Pubdate: Mon, 10 Mar 2008 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Richard Watts, Times Colonist COURTING NEW SOLUTIONS Community Court May Help Addicted Offenders Turn Their Lives Around An experiment with a new approach to courtroom justice is attracting the guarded interest of politicians, lawyers and social workers in Victoria. Called "community court," the three-year pilot program is scheduled to begin in July in Vancouver. It will deal with low-level crime most often traced to social problems, addiction or mental-health issues. Instead of whacking offenders with a jail sentence, it's hoped the new system will give people a better chance at turning their lives around. "We've got to start treating people who are treatable and who are prepared to be treated," said Attorney General Wally Oppal in a recent telephone interview. Oppal, an ex-Supreme Court Justice himself, said community court represents a change in mindset for the legal profession. It's one element of the government's Criminal Justice Reform Initiative, which also includes other programs like the Prolific Offender Management Project, in which the solicitor general's ministry is a key player. "Everybody in government is sold on the (community court) project," said Oppal. Community leaders and lawyers in Victoria are now watching the move with interest. Victoria Mayor Allan Lowe said local government has approached the attorney general's ministry to be part of the pilot project and hasn't given up yet on the idea of importing it. Lowe said it's believed Victoria's problems with street-level crime could be eased with the community-court approach. "We are hoping that Vancouver is successful so we can implement it." And Victoria lawyer Michael Butterfield, a longtime advocate for community court in Victoria, said he became interested after dealing with too many offenders whose underlying problems are social and not criminal. "They just come back again, and again and again," he said. "That might be profitable for a lawyer but it doesn't let me sleep well at night." According to Judge Hugh Stansfield, the province's chief judge, the initiative, pioneered in New York, promises the chance to quickly fashion a sentence with a visible, public punishment, along with directed assistance to address any underlying conditions, such as mental health or addiction. "So our job [as judges] isn't any more to sit back and decide the case. Our job is to some extent to jump in, and to the extent appropriate, help people solve the problem," he said in a recent meeting with the Times Colonist editorial board. For the Vancouver pilot, the attorney general's ministry has budgeted $13 million as a three-year operating budget, on top of $5.15 million to renovate part of the Vancouver provincial courthouse. Stansfield said he thought the initial effort deserved its own space, something different from the standard courthouse. Even the courtrooms will be designed differently, to bring the judge down to the level of the accused instead of sitting on high. It will offer people accused of minor offences, such as theft, drug possession, public nuisance or even common assault, a chance to plead guilty and head to community court for sentencing. There, a sentence can be fashioned to answer community concerns along with the underlying problems of the offender. Stansfield said community reparations can be devised by neighbourhood leaders who understand local problems. Offenders might find themselves painting over graffiti, wearing a specially marked bib. When these reparations occur quickly and publicly it will give people a chance to see swift justice in action, he said. But at the same time as reparations are crafted, the offender will be referred to programs or resources to help with any underlying medical or social issue. Stansfield said many of these resources already exist, and it's hoped community court can act as an entranceway into this network of programs and agencies. The court itself has already drawn commitment from other levels of government. The Vancouver Coastal Health Authority has assigned two full-time people, called justice liaison officers, who will work directly out of community court to see offenders are directed to the right people. Other Vancouver Coastal Health initiatives, like the 25-member urgent response team, will also work closely with the community court. Stansfield said ultimately he hopes the court can process 1,500 to 2,000 cases each year of the 17,000 now going through criminal court in Vancouver. Meanwhile, back in Victoria, Sue Wishart, chairwoman of the criminal justice section of the B.C. branch of the Canadian Bar Association, applauded the move to pilot a community court. But Wishart said a new court is only half of what's needed. The other essential half is the support of mental-health treatment providers, social housing and detox beds. Rev. Al Tysick, executive director of Our Place, a drop-in centre serving street people, said unless the supporting resources are in place a community court is pointless. And right now, Tysick said the service providers in Victoria are already overloaded. "If you don't have the support behind it [community court] -- it's useless," said Tysick. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake