Pubdate: Thu, 27 Jan 2005 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Don Plant, The Daily Courier POLICE SWEEP LEON RCMP uncorked a new weapon Wednesday against the drug dealers and criminal transients plaguing downtown merchants. Teams of Mounties, bylaw officers and downtown patrollers conducted regular sweeps along Leon Avenue and adjoining alleyways all morning. They ordered people out of the area, told them to tear down their illegal camps and checked them for drugs. "The majority did move along when confronted with authorities. (Police) did come across a considerable amount of aggressive and belligerent behaviour," said RCMP spokesman Cpl. Reg Burgess. Senior officials with the RCMP were planning to send out the "co-ordinated enforcement teams" on March 1. A resurgence of the addicts clustering in front of downtown shops and louder complaints about the problem prompted police to launch their assault sooner. "In view of the warm weather and the increase in the homeless population, we've had to step up plans, and we began today," said Supt. Bill McKinnon. The sweeps will become a regular fixture in the downtown, he said. Once new officers are hired in the coming weeks, four-member "street crews" will take over and patrol the area every day. "We're bringing in resources on overtime until the street crew starts at the end of February," said Burgess. Many suggested police were responding to a confrontation between 50 merchants and Mayor Walter Gray at City Hall on Tuesday night. In fact, police had been planning to bump up enforcement along the west end of Leon Avenue for days. Robert Simkins, who owns a shop on Lawrence Avenue, welcomed the renewed police presence. "It was a breath of fresh air to come to work and not have to sweep the sidewalk and ask someone to move," he said. "Kudos to the RCMP. They did a good job." Street people were upset by the crackdown. Manywere "very agitated" when they entered the Kelowna Drop-In Centre down the street, said director Candy Sutherland. "There's no place for them to go. They don't have homes. They get kicked out of everywhere else," she said. "Consumers said there were some pretty heavy-handed tactics. I don't know that for a fact, but a lot of them are pretty distraught." Police arrested one man for drug offences but detained no one else. The safe streets legislation, which gives police more authority to arrest vagrants, has not yet been enacted. Still, authorities have the right to enforce bylaws against loitering and panhandling, as well as provincial laws against squeegee kids impeding the flow of traffic, said McKinnon. "To interfere with the running of a business by sitting on a private doorstep is a criminal offence because they're interfering with the person's operation of that business," said McKinnon. Sutherland understands why police and merchants are frustrated. But she says the people at the core of the problem are human beings who deserve better. "Take morality out of the equation, and let's try to fix the problem," she said. "Why is it that we always spout off about the four-pillar approach, but when it hits the fan, we run toward enforcement? We know it's not the answer." - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)