Pubdate: Thu, 30 Oct 2008 Source: Maple Ridge News (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Maple Ridge News Contact: http://www.mapleridgenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1328 Author: Monisha Martins PETITION TO CLEAN UP NEIGHBOURHOOD District, Police Aren't Being Tough Enough Residents of a downtown Maple Ridge neighbourhood plagued by crime, drugs and prostitutes plan to take a petition to council because complaints to the district have fallen on deaf ears. Jim Osler, who manages a block of apartments near 224th Street and North Avenue, is leading the charge and appealing to the district to make the neighbourhood safer. He said a pipe bomb went off at 2 a.m. on Monday. The previous week, the streets were rocked by gun shots. After dark until the wee hours of the morning, sex trade workers and drug peddlers take over the block. "People in Maple Ridge should think twice about who they are re-electing," said Osler, who points to a townhouse complex nearby as the root of all problems. The run-down complex called Northumberland Court has been the target of countless projects by the district, fire department and police. But Osler claims the district and police aren't being tough enough. He said the bylaws department promised to clean graffiti painted on the buildings last month. More than 30 days later, the fences and walls are still tagged. For the past three weeks, a mattress, couch, cooking appliances and a washing machine have lined a burned-out building. Osler wants the bylaw department to crack down and treat the complex strata like every other property owner in Maple Ridge who are given seven days to complete the task. He wants the police to patrol the townhome complex at night, instead of parking outside when nothing's happening during the day. "Somebody is going to get killed down there before they do something," Osler said. Although he lost two more tenants this month, Osler isn't the only person to feel the repercussion of a degenerating neighbourhood. A group of doctors who have clinic in the Haney Professional Building and the B.C. Biomedical Laboratories are planning to leave. A receptionist for Dr. Ward Tinney, Dr. Dennis Chapman, Dr. Hannah Surgenor and Dr. Kenneth Burns, confirmed all four will leave 224th Street and North Avenue by next spring. She said the doctors don't want to leave, but need a larger clinic that's safer, where patients don't fall victim to crime. On Oct. 12, 67-year-old woman who was a patient at the clinic had her purse snatched as she left a nearby bank. Ryan Kjaer-Kinsella, who had just been released from prison on Vancouver Island, has been charged with the robbery. The receptionist said several patients have left the doctors because of the crime. "It's not safe," she said. "[The neighbourhood] is not a nice place." But the District of Maple Ridge claims its doing its best to change the south Lougheed area. Gordy Robson, who is seeking his second term as Maple Ridge mayor, said the municipality has used every resource legally available to it. They've cracked down on other crack houses in downtown Maple Ridge - 22 in total. Police began focusing a more aggressive spotlight on the neighbourhood around the Fraser Street townhouse complex at the beginning of August. There are aerial maps of Northumberland Court and neighbouring problem houses as well as a cell phone labelled Northumberland handed to a constable on each of the four watches who is assigned to patrol the south Lougheed neighbourhood. But Robson said dealing with a problem landlord who owns 16 units at Northumberland Court hasn't been easy. Bylaws has been trying, Robson added. The district has also asked Income Assistance to stop issuing rent cheque to people who live in the complex. The ministry responsible has refused. "We are all fed up," said Robson. "We just don't have a final solution. I won't rest until we get rid of this cancer in our downtown." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake