Pubdate: Tue, 03 Jan 2006 Source: Kamloops Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Kamloops Daily News Contact: http://www.kamloopsnews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/679 Author: Jason Hewlett and Robert Koopmans Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) RCMP TO TARGET PUBLIC'S BIG FEARS When it comes to public safety, fear can be as destructive as crime itself. With that in mind, the city's RCMP will target enforcement in the coming year to address areas of public concern, all the while working within resource limits, said the city's top cop. Supt. Jim Begley said the RCMP went through a consultation process in 2004 to better target enforcement efforts in 2005. The results of those public meetings will continue through 2006. More meetings are planned to allow further fine-tuning of operational plans. "We'll be meeting with the public, city council and all our community partners to set out our goals and objectives for the year ahead," Begley said. He noted that many citizens expressed concerns about drugs, prostitution and related crimes. As a result, the detachment increased bike and foot patrols in North Kamloops and the city's downtown core. A four-member action response team was formed in August to target crime that most often affects public perceptions of safety -- issues like crack houses and auto crime. Begley said the city RCMP's action response team has been effective. A month-long crackdown on grow-ops saw 10 residential homes searched and more than 3,000 marijuana plants seized, for example. Despite that, the work needs to continue. "What we're seeing is that these problems aren't changing. They're still very similar," Begley said. "What we want to do now is put the right people in the right place. For example, if prostitution is not as big an issue with the public as drugs then why not focus on drugs more?" Coun. Pat Wallace, a member of the city's police committee, said Monday she's pleased with the RCMP's willingness to listen to public concerns about crime, and target enforcement to match. But there is only so far the detachment should go when it comes to addressing public worries and in the end, police managers must use the resources to do the job they know needs to be done. Citizens frequently want more uniformed police officers hired to walk beats or man bicycle patrols, Wallace said. While hiring more members may result in a more visible police force, the extra officers may not achieve results proportionate to the cost, she added. "If I'm being held up by a gunman, I don't want to be told all the officers are out riding bikes." Wallace said she wants systems implemented that employ the use of objective statistics, so there is a way to measure progress on crime. Too often perceptions of crime don't reflect reality, she said. Some neighbourhoods see temporary problems surface that create the impression crime is rampant while overall, problems may be diminishing. "There needs to be a balance between reality and what is possible," she said. Wallace said she expects the police committee will continue to meet with Begley and other senior managers to learn about and help decide policing priorities through the coming year. She also wants to explore some way of lobbying federal lawmakers to change or enable laws that allow Canada's courts to deal more effectively with repeat criminals and new crime trends. Begley said much of the operational planning for 2006 will depend on staffing, as well as needs identified by the public. "If we get several reports about crack shacks operating at such and such a location, then (the action team) will focus its attention there. If there is a rash of bank robberies like we had in the fall, then they will be focusing on that." The team did foot and bike patrol duties this past summer and will do the same next year. It's not yet known whether an officer will walk downtown streets through the summer as Const. Mark Price did in August, Begley said. "It all depends on the demands of the day It's something we will look at in February," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake