Pubdate: Tue, 01 Aug 2006 Source: Business In Vancouver (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 BIV Publications Ltd. Contact: http://www.biv.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2458 Author: Bob Mackin ANGELS IN THE IN-BOX Guardian Angel boss returns to Vancouver after 20-year absence hoping for a warmer welcome from civic leaders, as Mayor Sullivan mulls a plan to get tough on small crime. Guardian Angels' founder Curtis Sliwa returned to Vancouver last weekend, hoping to be part of the solution to downtown's drug and crime problem. The leader of the New York-headquartered citizens' crime fighting patrols, recognizable in their trademark red berets and jackets, wants the Guardian Angels to make a Vancouver comeback this year after failing in the 1980s because of a lack of civic and police co-operation. "Local officials didn't want anything to do with us, like we were in a leper colony," Sliwa told BIV in an exclusive interview in New York. "The mayor, the police chiefa=80"no one would have anything to do with us." The original Vancouver chapter trained at Stanley Park and patrolled the Downtown Eastside, Granville Mall and Davie Street. It eventually disbanded because of lack of support. Sliwa said he has received a steady stream of e-mails from Vancouverites in recent years fed up with the city's decline. "[Vancouverites continue to complain of] attacks on bus drivers, people on the SkyTrain, definitely the East End, and more of the American-style problems that transpired in New York that motivated me to start the group," he said. Sliwa planned to meet with VPD Insp. John McKay, because he said Guardian Angels' patrols are needed to help restore order, because politicians and police haven't done a good job. "Let us organize, train, recruit," he said. "Let us do it in co-operation with the police and let us prove that we can do what we have been able to do in many of the 60 cities in the world, now with police and elected officials' co-operation." VPD media relations Const. Howard Chow declined to act on a BIV request for an interview with Chief Jamie Graham. He said police are aware of the Guardian Angels' intent to re-establish a Vancouver chapter and welcome "more eyes and ears out there," but civilians should report crime to police instead of taking the law into their own hands. The Guardian Angels could have a better reception this time, because Mayor Sam Sullivan wants to get tough with panhandling, sidewalk camping, jaywalking and litter. Elected last November, Sullivan said there has been a vacuum at city hall where "disorder issues have been ignored." Sullivan said there could be a way to adapt some of the techniques and ideas of the Guardian Angels into the city's community policing system. Vancouver's claim to being one of the world's most livable cities was recently questioned in The Economist because of the problems on the Downtown Eastside. Sliwa, who hosts a morning drive radio show on New York's WABC AM, recently set up chapters in Toronto and Calgary. Toronto officials have offered no help, but he's pleased with the reception in Calgary, where he was shocked by a style of open drug dealing and drug use that he hadn't witnessed in New York since the 1980s. "People tell me that's what they've seen in Vancouver," he said. "A lot of people doing this really don't have an excuse whatsoever. They like committing crime, they like using drugs and if you create a tolerant atmosphere they're going to flock there." The Guardian Angels began when Sliwa was working as a McDonald's night manager in the Bronx in 1978. He formed the first 13-person volunteer, weapon-free patrol of the surrounding neighbourhood and the notorious No. 4 subway line. The Guardian Angels were lauded by New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani as part of his successful 1990s plan to clean up Manhattan, including Times Square, once a notorious district of smut and prostitution. The Guardian Angels' annual fundraising dinner is attended by some of the city's business and media elite who donate and fundraise for the organization. New York's Guardian Angels spend most of their time patrolling Brooklyn and Bronx housing projects, and work with civic harm prevention and anti-violence programs in schools. Chapters now operate worldwide in Australia, South Africa, Brazil and Japan. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin