Pubdate: Fri, 21 Jul 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, The Ottawa Citizen Referenced: Statistics Canada's report 'Crime Statistics in Canada, 2005' 23 page .pdf file http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/85-002-XIE/85-002-XIE2006004.pdf 'POLICE CAN'T RESOLVE SOCIAL PROBLEMS' Spending Money on Programs Is Cheaper Than Kilrea's Get-Tough-On-Crime Plan, Experts Say Trying to stop people from committing crimes and living on the streets by beefing up police enforcement -- like mayoral candidate Terry Kilrea wants to do -- doesn't work, say two Ottawa criminology professors. Ross Hastings, from the University of Ottawa, and Michel Vallee, from Carleton University, say the causes of crime and homelessness are what need to be addressed and increased enforcement or "zero tolerance" policies are not the answers. "These are social problems, and police can't resolve social problems," Mr. Vallee said yesterday. Mr. Hastings said if Mr. Kilrea wants to cut down on crime and homelessness, he would be better off spending money on integrated programs targeting at-risk families and children, largely in the city's poorer areas. He said studies show it's cheaper than Mr. Kilrea's approach, and it's more effective. "The difficulty with Kilrea's approach is it's incredibly expensive, and you often see no positive results." On Wednesday, Mr. Kilrea announced his public safety platform in the campaign against Mayor Bob Chiarelli, former city councillor Alex Munter, and three others. It's a classic get-tough-on-crime position, including increasing the number of police officers on the streets by 50 per cent and strict enforcement to the letter of the law. Mr. Kilrea's platform targets people living on the streets, drug dealing, guns, aggressive panhandling, public drunkenness, prostitution, gangs, vandalism and graffiti, all of which he says are serious problems in Ottawa. The policy would target downtown and in the Byward Market, which he said have "countless people sleeping on the streets, drug dealers operating in plain view, and roaming gangs of thugs at night." A report released by Statistics Canada yesterday shows the total crime rate in Ottawa rose last year by 1.1 per cent while the violent crime rate dropped 6.8 per cent. Overall, the report says the city was the ninth safest of 27 Canadian cities last year, and our crime rates are hardly those of the Bronx circa 1975. Mr. Vallee said Ottawa's problems, compared with other similar-sized cities, "aren't that significant" and that an increase in enforcement in one area, without an increase in support and social programs, such as affordable housing, will simply move the criminal element into another area. "The causes of crime and homelessness are very broad, so solutions to them must be broad, too," he said. "It's not a matter of simply increasing enforcement to get them off the streets. Where are you going to put them? How are you going to address the problems that led them to the streets so they won't go back? "These are the questions that need answering." Mr. Hastings said Mr. Kilrea's ideas might be influenced by the misconception that people living on the streets are there voluntarily. He said a minority of them are, but the majority of them are there "because they have nowhere else to go." The professor said tough-on-crime approaches are fundamentally flawed because they assume laws and enforcement can control individual decision-making by deterring bad decisions, such as taking drugs or sleeping on the streets, with punishment. He said studies show that this doesn't work well, but that when you provide education, drug treatment, other programs and better choices, people tend to make good decisions. "It seldom works if you focus solely on a punitive approach," he said. "It's more effective to address the multiple levels of risk faced by these kids and their families." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake