrats to prepare a report on what effect the EPS pullout had on public safety in the valley parks, and if it's feasible to give park rangers the powers of peace officers. That June 3 report shows park rangers documented 330 cases of camps or shelters in river valley parks in 2002 - more than five times the number recorded in Also up were the number of "inappropriate acts" discovered by park rangers. Hosler said it's far from unusual to find couples copulating in city parks. "There's a lot of that going on in the parks, but it has nothing to do with vagrants," he said. "Some of the shelters do not allow couples to live together. So one of the things we see is quite often, couples don't want to be split up." The report recommends giving park rangers access to the EPS radio system and looking at making rangers special constables, which Hosler said would let them check warrants and carry protective vests and pepper spray. Ward 5 Coun. Bryan Anderson, who serves on the community services committee, said he doubts the report's recommendations will fly. The city's new parkland bylaw will give park rangers the powers they need to keep people out of the river valley, said Anderson. When needed, they can always call police, he said. "You're going to find the park rangers have a presence they never had before." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake