Pubdate: Wed, 02 Aug 2006 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 Calgary Herald Contact: http://www.canada.com/calgary/calgaryherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Gwendolyn Richards GUARDIAN ANGELS TO HIT CALGARY'S STREETS IN FALL Armed with little more than red berets and a drive to cut down street crime, a local chapter of Guardian Angels will be on Calgary streets by November. The interview process is underway, but there is still first aid and self-defence training to be done before the six-member patrols can begin walking the beat, said the organization's Canadian director, Lou Hoffer. When Angels founder Curtis Sliwa arrived in Calgary in May, he said he expected to have his red berets on the streets by August. But Hoffer said he expects the group won't be fully functional by the end of the fall. "We are moving a little slower than we would have liked," Hoffer said. "There's no sense in rushing things." "It's quite a long process to get a chapter up and running," he added, explaining volunteers have to have a criminal record check and, if accepted, go through at least three months of training. In all, the Guardian Angels are looking for 24 volunteers who can take to the streets in teams of six. Sliwa said many Calgarians are supportive of the Angels' plan to patrol areas where street crime is a problem. But not everyone welcomes the volunteers in their red berets. Ward 10 Ald. Andre Chabot, whose area includes Forest Lawn -- which the Guardian Angels identified as a place on which they will be concentrating - -- said the group sounds like vigilantes and he doesn't want them in the city. If people are interested in getting crime off the streets, they should apply to the Calgary Police Service -- which is short of recruits -- rather than volunteering with a group that has no body armour nor weapons to protect themselves while out on patrol, he said. "That's why we have police. We shouldn't take the law into our hands," he said. He added that, if citizens feel police aren't doing a good enough job in combatting crime, he wants to hear from them. But turning to a group of volunteers is not the answer to the problem. Since Sliwa's May visit, the city has recently taken steps to control the drug problem in the downtown core. In June, the police commission approved Chief Jack Beaton's proposal to put 18 additional police officers in the downtown and Beltline areas to handle growing safety issues. This came on the heels of a city council decision to spend $6.2 million over the next two years for additional officers -- part of a $15.7-million plan to increase downtown safety and clean up the city core. Sliwa commended council and police for taking charge of problems in the downtown area, but said there is still a need for the Angels. "If they can get control of the East Village, the cul-de-sac of crack, the C-Train platforms in check that would be great," he said. "Then we can focus our energies outside of downtown." Ward 9 Ald. Joe Ceci expects the Angels will be able to supplement local police, but they won't solve the problems Calgary is dealing with. "I don't think they're going to be the solution," he said. "It's not going to make much of a difference one way or another." He also said, because the Angels are funded through donations, money people or corporations have given to other preventative initiatives may be funnelled toward the Angels instead. Meanwhile, the Angels are looking to expand elsewhere in Canada. On Friday, Sliwa met with officials in Vancouver and a meeting has been set up in Ottawa. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom