Pubdate: Thu, 14 Feb 2008 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Don Butler CRIME BILL WON'T PROTECT US, EXPERT SAYS Roots Of Violence Must Be Addressed, Criminologist Warns The Harper government's much-touted Tackling Violent Crime bill will do little to make people in Ottawa and other cities safer because it fails to address crime's root causes, a University of Ottawa criminologist said yesterday. The bill "lacks the key ingredients to make any significant difference to the safety of Canadians on our streets, in our schools and in our homes," Irvin Waller, director of the university's Institute for the Prevention of Crime, told a Senate committee studying the crime bill. The government has made the bill a centrepiece of its legislative agenda. It staged a confidence vote this week urging the Senate to pass the bill by March 1. The motion, which is non-binding on the Senate, carried easily after Liberal MPs boycotted the vote. Mr. Waller said he endorses Parliament's desire to tackle violent crime. However, "I am deeply concerned that the debate on this bill has left out the most important elements that would reduce violent crime in Canada." While the crime bill might achieve "some small gains" by keeping a few dangerous offenders off the streets, he said governments need to invest "in a smart and sustained way in targeted programs that tackle the roots of violence." He cited Statistics Canada figures that show one in four Canadians was a victim of crime in 2004. Close to half a million women were sexually assaulted and two million people were victims of physical assault. To reduce those numbers, Mr. Waller, whose 2006 book, Less Law, More Order, lays out his prescription for reducing victimization, called for a three-pronged strategy of enforcement, prevention and treatment. Crime-reduction policies should target troubled youth, providing incentives to complete school and find jobs, he said. And they require the engagement of education, housing, social services, public health and law enforcement. "Nowhere is this clearer than in relation to street violence, where innocent bystanders and our sons are being killed at rates that are appalling." Such strategies, he argued, are the best way to respond to the growing youth gang problem in Canadian cities, including Ottawa, where gang membership has increased to 600 from 250 in 2002, according to a study released this week. In Boston, a program in the 1990s used "smart enforcement and smart social programming" to cut homicides committed by youth by 71 per cent within two years. Youth inclusion programs in England and Wales reduced youth arrests by 65 per cent and overall crime in neighbourhoods by as much as 27 per cent. Similarly, he said, adding courses about relationships, alcohol and drug use to the school curriculum is an effective way to reduce violence against women. The Fourth R curriculum, an experimental Ontario school-based program designed to prevent bullying, dating violence and peer violence, has already significantly reduced aggressive behaviour. Mr. Waller said the strategy he advocates would reduce crime victimization by 50 per cent over a decade, and cost about 10 per cent of the $13 billion Canada spends annually on police, corrections and other criminal justice services. The "single greatest impediment" to reducing violence is the lack of knowledge by politicians, the public and the media about what works, he said. A rare exception is Alberta, which announced a three-pronged strategy of enforcement, prevention and treatment to reduce crime last November. "They provide an inspiring example to the federal Parliament of what is needed," Mr. Waller said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek