Pubdate: Tue, 01 Nov 2005 Source: Business In Vancouver (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 BIV Publications Ltd. Contact: http://www.biv.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2458 Author: Glen Korstrom MP WHITE BLASTS COMMUNITY COURT PROPOSAL Conservative Party Justice Critic Charges That It Would Create Another Cumbersome And Expensive Layer In An Already Ineffective Justice System One of Canada's best known justice critics is slamming a proposal to create a Vancouver community court to fix the city's rampant street crime problem. Abbotsford MP and Conservative justice critic Randy White's concerns come despite extensive buy-in for the new court that Attorney General Wally Oppal calls both "revolutionary" and "workable." Health-care professionals, social workers, police, lawyers and chief judges of both the B.C. Supreme Court and B.C. Provincial Court lined up to support the B.C. Justice Review Task Force's street crime working group recommendations when the committee released its 134-page report October 12. White believes the court would be a cumbersome and expensive addition to an already ineffective justice system. A better solution, he said, is to give funds to existing facilities such as Vancouver Island's William Head Institution and transform it into a rehabilitation centre. "This court proposal creates a third or fourth layer trying to deal with the same problem of drugs and crime," said White. "Next thing there'll be a study to establish a co-ordinating body of co-ordinating bodies." White is not running for re-election, but he said he'll continue to work to resolve drug problems after the next federal election. He has not announced what that new job will be. His skepticism about the proposed court stems from doubts that initiatives such as Vancouver's safe-injection site are helping reduce addiction and crime. "The [community] court is not worth supporting until they can convince me that everything else is working in the system, and I don't believe their harm reduction programs are working," White said. Using a community court to address minor crime is similar in approach to Vancouver City's four-pillar strategy of dealing with drug use: treatment, enforcement, prevention and harm reduction. It's also largely modelled on New York City courts. The working group paid New York's Center for Court Innovation less than $100,000 to consult during the drafting of its report, according to Leask Bahen lawyer Peter Leask, who was a Canadian Bar Association representative on the working group. No one in government or on the street crime committee would estimate how much it would cost to establish the court, but Leask said it could be created January 1, 2007, as long as government antes up necessary funds. The court would be housed in the same building as health-care staff and social workers so court representatives could communicate better with those professionals. That proximity would enable a "wraparound approach" and provide quicker assessment of mental problems and drug addictions. Offenders could go directly from court to an office in the same building to find out their community service and drug rehabilitation requirements. B.C. Provincial Court chief judge Hugh Stansfield was impressed with the Manhattan and Brooklyn community courts that he visited in 2000. "There's been a reduced rate of recidivism and a reduction in [New York's minor] crime rate. So, as a result of that, there's been an increased level of confidence in the justice system," Stansfield told reporters at an October 12 press conference. Center of Court Innovation director Greg Berman could not provide statistics to show a reduction in recidivism at the midtown Manhattan court that his organization helped create in 1993 or at the Brooklyn community court that CCI helped create in 2000. But he agreed that Manhattan and Brooklyn courts have helped reduce minor crime and increase public confidence in the courts. Prostitution offences in midtown Manhattan dropped 56 per cent between 1993 and 1997, while illegal vending crimes were cut in half during the same period, Berman said. "I couldn't sit here with a straight face and tell you that the sole reason that this wondrous thing happened in midtown Manhattan was because of the midtown community court," Berman said. "The opening of that court coincided with Rudy Giuliani being elected as mayor. There were changes at the police department and in the business climate. There was a new business improvement district where people swept streets and there was reinvestment." Public confidence in New York's courts has also risen. Berman said a survey in 1999 showed that only 12 per cent of residents in Brooklyn's Redhook neighbourhood had a positive impression of local courts. A recent survey showed 78 per cent of those residents felt positively toward their neighbourhood's new community court, Berman said. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)