Pubdate: Thu, 04 Dec 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Pete McMartin COURTING DISASTER ONE CASE AT A TIME Judge Thomas Gove Says It's Way To Early To Say If The Community Court Will Truly Make A Difference, But It Sure Is Helping It was 11:45 a.m. on a Tuesday morning and Judge Thomas Gove, presiding in Vancouver's small Downtown Community Court, had heard from, in the space of an hour: a mentally ill homeless man from Somalia found sleeping and urinating in a downtownapartment building's elevator, for a second time; a cocaine addict who spatin the face of a female McDonald's employee, then screamed "F--- you, bitch!" at her after he had refused to wait in line to be served; a man on permanent disability income charged with the theft of approximately $1,000 worth of merchandise from a video store, and who pleaded not guilty; a young man "with a very lengthy record" who Gove had previously sentenced to community service a couple of weeks ago and who was back in court because he had broken the terms of his curfew and never did report to do his community service (Gove gave him a second chance, sentenced him again to community service and warned him if he screwed up this time he'd better bring his winter clothes when he came to court because he'd be getting six months in jail); a man, who having lost his job, his girlfriend, and his apartment in Kitsilano, and who ended up in the Downtown Eastside severely depressed, charged with shoplifting socks and underwear from two different stores; a young man who was being charged with assault for allegedly getting into a fight with an employee of a video store where the young man used to work, a charge the young man vehemently denied and repeatedly said was "an injustice;" and a young, jittery man whose lank hair fell over one side of his face like a curtain, who broke out into song while he sat in the observers' gallery waiting for his turn in front of Gove, and who pleaded not guilty to allegedly threatening a security guard after he was approached for panhandling. When he was called forward, the young man stood in front of Gove, his hands jammed in the back pockets of his jeans. He listened, smiling, fidgeting, while Gove told him his trial would be set for a later date. The young man turned, and on the way out, shouted happily back to Gove: "Okay, thanks man!" Gove, startled, looked up from his notes and watched the young man go. He rolled his eyes and smiled. Community Court's level of formality is set on low. Gove prefers it that way. "The Supreme Court this isn't," Gove would say later. "I like the informality of it. Remember, the people that usually appear before me are often addicted or mentally ill, or they're poor, and few of them have ever probably had cause to speak in front of people. They're probably a little scared. So I try to keep it as low-key as possible. Let them address me sitting down, for example, if they're more comfortable with that." As Canada's first community court, it opened, with high expectations, on Sept. 10. It was designed to process as many as 1,500 cases a year - -- an unheard of number compared to the rest of Canada's sclerotic court system, and a number the community court will reach easily, Gove predicts. It was targeted especially toward ending, or at least slowing, the social and judicial revolving door that keeps the Downtown Eastside spinning out of control. Some numbers after 21/2 months of service: - - Fifty-two people were referred to Vancouver Coastal Health information sessions to access health services available to them. - - Seven people eligible for income assistance were processed. - - The court sentenced people to 211 hours of community service indoors doing laundry, janitorial, serving and secretarial work, and 301 hours of community service on outdoor street cleaning and beautification. (You can see these crews wearing bright yellow vests.) - - Eighteen people were placed into housing. (This may seem like a small figure, but in a city where social and emergency housing have waiting lists, the number, Gove said, is testimony to the tenacity of the court's in-house housing worker.) - - Twenty-four people assessed for forensic services -- again, by referral of the court's triage team -- and seven assessed by a psychiatrist. - - A total of 118 victims contacted. (A remarkable number, Gove said, compared to other courts, and important in an area with high addiction and AIDS/HIV rates.) Is it making a difference? Way too early to tell, Gove said, though the enormity of the problems, and the court's limits to what it can do about those problems, have quickly become apparent to him. "Even though I've been sitting in criminal court in Vancouver for the last six years before this, I did not appreciate the number of addicted and mentally ill people there are down here. It's astounding." There is, Gove said, nowhere near enough social housing. There is a sad lack of detox centres. And there is, he said, a troubling concentration of social services for the poor and addicted in the Downtown Eastside that draws and keeps them here. Gove would like to see those services -- some 600 social agencies, he believes -- dispersed throughout the Lower Mainland. This isn't a new message. It is important, though, that a man like Gove is saying it. He's respected, smart, committed -- all the good things -- and sufficiently disconnected from the ever-warring turf-jealous social agencies in the Downtown Eastside that the government will find a credible sounding board in him. Progress, he said, will be incremental. But he hands me a sheet of "good news stories." One of them: A crack addict who tried to hang himself in custody, who, because he had no record and needed employment, Gove released on bail with the suggestion that he volunteer to do 20 hours of community service. It might help him in sentencing, Gove told him. A month later, he came back, had moved out of the city to a new community, had done more than 20 hours of community service and was undergoing counselling. The charges were stayed. There was one less body in the revolving door. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin