Pubdate: Sun, 30 Oct 2005 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Matthew Ramsey, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) CONCERNED RESIDENT STARTED PHOTOGRAPHING DEALERS, ADDICTS East Vancouver: Plagued Community Pleads for Improved Police Presence For Lori, the last straw was being offered cocaine and heroin by four drug dealers on the corner of 10th and Commercial in East Vancouver. After months of dodging the growing flock of dealers and addicts doing business in her neighbourhood and watching her building and others broken into, the former corrections officer -- who, out of fear, asked that her last name be withheld -- decided it was time to do something. So she went home, grabbed her camera and started taking photos. "These people were like the living dead. They jumped up and ran at me," she said. "I was chased out. I was afraid. I was so scared somebody would follow me." With dealers and users increasingly pushed out of the Downtown Eastside, the area around 12th and Victoria, Broadway and Commercial and Salsbury and Kitchener needs help, she says. "We need awareness," she told The Province last week. "We would like community-crime offices to facilitate and bring the community together . . . Weekly, this area is just getting worse." A group of men have even stolen the lobby security camera in Lori's building. A second, hidden camera caught them in the act as they tried to open apartment doors and paused to read notices pinned to the lobby bulletin board. Eunice, who lives in the same building as Lori, says there are too few cops walking the beat. "It just makes me angry it's got this bad," Eunice said. "There isn't a visible police presence here." "There's 28 suites here and 28 concerns," Lori added. Eunice and Lori are careful to point out they don't want to bash police. But they are worried about longer response times and visibility, they say. They want businesses and area residents who share their views to help with an initiative jointly led by the community and police. An independent consultant reported in 2004 that the Vancouver Police Department's response times for crimes in progress and serious incidents rose from seven minutes in 1994 to 13 minutes a decade later. The average is six minutes in most large North American cities. Lori recalled an incident when she came across a group of crack addicts smoking the drug while sitting on her car. She backed off to call police, but the 911 operator told her police were "too busy" to attend and to move the group along herself. Some businesses in downtown Vancouver and in Kerrisdale have grouped together to hire private security guards. For the moment, Lori says, a good start would be for businesses in her area to install lights in back alleys. But Vancouver police spokesman Const. Howard Chow urges caution in confronting overzealous panhandlers, dealers and addicts. As far as police are concerned, the crime rate in Lori's neighbourhood has fallen over the past two years, he said. Lori suggested that may be because fewer people are bothering to call police. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake