Pubdate: Sun, 21 Sep 2008 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Cassidy Olivier, with file from Canwest News Service NDP PROMISES CRACKDOWN ON CRIME Vancouver candidate praises Layton while colleagues quit over drug use NDP candidate Don Davies lavished praise today on party leader Jack Layton's anti-crime measures, saying Canadians deserve to feel safe in their homes, on the streets and in their communities. Unveiled before an audience of about 200 supporters at a campaign rally in Edmonton, Layton pledged that, if elected, he would spend $100 million a year to put 2,500 new police officers on the streets. The plan also calls for $50 million a year to be put toward prevention programs for at-risk youth and $25 million a year over four years for witness-protection programs. Davies, who is running in Conservative MP David Emerson's Vancouver-Kingsway riding, said it was high time tougher measures were taken against crime -- in particular, the proliferation of handguns and gang activity. These are issues, he said, he's seen first hand in his own riding. "Our community has been touched by handguns and gang activity and elevated crime," he said. "That is why I am pleased to see our national campaign come out with a strategy to take action." Unlike Prime Minister Stephen Harper's approach to crime reduction, Davies said, the NDP's is more "balanced." Not only does the NDP want to be tough on crime, he said, but also tough on the causes of crime. Other measures announced included: targeting the sale of illegal weapons over the Internet, creating special policing units dedicated to fighting organized crime and making first-degree-murder charges applicable to gang-related homicides. Layton's announcement, meanwhile, comes on the heels of a second resignation made by a Vancouver-area NDP candidate over video images involving drug smoking. On Friday, Kirk Tousaw, the Vancouver Quadra candidate, resigned after a video surfaced of him smoking pot as part of a dope-judging competition with marijuana activist Marc Emery. On his blogsite, Tousaw wrote: "I feel compelled to make this difficult decision in light of the events of the past few days and the likelihood that my past involvement in drug-policy reform work might serve to continue to take the focus away from the issues that matter most to Canadians." His resignation came two days after Dana Larsen, an NDP candidate in the West-Vancouver Sunshine Coast riding, tendered his notice following the emergence of videos showing him smoking pot and dropping LSD. Larsen told The Province he decided to resign because he didn't want to "screw up" the election campaign. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin