Pubdate: Wed, 19 Apr 2006 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2006 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Bruce Owen SPEEDING FINES TO PAY FOR DRUG WAR Clean Sweep So Successful It's Expanding Across Winnipeg MANITOBA'S leadfoots will help pay to fight drug dealers and gang members under a permanent, city-wide version of Operation Clean Sweep. By the end of the month the province will increase speeding fines by as much as $60 and raise the Justice Services surcharge to $40 from $35 for all provincial offences, municipal bylaws and federal tickets. The stiffest increase, for doing 16 to 19 km/h over the limit, is to $195 from $135, a 44 per cent increase. The change was announced yesterday by Justice Minister Gord Mackintosh, Mayor Sam Katz and Police Chief Jack Ewatski. That new revenue, expected to be $2.1 million per year, will pay to put police into any "hot zone" in the city where criminals think they have the upper hand. "We are coming for you," Ewatski said. "We will continue to come for you." Katz said the aim of the full-time unit is to make sure Winnipeggers feel just as safe walking down Portage Avenue as they do sitting in their backyards. "We're giving our police officers the tools they need to be proactive, not reactive," he said. "We don't want to just move a problem around," Mackintosh added. "We want to move it out." Operation Clean Sweep started as a special task force set up following the Thanksgiving slaying of Philipe Haiart on Sargent Avenue. Haiart, 17, was an innocent bystander killed in a gang-related shooting. The focus of the 45-officer project -- dubbed "in-your-face" policing - -- was to uproot visible street crime (drug dealing, gang violence, prostitution and property crime) in the West End. What makes Clean Sweep different from other front-line patrol units is that its officers aren't "dispatchable," meaning they aren't beholden to the police radio and jumping from call to call, but free to make arrests on their own. Ewatski said to date more than 700 people have been arrested, some more than once. Officers have also seized 43 weapons. "You go drive down Ellice Avenue at 7 p.m. tonight and you'll see people out shopping and enjoying their neighbourhood," Clean Sweep Const. Peter O'Kane said. "You won't see the ruffians and toughs you used to see. "We made misery for them. If you ask me that's what community-based policing is all about." One detail that was missing yesterday is how an expanded Clean Sweep will work for the entire city. Insp. Boyd Campbell said the new unit is still being set up, but deployment of officers will likely be based on two things: Field intelligence gathered by police and internal computer analysis of crime trends. Campbell said ideally police will go into areas or "hot zones" before the public starts complaining. "We are not going to drop anything that's been successful," he said. "We're going to build on the lessons of the past five months." At least one group, however, isn't sold on the idea of financing the Clean Sweep program with speeding ticket revenues. "We don't feel it's appropriate," said Mike Mager, president of the Canadian Automobile Association's Manitoba chapter. "We're opposed to raising money and then putting it to a completely unrelated program. "They are mixing things that shouldn't be mixed." Mager said CAA is completely supportive of hefty fines as a deterrent for speeders. However, he said money raised from fines should go back into programs that either support safe driving or improve Manitoba roadways. One of the criticisms against Clean Sweep is that it's too focused on fighting crime and not enough at preventing it. However, inner-city activist and police adviser Rev. Harry Lehotsky of New Life Ministries said a dedicated enforcement project like Clean Sweep is sorely needed. "We've got social programs up the wazoo," he said. "We've got unattended programs galore. Where we've been hurting for years is serious enforcement." Speed over limit Old fine New fine * 10 to 12 km/h $110 $144 * 13 to 14 km/h $110 $167 * 15 km/h $135 $167 * 16 to 19 km/h $135 $195 - --- MAP posted-by: Derek