Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jan 2008 Source: Cambridge Times (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Fairway Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.cambridgetimes.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3423 Author: Melissa Hancock CRACKING DOWN ON DRUGS PRIORITY: SURVEY Policing Priorities Have Changed In The Eyes Of Waterloo Region Residents. Cracking down on drugs should be the service's number one focus, according to the 2007 citizen survey results. In 2003, cracking down on speeding and aggressive driving was the top priority for residents. Now, citizens have ranked speeding and aggressive driving as the third priority - in 2003, cracking down on graffiti was number three. Overall, the survey results are "encouraging", said Insp. Bryan Larkin, executive officer to the chief, who presented a brief outline of the survey results during Wednesday's regular Waterloo Regional Police Services Board meeting. He also said there is always room for improvement. Addressing criminal gangs in the region made the number two spot on the recent priority list. In 2003, residential break and enters took that slot. Deterring drinking and driving is the fourth priority, an area of crime that didn't even make the list in 2003. And the fourth priority was addressing youth behaviour. And finally, residential break and enters made the priority list at spot number five, previously police visibility. Chief Matt Torigian said crime prevention awareness initiatives have contributed to a change in the public's priorities. For several areas of the survey, the service asked questions to a combination of 500 random citizens and 500 victims of crime in the region. Some surveys were conducted by phone and some were mailed out to individual houses. Board member Patti Haskell raised concerns about how individuals who take the survey could interpret the questions differently. Larkin assured that in both the phone and mailed-out surveys, explanations of questions were given accordingly. Also discovered through the survey, 74 per cent of residents - a mix of citizens and victims - are happy with officers' call response time. After measuring survey participants' perceptions of crime in the region, the service found that 67 per cent of residents think regional crime rates have remained the same as in 2003. Nineteen per cent think crime has increased, five per cent think there has been a decrease, and nine per cent said they didn't know. "We've seen some vast improvements and it really speaks to fear," said Larkin of the public's perception of crime. He added that many residents are looking at crime in a broad light, not just a personal sense. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom