Pubdate: Mon, 31 Oct 2005 Source: Neepawa Banner, The (CN MB) Copyright: 2005 The Neepawa Banner Contact: http://www.neepawabanner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3951 Author: Ken Waddell IT'S TIME, IT'S JUST TIME The Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba has announced a "get tough on crime" platform. The City of Winnipeg has done the same thing. Missing in action are three other major players. The Province of Manitoba, the federal government and most of our municipal governments. A couple of weeks ago, the Winnipeg Sun called for action as did many other folks with an interest in maintaining peace on the streets of Manitoba. It appears that it has taken the death of an innocent person in a gangland shoot-out to bring a call for action. In fact, the PCs were working on the program for months already and may have actually delayed the announcement so as not to appear opportunistic. The PC party, and the City of Winnipeg and Mayor Katz are to be commended for coming out against crime. In the movie Rudy, the biography of New York Mayor Rudy Guilliani, he berates his fellow lawyers in the District Attorney's office. He literally screams at them that, "The only way to control criminals is to scare the living st out of the criminals." Good point. It's a point that has been lost on the Manitoba NDP. They sold the courthouse that was set up to bust gangs. They've gotten really tough on drunk driving which is a good thing. But at the same time, they have shrunk local policing and haven't done a thing about making any more jail space. The federal government has flushed enough money down the drain registering farmers' shotguns to clean up crime across Canada. Two billion dollars wasted on a make work project so they can pretend to make the streets safer in Toronto and Montreal. As if farmers' shotguns are being used to commit crime. Closer to home, most local politicians are missing in action too. They're too busy arguing about who will pay for the next sidewalk or which road to gravel. Instead, they should be standing up to criminals and crime in the ways that are open to them. For starters, they could declare curfews. Instead of looking at ways to make curfews both fair and effective they whine about how you can't paint people with the same brush and how can you enforce a curfew. In answer to that please tell why a 10 year old should be out on the street after midnight, or after 10 p.m. for that matter. The municipalities have the authority over curfews and they should be put in place. It would help parents keep tabs on their kids, it would set reasonable community standards and it would protect innocent kids from crossing paths with the night prowling criminal element. The next thing the towns could do is press hard with the RCMP to enforce the rules that need to be enforced. It's the towns that pay the RCMP contracts and yet it's rare to see the towns actually tell the police what they want done. It's ludicrous, little or no direction comes from the mayor's offices to the RCMP. Worse yet, drug trafficking is commonly ignored on our streets and in our school hallways. The "get tough" approach in Winnipeg will accomplish Rudy's goals with criminals. In Winnipeg they plan to press in on the crime issues, they will arrest suspected drug dealers for everything from spitting on the sidewalk to improper parking even if they can't prove drug trafficking. Locally we could do more, much more, but it takes courage. We've witnessed bloodshed in both rural and urban Manitoba, but we still don't have much action. We've allowed criminals and law breakers to be entirely too comfortable in our midst and it's time all levels of government and all citizens heard the call to action. Speak up, get tough and clean up the mess we are sliding into. It's time folks, it's time. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin