Pubdate: Fri, 10 Nov 2006 Source: Yellowknifer (CN NT) Copyright: 2006 Yellowknifer Contact: http://www.nnsl.com/members/newspapers/newsnorth/sideindexsetupYK.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4270 JUDICIAL OVERKILL Safe communities act unlikely to work in the NWT Illegal drugs and bootlegged booze can destroy lives, rip families apart and devastate neighbourhoods. A suspected drug house at Trail's End operated for nearly three years before police swooped in during the early morning hours of May 2. Neighbours called RCMP dozens of times. Police visited the home several times. But only after the two people who rented the mobile home were arrested did the problem end. It makes one wonder: if police can't shut down a suspected crack house, what will a bunch of quasi-judicial inspectors be able to do? During the now ended session of the legislative assembly, MLAs began consideration of a so-called Safe Communities and Neighbourhoods Act. Championed by Yellowknife Centre MLA Robert Hawkins and apparently supported by Justice Minister Brendan Bell, similar laws are already in place in Yukon, Manitoba and Saskatchewan. It would enable officials to target and shut down residential and commercial buildings believed to be involved in illegal activities, such as drug dealing, bootlegging or prostitution. Since the start of 2005 in Saskatchewan, a team of government investigators has completed 758 investigations and served 166 eviction notices. Of those evictions, four have been challenged in court. Two were overturned. Inspectors, most of them former police officers, have the power to get search warrants, do investigations and take suspects to court. In a province with a population nearing one million people, it seems to work. It's not clear if the Safe Communities Act is practical in a small territory: the Yukon act is just being put into effect. We don't believe this law is workable in the NWT. It's like using a bazooka to kill a flea. In the NWT in 2005, there were 438 drug offences, ranging from heroin to cocaine and marijuana. How many crack houses are there in Yellowknife? One or two? Who's going to do the inspections - city bylaw or RCMP? Is the justice department going to have to hire special investigators who travel the territory to look into every report of a crack house, gambling den or bootlegging operation? Then there's the issue of civil rights. Justice Minister Bell says he isn't concerned about "infringing on the rights of known drug dealers" but he should be. Every time you step on someone's rights, the closer you get to a police state where freedom comes in second place. MLAs' hearts might be in the right place, but their heads aren't. If they're so concerned about drugs, put more money into policing and enforcing the Criminal Code so officers can respond to each and every complaint of a drug house. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek