Pubdate: Sun, 30 Sep 2007 Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 The Calgary Sun Contact: http://www.calgarysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/67 Author: Rick Bell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) CALGARY COPS' NEW NO. 1 Talks The Talk On Fighting The Fight And Cuts To The Chase About Putting Unlawful Business Out Of Business He isn't riding into town pretending to be some kind of mythical white knight or Western movie sheriff. No, Rick Hanson is a cop in a very real and often ugly world and he wants to get down to business. "I'm not saying I have all the answers but I'll do all I can do to fight the fight and we've got to fight like hell," says Rick, who was raised in Calgary, grew up attending St. Francis high and served with distinction in the city police for 30 years before going to the Mounties for a couple of turns of the calendar. Now he's back. Rick is being sworn in as Calgary's new police chief tomorrow, the unanimous choice of the mayor, city council and the city's police commission. "I'm not going to give you glib responses or tell you I can wave my magic wand and Calgary will suddenly be safer. No one can say they'll make Calgary into Nirvana, it ain't there. But I've got the best police officers working their butts off to do the right thing, I've got a commitment from city hall and I'm in a community believing if something needs to be done, then let's do it." Well, something needs to be done. Rick cuts to the chase and, unlike others, uses no big words to try and avoid what stares us all in the face. "More and more people are tired of what's going on. Maybe 15 years ago, people were more accepting but now they've had it. There's a sense of frustration coming from the increase in social disorder. There is a fear of social disorder and people say: 'We want to see you guys fix it whatever it's going to take.' "Here's what I'm hearing. You know what, we're telling the kids not to do drugs and they walk out and see dopers in the mall and on the street and the idiots are arrested and the kids see them right back out. What message is this sending? These guys should be cooling their butts in jail. "It's scary out there and, if you're a parent, you have to be scared. We've got a problem and if we don't get a grip on this drug issue it is just going to get worse. "There's a lot of stuff coming into this province and it's fuelling a lot of the crime, a lot of the violence. Is it going to change overnight? No. But we can't just sit and complain. We've got be more aggressive about putting the right bad guys in jail and we will look at every solution we can and every tactic we can and then build the plan." Rick says he will sit down with prosecutors and work with the courts and social agencies where necessary. We will see a highly visible police presence, more officers actually on the street as they are recruited and trained. Rick wants to sweat the small stuff and the big. The new chief will present his plan to city council in the new year but a new tone will be set long before that date. Listening to Rick, you quickly get the impression he's hearing what the public is saying and not just trying to cook up a butt-covering explanation on how what we are thinking is all wrong. "We're all aware of community expectations. If we think with bad guys it's catch and release, then it's time to sit down with the justice system and fix it. Guys who go to jail have to stay in jail. "But it's not an either/or situation. There are decent kids and decent adults hooked on something insidious and we have to get them off the drugs. The guys we should really be going after are the drug dealers and those running the chop shops and anybody else facilitating this crime." Yes, the bad guys need to be behind bars and not on some conditional sentence playing Nintendo in Mommy's basement. The addicts really need help. And everybody has to walk the walk. "If you're a person with a good job in an office tower and classify yourself a recreational drug user, doing lines of coke at a party in a fancy house in one of the fancy districts, and then you shake your head and say, 'Tsk tsk, look, we have a drug problem' -- well, you aren't a street person but you sure as hell are contributing to the problem. You can't suck and blow." Mayor Bronco backs the new chief, including pledging to go to the province to get more cash for more cops once a plan is in place. "I'm confident we have a chief who will be very assertive in ensuring public safety is number one. When people are going out doing their unlawful business we want to put them out of business," says Bronco. "The public standard has slipped and we need to boost it back up." The mayor is aware the slippage isn't always found in the crime numbers. It is felt in polls showing crime climbing as a concern. "People feel uncomfortable. I feel uncomfortable walking downtown and having some guy try and sell me coke but I don't show up as a crime statistic," says Bronco. Of course, on this day, the spotlight is on Rick Hanson. This page tells Rick he still seems like a nice guy. Rick laughs. "If you think I'm a nice guy after all this, well, God bless you. All I can say is I'm going to give it my best. But, as always, the proof will be in the pudding." Well, so far, the flavour of the pudding is good. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin