Pubdate: Tue, 12 Dec 2006 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Jake Rupert DRUG USE 'OUT OF CONTROL' IN CORE WARD Rideau-Vanier Councillor, Group Want Special Police Cleanup Unit Drug use "has never been so been so out of control" in downtown Ottawa's east side, and the police need to dedicate a special unit to address the problem, a group of community leaders says. The group is led by Rideau-Vanier Councillor Georges Bedard, the heads of two major social service agencies in that ward, and the area's 500-member business improvement association. Ottawa police Const. Steven Desjourdy said there are no plans for such a unit, but 10 officers have recently been added to the force's drug squad and police plan a strategy to deal with the problem. He said the strategy will address all different levels of the drug world from street pushers to high-level dealers. "I think we'll be seeing positive results from this in the next few months," Const. Desjourdy said. He said the force welcomes the input from the group and wants to work with the community to deal with the issue. However, members of the group say a dedicated unit targeting the street-level drug problem is needed. "We are now living in an unsafe environment where the drug dealers are preying on the homeless and making their life situations even more difficult than they already area," said the co-executive directors of the Shepherds of Good Hope in a recent letter to police Chief Vince Bevan. "Crack houses, drug dealers, drug users, and a higher-than-usual level of crime are symptoms of the drug issues in the area," The Ottawa Mission's executive director, Diane Morrison, said in a similar letter. Brian McQuaid, chairman of the Downtown Rideau Board of Management, said drug use and crime have surpassed officers' abilities to deal with the problem under current staffing levels. "The insurgence of these drugs in our community, and the crimes directly linked to them, go beyond these officers' capacities," he said. The officers "need and deserve to be supported with proactive resources specific to our needs ... before this cancer manifests and spreads any farther in our community." Police statistics show Rideau-Vanier Ward has more crimes per capita than any other. Rideau-Vanier's total crime rate of 15,218 incidents per 100,000 people in 2005 is almost three times higher than the city's overall rate of 5,785 per 100,000. In 2005, the ward had the most violent and property crimes per capita and finished second to Somerset Ward in break and enters. Last month, things got so bad at the Shepherds of Good Hope that officials closed the facility for two days. Officials at the combination drop-in centre, soup kitchen and shelter said there was so much drug dealing and use going on in its facility, it had to close for safety reasons. At the Salvation Army shelter on George Street, officials have hired private security guards to deal with unruly drug users. Drug use is becoming so prevalent in the area that last month during a tour of the Byward Market, Mayor Larry O'Brien, then a candidate, came face-to-face with a man using crack and watched officers arrest another man for drug possession. Also last summer, a Citizen reporter spent four hours observing Rideau Street and witnessed dozens of quick, hand-to-hand transactions of money for small packages. Mr. Bedard said he understands getting rid of the problem will require prevention programs and treatment programs, as well as increased enforcement. He also says members of the community need to buy into the effort to take back their neighbourhoods. "We need to get back to the neighourhood watch and work together to get rid of this sort of activity," he said. "Turning a blind eye to the problem will not make it go away." However, he said citizens and businesses can report all the criminal activity they want, but if police can't respond, the effort is wasted. That's why he's asking police to set up a special drug unit to deal with crack houses and street trafficking in the Byward Market, Lowertown, Sandy Hill and Vanier. "It's imperative that measures be taken immediately to tackle this problem before it gets completely out of control," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom