Pubdate: Tue, 12 Oct 2004 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Allen Garr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?216 (CN Police) COPE LOSING ON SAFE STREETS Politicians have a way of smelling trouble. COPE councillor and wannabe NDP MLA Tim Stevenson is no exception. He made that clear Tuesday, in the midst of a city council debate on a motion by NPA Coun. Peter Ladner endorsing the Safe Streets Coalition and two pieces of proposed provincial legislation dealing with aggressive panhandling and trespass. One after another, COPE councillors rose to denounce this legislation, championed by Liberal MLA for Vancouver-Burrard, Lorne Mayencourt. It was an attack on the poor; it didn't deal with the root causes of poverty and crime in the streets. Stevenson rose to define what was unfolding as a "wedge issue." Nothing has divided this city in recent times more than the perception of growing public disorder and what should be done about it. It has given the law-and-order crowd the advantage and put COPE in a corner. This situation didn't develop overnight. Go back a year and a half ago, when Vancouver Police Chief Jamie Graham decided to unilaterally deploy 40 more cops in a crackdown on the Downtown Eastside. It was all done without the knowledge of city staff, police board chair Mayor Larry Campbell and the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority-all partners in the Four Pillars drug strategy. It was a brilliant move by Graham. Not just because it took a problem that was centered at Main and Hastings and spread it to adjacent residential neighbourhoods including the West End. But because, unwitting citizens newly beset by drugs and homelessness they thought only existed elsewhere in the city demanded-you guessed it-more police. Mayencourt, a politician who was in trouble with his constituents, saw an issue he could run with. While COPE belittled his efforts to deal with aggressive panhandlers and squeegee kids, public sentiment swelled behind him. A year ago the Vancouver Board of Trade report on property crime-based on outdated and inaccurate data-drew widespread headlines from a media that consumes crime as a major part of its diet. It put Vancouver just behind Miami as the property crime capital of North America. Yikes! The growing problems of homelessness, drugs and panhandling weren't limited to Vancouver of course. Aggravated by provincial cuts to welfare and social housing and a failure to respond to needs for treatment, cities and towns across the B.C. were starting to notice an increase in problems on their streets. The Safe Streets Coalition was formed and Mayencourt was the man with the plan. It all came to a head at the recent UBCM meeting in Kelowna, an event COPE councillors tend to ignore as a gathering of upcountry bumpkins, preferring instead to do civic business in Barcelona, or London or Ottawa. They sent Ellen Woodsworth off to the UBCM, proof of the priority they gave it. But it was there Premier Gordon Campbell was elevated to sainthood for feeling their pain, for turning over parking fine revenues to municipalities to be used to make streets safe. The vast majority of delegates endorsed Mayencourt's legislative initiatives. The majority of Vancouver politicians couldn't have been more offside not just with UBCM but with the sentiments of their own citizens. Look, for example, at the volcanic reaction last week to a rehabilitation centre for mentally ill drug addicts planned near Fraser Street and 41st Avenue. COPE appears lost in the fog of their election victory two years ago, when the whole city was onside, wanting treatment centres spread beyond the Downtown Eastside. But perceptions have changed, demands have changed and Stevenson would be the first to admit he's not the only member on this council who is in trouble as a result. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek