Pubdate: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) id=7af1838c-862f-4c57-a402-f0da5c639d72 Copyright: 2006 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoon/starphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: Janet French, The StarPhoenix CRIME-INFESTED HOMES CLOSED Anonymous Reporting Helps Lead Investigators Of Gov't-Backed Program PLEASANT HILL, Sask. -- Tenants at three Pleasant Hill homes were evicted this month under a Justice Department program that aims to shut down brothels, drug houses and booze cans. The Safer Communities and Neighbourhoods (SCAN) Act, a program that lets neighbours report suspicious activity anonymously, took effect in fall 2004. By December 2005, investigators had sent residents packing from 64 crime-filled homes across the province, Justice Minister Frank Quennell said Thursday. With help from landlords, SCAN investigators have evicted people from eight Pleasant Hill homes, including three on April 7, Quennell said. "I think in streets where there is a house where people are afraid to go out of their homes if anybody is coming out of or going to that house, we make a dramatic difference when we shut down that house," he said. At a community meeting last week, Pleasant Hill residents challenged the province to take action in their crime-ridden neighbourhood. The city's first two homicides of 2006 took place in Pleasant Hill -- across the street from the other on Avenue S South, a couple of weeks apart in March. When a resident sees suspicious traffic frequenting a house, that person is encouraged to call a toll-free number and report it. Provincial investigators check out the homes, which usually involves surveillance, Quennell said. When the investigators have gathered their evidence, they present it to the property's landlord in hopes the tenants will be evicted. If the property owner is causing the trouble, investigators can apply to a judge for a so-called community safety order. Any future criminal activity at the address will put the owners in contempt of court, and police can lay charges, Quennell said. At least one of the Avenue S homes that became a homicide scene was suspected of being a drug house, Quennell said. "This is the type of place you'd hope somebody would report to the Safer Communities and Neighbourhoods unit so that that activity was shut down before the type of violence that often arises from that type of activity would occur and somebody was tragically killed," he said. A drug house, Quennell said, can be a place from which residents deal drugs or an otherwise empty home where people meet to do intravenous drugs or solvents. "It's pretty grisly stuff," he said of some residences he toured in Regina busted under SCAN. Dorothy Ross, a Pleasant Hill resident, recently heard about SCAN and said she wished she'd known about it sooner. Ross said she's made repeated calls to the police in the past about a suspected drug house on her street, which was eventually shut down. She feels like the neighbourhood has become safer since more crime hot spots have been shut down. "It's helped a lot," she said. "I'd like to see a lot more shut down because there are a lot of drug houses in this area." Brian Graham, president of the Pleasant Hill community association, is less convinced. "It's just a Band-Aid solution," he said. "It doesn't have any teeth." In some cases where tenants are evicted, no criminal charges are laid, he said. Some evictions just displace criminals to another house in the neighbourhood, he said, adding he knows of one group of dealers who are back on the same street peddling drugs after getting evicted. "It's a start and we have to be comfortable with whatever starts we get, but is it going to solve anything? No, because eventually they're just going to get smarter and figure out new ways of dealing," Graham said. The April 6 budget included money for two new SCAN investigators. Quennell also said the program doesn't just shuffle drug dealers and pimps around. Many landlords own numerous properties and aren't going to rent to the same thugs twice, he said. The justice minister said he didn't know how many evicted tenants also faced criminal charges in connection with their activities. Along with 64 evictions between November 2004 and December 2005, investigators have also handed out six warnings, and in 25 cases were able to take other measures to stop the criminal activity, Quennell said. To anonymously report a drug house, sex trade operation or booze can, call 1-866-51-SAFER. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl