Pubdate: Thu, 13 Sep 2007 Source: Outlook, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Outlook Contact: http://www.northshoreoutlook.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1433 LOWER LONSDALE ON THE BRINK Unless you live on the 300-block of West 4th in Lower Lonsdale, stories of drug dealing and prostitution overrunning apartment buildings might seem outlandish. But rest assured, area residents are not crying wolf. After a group of tenants on the block called a rent strike, accusing their landlord of negligence leading to slum conditions, The Outlook investigated and indeed found the telltale signs of a neighbourhood teetering on the brink. A casual observer spending any time in the back alleys of this block will see drivers pull up behind certain apartments and zip off two minutes later. These guys aren't delivering pizzas. It's drug trade, area residents say. For more visual proof, watch for the non-residents flocking to the area. Like wretched human seagulls drawn to junk piles, piteously skinny, bedraggled women are hanging around, soliciting whoever passes by, and quickly flipping their earnings for drugs. One particular woman is known for tossing rocks through windows when her dealers won't let her in. You can hear shrieks and brawls and breaking glass at night. Something needs to be done quick, because this is what Vancouver's Downtown Eastside must have looked like before a critical mass of drug traffic dragged it into a hellish black hole of addiction and crime. Following The Outlook's rent strike reports a number of residents applauded the coverage and suggested ways to buttress their neighbourhood. In alleys the city should ensure all garbage bins are locked, perhaps streetlights should be erected and unlicensed derelict cars should be towed away. Graffiti is proliferating and must be addressed too. Patrick Regan, owner of a building on West 4th, said the vast majority of landlords here are moving the neighbourhood in the right direction. "It's about building maintenance and tenant screening," he said. "If you have problem tenants, you can easily throw them out." Too often with local politicians, drugs and crime are seen as vast, nebulous social problems without ready solutions. Nonsense, residents of the 300-block of West 4th say -- drugs and crime take over building by building, they don't materialize full blown out of the ether. The solution is as simple as this. Landlords that are bringing the block down must be compelled by the city to act responsibly. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek