Pubdate: Fri, 06 Nov 2009 Source: Moose Jaw Times-Herald (CN SN) Copyright: 2009 The Moose Jaw Times-Herald Group Inc. Contact: (306) 692-2101 Website: http://www.mjtimes.sk.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2154 Note: No email LTEs accepted - use fax or mail Page: A3 Author: Lyndsay McCready SCAN FOCUSES ON RIDDING NEIGHBOURHOODS OF BAD HOUSES Introducing Moose Javians to a new way of dealing with a bad neighbour was Tom Fulcher of the Saskatchewan government's Safer Communities and Neighbourhood Unit (SCAN). Fulcher was the guest speaker at a luncheon hosted by the Moose Jaw South-Central Regional Intersectoral Committee Wednesday at the Prairie South School Division's board office. The 45-minute talk explained the purpose of the unit, the types of situations it is usually faced with and its solutions to cleaning up a community one neighbourhood at a time. Fulcher said what the unit does is clean up properties that are negatively affecting a community. He said whether there is drugs, prostitution, violence or gangs, when a complaint is made, SCAN will go in, investigate, determine whether there is an actual issue, if there is, seize the property in question and evict those currently occupying it. " We don't target the bad guys . . . we target the house. You can always get a bad guy out of a drug house but the drug doesn't close down. They just put another bad guy in the drug house and the drugs keep getting sold." Fulcher said his unit leaves the arrests up to the police, He doesn't really care if those people living in the residences SCAN is focusing on get arrested - just that the house is gone. "If the house (that is causing the neighbourhood problems) is gone, then the neighbourhood is safer because of that." Fulcher said the majority of the complaints his unit receives come from the community. "I really believe people are aware of what is going on in their neighbourhood . . . you know they live there 24 hours a day, so they are aware if something has changed or if something is not right," said Fulcher. " We really put a lot of weight on their ability to recognize something out of the norm." Fulcher said Moose Jaw is one of the unit's most pro-active communities. He said the majority of the complaints streaming from the Friendly City are with regard to drugs. Fulcher said his unit is aware that what it is doing is not going to stop drugs in Moose Jaw. However, it is going to make one neighbourhood at a time safer. For more information on SCAN visit www. saskjustice.gov.sk.ca/ Safer Communities. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart