Pubdate: Thu, 12 May 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: Gordon McIntyre NDP SOFT ON CRIME, COLEMAN SAYS James Fires Back That Liberals Have Made Cuts To Victims' Services, Legal Aid The NDP doesn't care about "protecting communities," Solicitor-General Rich Coleman told Liberal supporters yesterday. "At best, the NDP doesn't have a plan," he said. "At worst, they don't care about the safety of our families and our children." The Fort Langley-Aldergrove incumbent's remarks drew hoots of protest from the NDP. "It's extraordinary to me that you see Rich Coleman coming out and saying we're soft on crime," NDP Leader Carole James said later in a meeting with the Province editorial board. "It's amazing Mr. Coleman would come out with that kind of statement when you take a look at his track record." James ticked off cuts made by the Liberals, including victim-services counsellors and legal aid. Coleman, meanwhile, trotted out quite the list himself. "I could have gone on about what we've done for public safety and what we're doing for another hour, at least," he said. Without getting bogged down in yesterday's nitty-gritty numbers and the he-said-she-said finger-pointing, it's obvious the two parties barely speak the same language when it comes to law and order. The Liberals brag about hiring more police (albeit late into their four-year term), getting a helicopter for the Lower Mainland, starting a sex-offender registry and introducing civil forfeiture so criminals don't profit from their crimes. The NDP wants to boost legal aid, restore the budget for native court workers, rehire the 70 counsellors for victims of crime and increase funding for addiction services and mental illness. "I want to talk for a second about the NDP, the people that don't care about protecting communities, the people that won't invest in policing in British Columbia," Coleman said as Liberal incumbent John Nuraney, Burnaby-Willingdon, held up a sign that was blank other than the words, "NDP Plan For Public Safety." "If you want your children protected from sex offenders, if you want someone to stop Internet luring in your community, if you want police officers integrated to deal with major crime across the province . . . you've got to on May 17 elect the B.C. Liberal government," Coleman said. It was out-and-out fear-mongering, NDP candidate Gabriel Wing-On Yiu, Burnaby-Willingdon, countered. "I think they're really desperate. In Burnaby, they closed our courthouse. Our police, even for summary, minor disputes have to travel all the way to Vancouver. That's a waste of police resources and a lot of inconvenience to citizens." Crime is a multi-facetted problem that needs a multi-pronged attack, he added. "I think when we talk about crime and safety, law and order is just one angle to tackle it. We all know crime is also a very complicated social problem. "The level of crime has a lot to do with social policy." - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman