Pubdate: Fri, 03 Sep 2004 Source: Kelowna Capital News (CN BC) Copyright: 2004, West Partners Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.kelownacapnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1294 Author: Marshall Jones CRIME WAVE BLAMED ON DRUGS Kelowna's downtown transient drug problem is a product of the city's attractive climate, cheap drug prices and the nomadic nature of the people themselves, says a Kelowna drug squad investigator. Const. Don Powell says the problems with downtown street crime are all directly related to drugs. Break-ins, robberies, prostitution and other thefts are the quickest ways t get to get more drugs. Assaults and even murders are also the likely result of leap-frogging small-time dealers carving out new territories. While he acknowledged there has been a large increase in the number of addicts on Leon Avenue, in City Park and in small pockets around the city--and a corresponding increase in street crime--Powell said Kelowna is no different than any other city. "Prince George, Nanaimo, Kamloops or anywhere in the Lower Mainland, they all have the same problems," he said. "I don't think Kelowna is any worse, but it is a good thing to be concerned about it because this is where most crime comes from." Powell and the Kelowna drug squad team are plugged into the culture either by infiltration or interrogation. He said the police have nearly daily contact at the street level. He says, as many do, that the Vancouver Police Department's efforts to clean-up the downtown eastside of Vancouver has displaced a lot of them. The displacement theory is a popular one and has some basis behind it, Powell said. He said many transients police check on are from Vancouver, Quebec or Ontario and are either fleeing provincial warrants (warrants hold no jurisdiction outside their provinces) or come here with the intention of picking fruit. Kelowna is just the best choice of B.C.'s cities outside the Lower Mainland. Once transients get here, they find a steady supply of drugs--cheap drugs like crack cocaine or crystal methamphetamine. "Crystal meth is very easy to produce and the price of cocaine is dictated on a bunch of different factors," Powell says. "There is no shortage and we are certainly not stopping it from getting into the country." Six years ago, he said, the price of cocaine was between $100 and $120 a gram. Even with inflation, the price is now half that amount. Crystal meth is even cheaper. But it's the nomadic nature of the those involved that will likely solve the worst of Kelowna's problem. If trouble catches up, they will likely disperse again. Kelowna was slow to develop a strategy for dealing with its homeless and the influx hit them in that soft spot. The City of Kelowna and Mayor Walter Gray began talking about a combination of enforcement, harm reduction, treatment and prevention but never got it off the ground before the numbers started increasing. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek